Mike O'Rourke - Life in Tombstone

Life in Tombstone

O'Rourke first surfaced in Tucson when he was 16, where he developed into a talented poker player. He was often accused of cheating, but more often than not his accusers recanted in view of his reputation for being good with a gun and fast on the draw. There is evidence that O'Rourke had a fast temper and was prone to altercations, but none to support his having been in any gunfights.

He relocated to the rough town of Charleston, a stamp-mill town of about 200 individuals 9 miles (14 km) southeast of Tombstone on the San Pedro River. In Charleston on January 14, 1881, he played poker all night with Henry Schneider, chief engineer of the Tombstone Mining and Milling Company. Schneider was losing badly, and the men argued. Schneider pulled a knife and O'Rourke shot and killed him.

Tombstone City Marshal (police chief) George McKelvey soon arrived and arrested O'Rourke. He put him in a wagon and began the trip back to Tombstone. Outlaw Cowboys Curly Bill Brocius and John Ringo encouraged talk of a lynching and led other men who pursued the wagon. McKelvey got to the outskirts of Tombstone and the Last Chance Saloon just ahead of the mob, where they met by Deputy U.S. Marshal Virgil Earp. Virgil was not looking for work, but was off duty and out at the edge of town riding for pleasure, exercising a favorite horse of Wyatt's that had been recently recovered by the brothers after having been stolen and in posession of Billy Clanton for more than a year.

McKelvey told Earp that the mob on his tail was aiming to lynch O'Rourke, and Earp put O'Rourke on his horse, reaching Tombstone before the mob. Assistant City Marshal Morgan Earp then took the prisoner to Vogan's Bowling Alley (a long defendable structure made of brick, situated on Allen Street), while his brother, former Pima County Deputy Sheriff Wyatt Earp pulled out a shotgun and held off the crowd, convincing them to disperse.

O'Rourke was later escorted by Wyatt Earp to the county jail in Tucson, but he escaped shortly afterward and never stood trial for the miner's murder. In 1882, while gambling in Sulphur Springs Valley, he was again accused of cheating. The argument motivated O'Rourke to leave, but he was shot and killed in a gunfight shortly afterward, although there were no witnesses. Many believed the gunman may have been Pony Diehl, a former friend to gunman Johnny Ringo, in whose mysterious death O'Rourke was rumored to have played a part. Diehl was in town at the time, and was known to believe that O'Rourke was responsible for Ringo's death.

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