Monday, January 27, 2014

William Estes (1790-1855)



Kentucky Hero from the War of 1812


Kentucky Volunteers


William 'War of 1812' ESTES was born on January 19, 1790, in Spotsylvania, Virginia. He fought in the War of 1812 at the Battle of the Raisin. He married Mary Polly Hockensmith in 1809. They had nine children in 27 years. He died on March 2, 1855, in Scott, Kentucky, at the age of 65, and was buried in Daviess, Kentucky.




William 'War of 1812' Estes (1790 - 1855)
is our 2nd great grand uncle
brother of Catherine Estes Bramblett
Fielding Estes * (1766 - 1826) (3rd great Grandfather)
father of William 'War of 1812' ESTES
Catherine Katherine Kitty Estes * (1796 - 1860)  (second great grandmother)
daughter of Fielding Estes *
Fielding Bramblett * (1814 - 1897) (second great grandfather)
son of Catherine Katherine Kitty Estes *
George Edward Bramblett * (1851 - 1922) (first great grandfather)
son of Fielding Bramblett *
Walter Scott Bramblett * (1882 - 1978) (grandfather)
son of George Edward Bramblett *
Margaret May Belle Bramblett * (1911 - 1988)
daughter of Walter Scott Bramblett *

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Margaret Sarah Hall (1836-1858)

Margaret Sarah Hall, our second great grandmother, was born in 1836 in Woodford, Henry County, Kentucky, USA, the second child of Albert H Hall and Nancy Wilson Hall. They were rural farmers. When she was nineteen, she married Martin V. Hardin (age twenty-one) on October 25, 1855 in Henry County, Kentucky, USA.  They were blessed with a son William and a daughter Nancy.  Margaret died at the young age of twenty-two on May 20, 1858 from Typhoid Fever. 

Typhoid Fever is a common worldwide bacterial disease transmitted by the ingestion of food or water contaminated with the feces from an infected person. The disease has received various names, such as gastric fever, abdominal typhus, infantile remittent fever, slow fever, nervous fever and phytogenic fever.
  
The nineteenth century was plagued by bacterial diseases such as Typhoid and Cholera.  Lack of modern sanitation played a big part in Typhoid epidemics. 

Untreated typhoid fever is divided into four individual stages, each lasting approximately one week. Over the course of these stages, the patient becomes exhausted and emaciated.

In the first week, the temperature rises slowly, and fever fluctuations are seen with relative bradycardia, malaise, headache, and cough. A bloody nose is seen in a quarter of cases, and abdominal pain is also possible.
In the second week of the infection, the patient lies prostrate with high fever in plateau around 40 °C (104 °F) and bradycardia, classically with a  pulse wave. Delirium is frequent, often calm, but sometimes agitated. This delirium gives to typhoid the nickname of "nervous fever". Rose spots appear on the lower chest and abdomen in around a third of patients.

The abdomen is distended and painful in the right lower quadrant. Diarrhea can occur in stage two, however, constipation is also frequent. The spleen and liver are enlarged and tender. The major symptom of this fever is that the fever usually rises in the afternoon up to the first and second week.

In the third week of typhoid fever, a number of complications can occur: Intestinal hemorrhage and Intestinal perforation (which can be fatal), delirium, and metastatic abscesses. The fever is still very high and oscillates very little over 24 hours. Dehydration ensues, and the patient is delirious. One third of affected individuals develop a macular rash on the trunk.

The platelet count goes down slowly and finally when it becomes 0 bleeding starts.

This continues into the fourth week. During the American Civil War, 81,360 Union soldiers died of typhoid or dysentery.

Sanitation and hygiene are the critical measures that can be taken to prevent typhoid. Typhoid does not affect animals, and therefore, transmission is only from human to human. Typhoid can only spread in environments where human feces or urine are able to come into contact with food or drinking water. Careful food preparation and washing of hands are crucial to prevent typhoid.

