March 18, 1882
Morgan Earp vs. Frank Stilwell, Pete Spence and others.
A one-night showing of the play Stolen Kisses is being staged at the Turnverein Hall, north of Schieffelin Hall. It has been two and a half months since Virgil Earp was shot, and, after a flurry of posses, raids, charges and counter-charges over the cow-boy killings, things are once again quiet in Tombstone.
Wyatt agrees to go out with his brother Morgan, even though the previous night, a local, Briggs Goodrich (whose lawyer brother Ben represents many cowboys), warned Wyatt that there are “some strangers here that I think are after you.” Goodrich also had a message from one cowboy in particular: “By the way, John Ringo wanted me to say to you, that if any fight came up between you all, he wanted you to understand that he would have nothing to do with it; that he was going to take care of himself, and everybody else could do the same.”
After the play, Morgan insists on a game of pool. Wyatt joins his younger brother as the two, along with Dan Tipton and Sherm McMasters, drop in at Campbell and Hatch’s saloon for a game.
Ten minutes before 11 p.m., Morgan walks around the pool table to line up a shot. As he leans over, a pane of glass in the back door explodes as a bullet catches Morgan in the middle of the back, goes through his body and lodges in the leg of a bystander. As Morgan falls against the table, a second shot is fired through the gaping hole. The bullet thuds against the far wall, near the ceiling, just above Wyatt’s head. As patrons dive for cover, Morgan slides off the table and collapses in a pool of blood.
Perhaps fearing another attack, Wyatt, McMasters and Tipton lift Morgan and move him about 10 feet away from the rear door, and near a door to the card room. Three doctors are summoned (Mathews, Goodfellow and Millar). After a brief consultation, they pronounce the wound mortal.
Morgan’s brother and friends then move him into the card room and place him on a lounge, as Morgan’s other brothers Virgil, James and Warren are summoned, along with Virgil’s wife, Allie and James’ wife, Bessie.
The Epitaph reports, “Notwithstanding the intensity of his mortal agony, not a word of complaint escaped his lips, and all that was heard, except those whispered into the ears of his brother and known only to him were, “Don’t, I can’t stand it. This is the last game of pool I’ll ever play.”
From the Man Who Was There
March 19, 1882
“Another assassination last night about eleven o’clock. I heard the shots, two in number, but hearing so many after dark was not particularly startled, though I remarked to [Joseph L.] Redfern about it. Poor Morgan Earp was shot through by an unknown party—probably 2 or 3 in number in Campbell and Hatch’s [billiard parlor], while playing pool with [Bob] Hatch. The shots, 2, came through the ground window leading into alley running to Fremont St—on east side of Otis & Co’s store. Geo Berry received the spent ball in his thigh, sustaining a flesh wound. The second shot was fired apparently at Wyatt Earp. Murderers got away of course, but it was and is quite evident who committed the deed. The man was Stilwell in all probability. For two cowardly, sneaking attempts at murder, this and the shots at Virgil E when I came nearly getting a dose, rank at the head. Morg lived about 40 minutes after being shot and died without a murmur. Bad times ahead now.”
—George W. Parsons
What Were Morgan’s Last Words to Wyatt?
The Epitaph noted in the March 20, 1882, edition that before he died, Morgan whispered something into his brother Wyatt’s ear.
Several versions of what he may have said gained popularity over the years. In one, Morgan asks, “Do you know who did it?” and Wyatt responds, “Yes, and I’ll get them.” “That’s all I ask,” Morgan whispers. “But Wyatt, be careful.”
Two months after the events in Tombstone, Wyatt would say: “When they shot him he said the only thing he regretted was that he wouldn’t have a chance to get even. I told him I’d attend to it for him.”
In the last years of his life, Wyatt allegedly told this version to author Stuart Lake, “I’ve never told anyone what Morgan said to me then, not even Virgil…. Morgan had a boyish curiosity which I never knew to be satisfied.
