Try GOLD - Free
Erroneous Ellsworth
True West
|February 2019
LETTERS HELP PROVE THAT THE WYATT EARP-BEN THOMPSON SHOWDOWN IS A TALL TALE.
Among the many questionable incidents people often repeat about Wyatt Earp’s life story, few reveal the duplicity of his biographer as much as the tale of Wyatt’s 1873 showdown with Ben Thompson in Ellsworth, Kansas. Letters between Stuart N. Lake and a Hollywood producer show the legend makers of print and fi lm collaborating to create a fi ctional character who both men insisted matched the real man.
The Ellsworth Incident
Stuart N. Lake first told the story of the Ellsworth incident in a 1930 Saturday Evening Post article. A wandering buffalo hunter searching for opportunities in the cattle business, Wyatt landed in Ellsworth on August 18, 1873, where he responded to a dangerous standoff after the killing of Sheriff Chauncey B. Whitney. Bill Thompson had shot Whitney and was allowed to ride out of town, while his brother Ben held off any pursuers with a shotgun. The remaining Ellsworth peace officers were too cowed to challenge Ben until Wyatt volunteered to arrest him, with the aid of two borrowed sixshooters and a sheriff’s badge. Striding fearlessly across the street, Wyatt ignored the “hundred or more half drunken cowboys” who backed Ben and intimidated Ben into surrendering. When offered a permanent position on the police force by the mayor, Wyatt contemptuously refused due to the court’s release of Ben on a $25 fine.
The problem with this story is that it has not been proven. The only contemporary description of the incident appears in the August 21, 1873, issue of the Ellsworth Reporter, and Wyatt’s name is conspicuously absent. The newspaper story describes the shooting of Whitney and Mayor James Miller’s impatient discharge of the town’s cowardly police force, but it identifies Deputy Sheriff Ed Hogue as the only officer remaining to make arrests and the person who “received the arms of Ben Thompson.”
This story is from the February 2019 edition of True West.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM True West
True West
Hucklebearer Baloney
And formal ties to Bonney, we Kid you not.
3 mins
January - February 2026
True West
A YEAR OF WESTERNS ON HOLD
The year 2025 was a placeholder for Westerns. The most anticipated Western of the year, Kevin Costner's Horizon: An American Saga, Chapter 2, has yet to arrive.
5 mins
January - February 2026
True West
What HISTORY HAS TAUGHT ME
For my money the best Western movie is The Searchers. John Ford's masterpiece perfected nearly everything the genre had been to that point and shaped nearly everything that came after. That is true greatness.
2 mins
January - February 2026
True West
THE SPIRIT OF THE WEST LIVES ON
OUR ANNUAL CELEBRATION OF DESTINATIONS ACROSS THE WEST SHINES A LIGHT ON THE PLACES THAT KEEP THE FLAME OF HERITAGE ALIVE.
8 mins
January - February 2026
True West
HOW THE WEST WAS WON
PUBLISHERS IN 2025 PLAY TO WIN WITH A FULL HOUSE OF WESTERN HISTORY ROYALTY.
7 mins
January - February 2026
True West
THE FRONTIER SPIRIT LIVES ON
Across the vast, storied landscapes of the American West, there are towns that don't just honor their pasts, they live them.
12 mins
January - February 2026
True West
ART COLLECTIBLES AND THINGS THAT MAKE US WESTERN
Collectors love the Old West, and Western art, firearms and collectibles remain popular coast to coast.
2 mins
January - February 2026
True West
The Dubious and Popular Rock and Rye
Was it liquor or a health tonic?
3 mins
January - February 2026
True West
It's True that True is a True Westerner
True that and all crazy true.
1 min
January - February 2026
True West
THE SEARCHERS
THE MAKING OF AN AMERICAN LEGEND
9 mins
January - February 2026
Translate
Change font size