 Excerpts from wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoid_fever

Margaret Sarah Hall * (1836 - 1858)
is our 2nd great grandmother
Nancy Wilson Hardin * (1858 - 1933)
daughter of Margaret Sarah Hall *
Walter Scott Bramblett * (1882 - 1978)
son of Nancy Wilson Hardin *
Margaret May Belle Bramblett * (1911 - 1988)
daughter of Walter Scott Bramblett *

Monday, January 6, 2014

Dave and Broy Harding (1882-1963; 1904-1968)


daveh
David Alexander Harding

broyh
Broy William Harding

Dave (1882-1963) and Broy (1904-1968) Harding--- Bank Robbers
David and Broy are our second cousins one time removed.  Even though Harding is similar to Hardin, I can find no family connection.

Both Dave and Broy Harding were arrested for the Modale Bank Robbery, but only Broy Escaped. In 1946 Broy fled to Montana, (from a Chain gang) changed his name and become "an upstanding citizen". Years later he was found in Montana by the FBI but when they tried to extradite him, his friends and neighbors signed a petition, so he was pardoned by the Governor. As long as he stayed in MT..., but in 1956 he went to Washington state looking for work and was reportedly found prowling behind a dairy with what looked like burglary tools. He was then sent back to Iowa to serve out his time. . David was released to his sons’ custody when he was in his 70's. I do not know what happened after that. It’s quite a story. When they were initially caught the Harding brothers were beaten severely.
Harding’s Great Grand Daughter

Taken from Ancestry.com

Figures and Scenes in Modale, Harrison, Iowa Bank Robbery
December 16, 1926
Pages designed and maintained by Judy Wallis White
These pages are from my personal collection of newspaper stories of Modale, Iowa

Credit for the capture of the brothers was due largely to Mrs. Louise Hitchings, at whose restaurant in Missouri Valley, Iowa they stopped Tuesday night while Dave Harding telephoned an Omaha number, and purchased some red pepper.  Mrs. Hitchings remembered the address he mentioned 1710 Cass Street.   Wednesday afternoon she recalled the incident, and the Omaha police were notified.

Credit was also due to Detective Buford's alertness, Inspector Danbaum said today.  While other detectives were searching in the neighborhood of 1710 Cass Street, Buford, who was at the wheel of their car, saw two men alight form a Yellow taxicab and go into 1713 California Street.  He heard Dave Harding tell the driver, "Keep the change--there's plenty more where that came from."  Notifying the other officers, Buford stood guard at the back door while the others entered the front.

When taken before Inspector Danbaum this morning Dave Harding was silent for a time, then said, "I have decided I might as well tell all about it, my brother is right--he and I staged the robbery."  My wife was sick, perhaps dying and I needed money for her and the children.  When Broy proposed robbery, I listened.  We both knew the lay of the land around Modale, and had been in the bank."

The planning took three or four days, Dave said.  Tuesday night the brothers stole a Ford automobile.   They drove first to Missouri Valley, stopping at the restaurant to telephone and get some red pepper "to destroy the scent if bloodhounds were used."  That night they stopped in an abandoned, tumbledown farm shack, and Wednesday morning drove to Modale.  
"Broy went into the bank first, and I followed, " said Dave.  "One man wouldn't hold up his hands and Broy shot him.   I took a shot at another man who started running.  "I don't know how many shots were fired.  I went outside and did some more shooting, and men in the town were shooting.  Broy came out with money, which I tossed into the car.  Then I drove directly to the river.  We passed the shack where we slept the night before, but didn't stop.

"At the river Broy shot a hole in the gasoline tank, and set fire to the car.  We thought to delay police, who would have difficulty in getting the numbers and tracing the car.  Then we crossed the river on the ice, landing about three miles south of Blair.  On the highway we hailed an automobile carrying a man, woman and child, they were given a ride to Twentieth street in Omaha, about the center of town.  Then we went to the home a brother-in-law at 2405 St. Mary's avenue.  In the afternoon we called a taxicab and went to 1713 California street, where we were arrested."