“Morg got me to read one of his books [reporting experiences of persons who had visions of heaven when close to death]. I told him I thought the yarns were overdrawn, but at his suggestion we promised each other that, when the time came for one of us to go, that one would try to leave for the other some actual line on the truth of the book…. He was sensitive to the fun others might poke at such notions, so, in the last few seconds of his life, when he knew he was going, he asked me to bend close.
“‘I guess you were right, Wyatt,’ he whispered. ‘I can’t see a damn thing.’”
Most historians today think Lake made up the story.
Mrs. Marietta Spence Drops a Bombshell
At the murder inquest on the killing of Morgan Earp, Marietta Spence gave damning testimony against her husband of eight months: “Reside in Tombstone, and am the wife of Peter Spence; on last Saturday night, the 18th of March, was in my house on Fremont Street; for two days my husband was not home, but in Charleston, but came home about [noon on] Saturday. He came with two parties, one named Fries, a German [Frederick Bode]; I don’t know the other’s name [believed to be Florentino Cruz]. Each had a rifle…. They then entered the front room and began to converse with Frank Stilwell…there was an Indian with Stilwell called Charley [Hank Swilling]. He was armed with a pistol and carbine…. Both Charley and Stilwell were armed with pistols and carbines when they returned to the house Saturday night. The conversation between Spence and Stilwell and the others was carried on in a low tone. They appeared to be talking some secret. When they came in I got out of bed to receive them, and noticed they were excited. Why, I don’t know. Stilwell came in the house about an hour before Spence, and the other two.
On Sunday morning Spence told me to get breakfast about 6 o’clock, which I did—after we had a quarrel, during which he struck me and my mother, and during which he threatened to shoot me, when my mother told him he would have to shoot her too. His expression was, that if I said a word about something I knew about he would kill me; that he was going to Sonora and would leave my dead body behind him. Spence didn’t tell me so, but I know he killed Morgan Earp; I think he did it, because he arrived at the house all of a tremble, and both the others who came with him…. Myself and mother heard the shots, and it was a little after when Stilwell and the Indian, Charley, came in…. I judged they had been doing wrong from the condition, white and trembling, in which they arrived.”
Marietta also testified that four days prior to the murder, her husband had been talking to an “Indian” as Morgan Earp walked by (see map, opposite page). “Spence nudged the Indian and said, ‘That’s him, that’s him.’ The Indian then started down the street, so as to get a good look at him.”
However, when the case against Spence and the others came up for trial on April 2, the defense successfully blocked Marietta’s testimony, probably on grounds that wives cannot
testify against their husbands. The prosecution quietly dropped the case.
A Midnight Ride
According to Tucson’s Arizona Daily Star, Frank Stilwell was spotted in Tucson early on Sunday morning, six or seven hours after the Morgan shooting. This gave him a pretty solid alibi. Some argue that a 70-mile run on horseback is not out of the question.
A Surprising Admission
In spite of the damning accusations by Marietta Spence, Wyatt Earp never believed her husband was involved in Morgan’s murder. Late in life, he wrote to author Walter Noble Burns, “I am satisfied that Spence had nothing to do with the assassination of Morgan, although he was against us.” Wyatt believed Swilling, Stilwell and Cruz were joined by John Ringo and Curly Bill Brocius.
Aftermath: Odds & Ends
According to the Epitaph, Morgan was shot at 10:50 on Saturday night and his body was placed in a casket and sent to Colton, California (the Earps’ home base). It was guarded “to Contention by his brothers and two or three of his most intimate friends. The funeral cortege started away from the Cosmopolitan hotel about 12:30 yesterday [Sunday, March 19].” Many writers have mistakenly assumed that Virgil and his wife accompanied Morgan’s body, but they left Tombstone the following day.
Pete Spence turned himself in to Sheriff Behan and was allowed to keep a pistol in his cell as protection against a possible attack by the Earps, which never came. Although acquitted in the Morgan Earp murder, Spence later served time in Yuma Territorial Prison for assault. Pardoned after serving a year, Spence, now going by the name E.L. Ferguson, married the widow of Phin Clanton.
Recommended: Classic Gunfights Volume II by Bob Boze Bell, published by Two Roads West.