 Immediately after being brought to the police station, the younger Harding broke down and tears appeared in his eyes.   "I want to tell about the whole dammed thing," he said.   "I"m sick and tired of the rotten business.”  Then assuming a worried, yet defiant attitude, Broy began his story, "Dave and I had no job and were broke, " he said.  "Dave has four kids, and I got one.  It was either get money or starve.  I thought of robbery.  I lived in the Modale neighborhood, and knew of the savings bank there.   "It was my plan.  Dave at first didn't want to go in on it, and later said he would.  so we went and looked the place over to make complete plans."   "We came into Omaha last night and stole a car at Sixteenth and Nicholas streets.  Then we drove to Missouri Valley, Iowa where we tried to by some shells.   We couldn't get any there.  "Then we ate lunch.  We put in a long distance telephone call to Omaha but couldn't get my party, so we drove to the house near the Blair railroad bridge on the Iowa side and stayed there all night."

Harding Brothers Probably will be sent to Penitentiary For Life
Harrison County Prosecutor will Demand the Limit
Attorney Havens Points out robbery Charge was "Aggravated"

Logan, Iowa December 17, 1926  The Harding brothers of Blair Nebraska who confessed to robbing the Modale Savings bank and wounding two men, will be sent to the penitentiary for a life term it they plead guilty or are found guilty of the charge, county Attorney Hoy Havens of Harrison county intends to place against them and the full penalty of the statute is exacted.  The charge will be entering a bank with intent to rob.  this carries a sentence of life imprisonment.

 Havens pointed out Friday that the men had confessed to acts which constituted this crime and to additional acts which aggravated the charge--had shot two men and robbed the bank.  There were no mitigating circumstances, he said.
 
The men still are in Omaha, and Havens said he did not know when they would be brought to Logan.  "I understand the police there are trying to connect them with the Hooper, Nebraska attempted robbery.  But even if they do, the men will have to come here for we have a more serious charges against them."   Mr. Havens has not yet talked to the haring brothers, and said he will make no effort to do so until the men are returned to Logan.  Neither had Sheriff Millman visited them.  The officers pointed out that the men have confessed, and the rest of the procedure is more or less prescribed.  If they still were protesting their innocence then the officials would quiz them, they said.

 It was cited here today that the bank robbers do not fare well when tackling Harrison county banks.  The Pisgah bank was robbed three years ago next week, but three Council Bluffs men now are in the penitentiary for it.  Then the Little Sioux bank was robbed and Pat Carroll is in the penitentiary for that.

George Lute * (1780 - 1852)                                         George Lute * (1780 - 1852)
is our 2nd great grandfather                                      is their great grandfather
Andrew Lute * (1814 - 1882)                                        Jacob Nicholas Lute (1826-1899)
son of George Lute *                                                     son of George Lute
Charles William Lute * (1874 - 1905)                          Amanda Jane Lute (1865-1944)
son of Andrew Lute *                                                    daughter of Jacob Nicholas Lute
Doran Edgar Lute * (1901 - 1982)                               David and Broy Harding (1882-1963, 1904-1968)
son of Charles William Lute *                                       sons of Amanda Jane Lute

Thursday, January 2, 2014

John Wesley Hardin (1853-1895)



Wanted Poster

John Wesley Hardin Wanted Poster

Wanted Poster



John Wesley “Wes” Hardin is our 5th cousin 2 times removed.  He is well documented with many records and photographs.  He was a notorious outlaw of the old west and also a 4th cousin of Doc Holliday.

John Wesley Hardin is credited with forty killings in stand-up gunfights, ambushes and running battles on horseback.  It has been said that whenever Hardin rode out of a town, dead men were always left behind.  By the time he reached his 20th birthday, John was regarded as one of the deadliest gunfighters in the west. He had killed a number of men, had a confrontation with Wild Bill Hickok in Abilene, and was wanted by the Texas State police and the Texas Rangers.

John Wesley Hardin was killed by John Selman, Sr. when Selman shot Hardin in
the back of the head in the ACME Saloon in El Paso, TX.  Wes Hardin's last
words were, "Four sixes to beat..."
www.kanasas heritage.org

He was an American outlaw, gunfighter, and controversial folk icon of the Old West. Hardin found himself in trouble with the law at an early age, and spent the majority of his life being pursued by both local lawmen and federal troops of the reconstruction era. He often used the residences of family and friends to hide out from the law.

Hardin was born near Bonham, Texas, in 1853 to Methodist preacher and circuit rider, James "Gip" Hardin, and Mary Elizabeth Dixson.[1][6] He is named after John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist denomination of the Christian church.[7] In his autobiography, Hardin described his mother as "blond, highly cultured... [while] charity predominated in her disposition.[8]:5 Hardin's father traveled over much of central Texas on his preaching circuit until, in 1859, he and his family settled in Sumpter, Trinity County, Texas. There, Joseph Hardin taught school, and established a learning institution that John Wesley and his siblings attended.

 Hardin killed his first man at the age of 15. Texas was ruled by the military according to congressional reconstruction policies and Hardin believed that he would not receive a fair trial.  He fled and later claimed to have killed three soldiers who were sent to arrest him and that his relatives and neighbors helped him bury and hide the evidence.  In 1869, his father sent him away from the area to teach school in Pisga, Navarro County, where other relatives lived.  He left the school after one term to take up more lucrative pursuits.  He developed his skills in gambling and became enamored of horse racing.  By the end of 1869, Hardin by his own admission had killed a freedman and four soldiers.  In December of that year he killed Jim Bradly in a fight after a card game.  His life subsequently became a pattern of gambling, saloons, fights, and killing. 


Hardin spent 17 years in prison where he studied criminal law.  When he was released he was pardoned by the governor of Texas.  He eventually returned to his wicked ways and was shot and killed.

John Wesley Hardin


John Wesley Hardin Obituary

Marcus Mark Hardin * (1681 - 1735)                              Marcus Mark Hardin * (1681 - 1735)
is our 6th great grandfather                                                        is his 6th great grandfather
Mark Hardin * (1718 - 1790)                                         Henry Hardin (1720-1797)
son of Marcus Mark Hardin *                                             son of Marcus Mark Hardin
Benjamin Hardin * (1753 - 1834)                                   William Everett Hardin (1741-1810)
son of Mark Hardin *                                                       son of Henry Hardin
Daniel Hardin * (1790 - 1850)                                        Swan Hardin (1773-1829)
son of Benjamin Hardin *                                                 son of William Everett Hardin
Martin V Hardin (1834 - 1881)                                        Benjamin Watson Hardin (1796-1850)
son of Daniel Hardin *                                                     son of Swan Hardin
Nancy Wilson Hardin * (1858 - 1933)                              Rev. James Gibson Hardin (1823-1876)
daughter of Martin V Hardin                                               son of Benjamin Watson Hardin
Walter Scott Bramblett * (1882 - 1978)                            John Wesley Hardin (1853-1895)
son of Nancy Wilson Hardin *                                             son of rev. james Gibson Hardin
daughter of Walter Scott Bramblett *


Thursday, December 26, 2013

John Henry "Doc" Holliday (1851-1887)

We share 6th great grandparents with John Henry "Doc" Holliday---the infamous gambler, gunslinger, and dentist.  This makes him our 4th cousin three times removed.
The following information is excerpts that come from Wikipedia:
Doc Holliday--- Born John Henry Holliday
August 14, 1851

Griffin, Georgia
, U.S. Died November 8, 1887 (aged 36)
Glenwood Springs, Colorado
U.S. Education Graduated from Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery in 1872 at age 20
Occupation Dentistprofessional gambler, gunfighter
Known for Arizona War
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral
Earp Vendetta Ride

John Henry "Doc" Holliday (August 14, 1851 – November 8, 1887) was an American gambler, gunfighter and dentist of the American Old West, who is usually remembered for his friendship with Wyatt Earp and his involvement in the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.
During his travels, he met and became good friends with Wyatt Earp and Earp's brothers. In 1880, he moved to Tombstone, Arizona, and participated alongside the Earps in the famous gunfight. This did not settle matters between the two sides, and Holliday was embroiled in ensuing shootouts and killings. He successfully fought being extradited for murder, and died in bed at a Colorado hotel/sanatorium at the age of 36.

The legend and mystique of his life is so great that he has been mentioned in countless books, and portrayed by various actors in numerous movies and television series. For the 100-plus years since his death, debate has continued about the exact crimes he may have committed during his life.
 In September 1873, Holliday moved to Dallas, Texas, where he opened a dental office with fellow dentist and Georgian John A. Seegar. Their office was located between Market and Austin Streets along Elm Street, about three blocks east of the site of today's Dealey Plaza.[10] He soon began gambling and realized this was a more profitable source of income, since patients feared going to his office because of his ongoing cough. On May 12, 1874, Holliday and 12 others were indicted in Dallas for illegal gambling.[10] He was arrested in Dallas in January 1875 after trading gunfire with a saloon-keeper, but no one was injured and he was found not guilty.[1] He moved his offices to Denison, Texas, and after being found guilty of, and fined for, "gaming" in Dallas, he decided to leave the state.
Holliday made his way to Denver, traveling the stage routes and staying at Army outposts along the way practicing his trade as a gambler. In the summer of 1875 he settled in Denver under the alias "Tom Mackey", working as a Faro dealer forJohn A. Babb's Theatre Comique at 357 Blake street. Here he heard about gold being discovered in Wyoming and on February 5, 1876 he relocated to Cheyenne, working as a dealer for Babb's partner, Thomas Miller, who owned a saloon called the Bella Union. In the fall of 1876, Miller moved the Bella Union to Deadwood (site of the gold rush in the Dakota Territory) and Holliday moved with him.[11]
In 1877, Holliday returned to Cheyenne and Denver, eventually making his way to Kansas to visit an aunt. He left Kansas and returned to Texas setting up as a gambler in the town of Breckenridge. On July 4, 1877 he got involved in an altercation with another gambler named Henry Kahn, whom Holliday beat with his walking stick repeatedly. Both men were arrested and fined, but later in the day, Kahn shot Holliday, wounding him seriously.[12]
The Dallas Weekly Herald incorrectly reported Holliday as dead in its July 7 edition. His cousin, George Henry Holliday moved west to take care of him during his recovery. Fully recovered, Holliday relocated to Fort Griffin, Texas, where he met "Big Nose Kate" (Mary Katharine Horony) and began his long-time involvement with her.[12] In Fort Griffin, Holliday was initially introduced to Wyatt Earp through mutual friend John Shanssey.[13] Earp had stopped at Fort Griffin, Texas, before returning to Dodge City in 1878 to become the assistant city marshal, serving under Charlie Bassett.[14]:31 The two began to form an unlikely friendship; Earp more even-tempered and controlled, Holliday more hot-headed and impulsive. This friendship was cemented in 1878 in Dodge City, Kansas, when Holliday defended Earp in a saloon against a handful of cowboys out to kill Earp, and where both Earp and Holliday had traveled to make money gambling with the cowboys who drove cattle from Texas.
Holliday was still practicing dentistry on the side from his rooms in Fort Griffin and in Dodge City, as indicated in an 1878 Dodge newspaper advertisement (he promised money back for less than complete customer satisfaction), but this is the last known time he attempted to practice.[13] Holliday was primarily a gambler although he had a reputation as a deadly gunman. Modern research has only identified three instances in which he shot someone. In the summer of 1878, Holliday assisted Earp during a bar room confrontation when Earp "was surrounded by desperadoes". Earp credited Holliday with saving his life that day and the two became friends as a result..[15]
One documented instance happened when Holliday was employed during a railroad dispute. On July 19, 1879, Holliday and noted gunman John Joshua Webb were seated in a saloon in Las Vegas, New Mexico when a former U.S. Army scout named Mike Gordon tried to persuade one of the saloon girls to leave her job and come away with him. When she refused, Gordon stormed outside and began firing into the building. Holliday followed him and killed him before he could get off a second shot. Holliday was placed on trial for the shooting but was acquitted, mostly based on the testimony of Webb.[16][17]
Dodge City was not a frontier town for long; by 1879, it had become too respectable for the sort of people who had seen it through its early days. For many, it was time to move on to places not yet reached by the civilizing railroad—places where money was to be made. Holliday, by this time, was as well known for his prowess as a gunfighter as for his gambling, though the latter was his trade and the former simply a reputation. Through his friendship with Wyatt and the other Earp brothers, especially Morgan and Virgil, Holliday made his way to the silver-mining boom town of Tombstone, Arizona Territory, in September 1880. The Earps had been there since December 1879. Some accounts state the Earps sent for Holliday when they realized the problems they faced in their feud with the Cowboy faction. In Tombstone, Holliday quickly became embroiled in the local politics and violence that led up to the famous Gunfight at the O.K. Corral in October 1881.
The gunfight happened in front of, and next to, Fly's boarding house and picture studio, where Holliday had a room, the day after a late night of hard drinking and poker by Ike Clanton. The Clantons and McLaurys collected in the space between the boarding house and the house west of it, before being confronted by the Earps. Holliday likely thought they were there specifically to assassinate him.[18]
It is known Holliday carried a coach gun from the local stage office into the fight; he was given the weapon just before the fight by Virgil Earp, as Holliday was wearing a long coat which could conceal it. Virgil Earp in turn took Holliday's walking stick: by not going conspicuously armed, Virgil was seeking to avoid panic in the citizenry of Tombstone, and in the Clantons and McLaurys.[19]
An inquest and arraignment hearing determined the gunfight was not a criminal act on the part of Holliday and the Earps. The situation in Tombstone soon grew worse when Virgil Earp was ambushed and permanently injured in December 1881. Then Morgan Earp was ambushed and killed in March 1882. After Morgan's murder, Virgil Earp and many remaining members of the Earp families fled town. Holliday and Wyatt Earp stayed in Tombstone to exact retribution on Ike Clanton and the corrupt members known as the Cowboys. In Tucson, while Wyatt, Warren Earp, and Holliday were escorting the wounded Virgil Earp and his wife Allie on the first stage of their trip to California, they prevented another ambush in Tucson, and this may have been the start of the vendetta against Morgan's killers.
Several Cowboys were identified by witnesses as suspects in the shooting of Virgil Earp on December 27, 1881, and the assassination of Morgan Earp on March 19, 1882. Some circumstantial evidence also pointed to their involvement.
Wyatt Earp had been appointed Deputy U.S. Marshall after Virgil was maimed. He deputized Holliday, Warren Earp, Sherman McMasters, and "Turkey Creek" Jack Johnson, and they guarded Virgil Earp and his wife Allie on their way to the train for California. In Tucson, the group spotted Frank Stilwell and Ike Clanton lying in wait to kill Virgil. On Monday, March 20, 1882, Frank Stilwell's body was found at dawn alongside the rail road tracks, riddled with buckshot and gunshot wounds.[20]
Tucson Justice of the Peace Charles Meyer issued arrest warrants for five of the Earp party, including Holliday. They returned briefly to Tombstone on March 21, where they were joined by Texas Jack Vermillion and possibly others. Wyatt deputized the men who rode with him. After leaving Tombstone, the posse made its way to Spence's wood-cutting camp in the South Pass of the Dragoon Mountains. There they found and killed Florentino "Indian Charlie" Cruz. Over the next few days they also located and killed "Curly Bill" Brocius and wounded at least two other men thought to be responsible for Morgan's death. Holliday and four other members of the posse were still faced with warrants for Stilwell's death. The group elected to leave the Arizona Territory for New Mexico and then Colorado. While in Trinidad, Colorado, Wyatt Earp and Holliday parted ways, going separately to different parts of Colorado. Holliday arrived in Colorado in mid-April 1882.[21]
On May 15, 1882, Holliday was arrested in Denver on the Arizona warrant for murdering Frank Stilwell. Wyatt Earp, fearing that Holliday could not receive a fair trial in Arizona, asked his friend Bat Masterson, Sheriff of Trinidad, Colorado, to help get Holliday released. The extradition hearing was set for May 30.[22]:230 Late in the evening of May 29, Masterson needed help getting an appointment with Colorado Governor Frederick Walker Pitkin. He contacted E. D. Cowen, capital reporter for the Denver Tribune, who held political sway in town. Cowen later wrote, "He submitted proof of the criminal design upon Holliday's life. Late as the hour was, I called on Pitkin." After meeting with Masterson, Pitkin was persuaded by whatever evidence he presented and refused to honor Arizona's extradition request.[22] His legal reasoning was that the extradition papers for Holliday contained faulty legal language, and that there was already a Colorado warrant out for Holliday—one on bunco charges that Masterson had fabricated in Pueblo, Colorado.[22]
Masterson took Holliday to Pueblo, where he was released on bond two weeks after his arrest.[23] Holliday and Wyatt met briefly after Holliday's release during June 1882 in Gunnison.
On July 14, 1882, Johnny Ringo was found dead in the crotch of a large tree in West Turkey Creek Valley, near Chiricahua Peak, Arizona Territory, with a bullet hole in his right temple and a revolver hanging from a finger of his hand. The book, I Married Wyatt Earp, supposedly written by Josephine Marcus Earp, reported that Wyatt Earp and Holliday returned to Arizona to find and kill Ringo. Actually written by Glen Boyer, the book states that Holliday killed Ringo with a rifle shot at a distance, contradicting the coroner's ruling that Ringo's death was a suicide. However, Boyer's book has been discredited as a fraud and a hoax[24] that cannot be relied upon.[25]:489 In response to criticism about the book's authenticity, Boyer said the book was not really a first-person account, that he had interpreted Wyatt Earp in Josephine's voice, and admitted that he could not produce any documents to vindicate his methods.[26]
Official records of the Pueblo County, Colorado District Court indicate that both Holliday and his attorney appeared in court there on July 11, 14 and 18, 1882. Author Karen Holliday Tanner, in Doc Holliday, A Family Portrait, speculated that Holliday may not have been in Pueblo at the time of the court date, citing a writ of habeas corpus issued for him in court on July 11.[6] She believes that only his attorney may have appeared on his behalf that day, in spite of the wording of a court record that indicated he may have appeared in person—in propria persona or "in his own person". She cites this as standard legal filler text that does not necessarily prove the person was present. There is no doubt that Holliday arrived in Salida, Colorado on July 7 as reported in a town newspaper. This is 500 miles (800 km) from the site of Ringo's death, six days before the shooting.
Holliday spent the rest of his life in Colorado. After a stay in Leadville, he suffered from the high altitude. He increasingly depended on alcohol and laudanum to ease the symptoms of tuberculosis, and his health and his ability to gamble began to deteriorate.[6]:218
In 1887, prematurely gray and badly ailing, Holliday made his way to the Hotel Glenwood, a sanatorium near the hot springs of Glenwood Springs, Colorado. He hoped to take advantage of the reputed curative power of the waters, but the sulfurous fumes from the spring may have done his lungs more harm than good.[6]:217 As he lay dying, Holliday is reported to have asked the nurse attending him at the Hotel Glenwood for a shot of whiskey. When she told him no, he looked at his bootless feet, amused. The nurses said that his last words were, "Damn, this is funny." Holliday died at 10 A.M., November 8, 1887. He was 36.[3] It was reported that no one ever thought that Holliday would die in bed with his boots off.



Marcus Mark Hardin * (1681 - 1735)                 Marcus Mark Hardin * (1681 - 1735)
is our 6th great grandfather                                          is our 6th great grandfather
Mark Hardin * (1718 - 1790)                              Alice Hardin (1730-1777)
son of Marcus Mark Hardin *                                          daughter of Marcus Mark Hardin *
Benjamin Hardin * (1753 - 1834)                        Joseph Cloud (1770-1851)
son of Mark Hardin *                                                       son of Alice Hardin
Daniel Hardin * (1790 - 1850)                             Jane Cloud (1804-1853)
son of Benjamin Hardin *                                                 daughter of Joseph Cloud
Martin V Hardin (1834 - 1881)                            Alice Jane Mckey (1829-1866)
son of Daniel Hardin *                                                      daughter of Jane Cloud
Nancy Wilson Hardin * (1858 - 1933)                  John Henry “Doc” Holliday (1851-1887)
daughter of Martin V Hardin
Walter Scott Bramblett * (1882 - 1978)
son of Nancy Wilson Hardin *
Margaret May Belle Bramblett * (1911 - 1988)