The Gunfight at the OK Corral Never Happened

Rick
Rick
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First published July 15, 2016, by Miles Mathis


Funny story on how I got into this one.

I was watching the Original Star Trek, season 3, episode “The Spectre of the Gun”.




They showed a period poster on the wall, which stated the Gunfight in Tombstone was on October 26, 1881.

The numerology there alerted me to the possibility this event was a fake.

Note all the eights:


October means eighth month, 2+6=8, and then the year.

More research confirmed it.

This is doubly curious, because in that episode the thesis has to do with the unreality of their situation.

The lead crew has transported down, and the aliens expect them to fight the Earps.

Spock finally figures out that all their actions are scripted, and that everything is an illusion.

He Vulcan mind-melds to the other crewmembers, to teach them to believe the bullets aren't real.

Of course, that was also a theme of the Ghost Dance, where Natives were taught that the bullets in the guns of whites weren't real.

That also ties into this paper, since Wounded Knee will come up in my research below.

Wounded Knee Massacre - Wikipedia

Before I get started, I will be told transcripts of the court proceedings survive, photographs of the dead bodies survive, etc.

But we will see it was all another charade.

We have seen many trials faked, including far more prominent and important trials, so that means nothing.

See:



and so on.

As for the photos, they prove nothing.

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That's the most famous photo of the bodies.

But is indication of absolutely nothing.

We have no proof those guys are dead, and if they are we have no proof they are who they are said to be.

It is just three guys in coffins, which proves nothing.

Given what we already know about faked events, I think we are going to need more than that.

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That's the next famous picture, said to be of Wyatt Earp and others.

Earp at about age 39 1.1 MB View full-size Download

Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp (March 19, 1848 – January 13, 1929) was an American lawman and gambler in the American West, including Dodge City, Deadwood, and Tombstone. Earp was involved in the gunfight at the O.K. Corral, during which lawmen killed three outlaw Cochise County Cowboys. While Wyatt is often depicted as the key figure in the shootout, his brother Virgil was both Deputy U.S. Marshal and Tombstone City Marshal that day and had considerably more experience in law enforcement as a sheriff, constable, and marshal than did Wyatt. Virgil made the decision to enforce a city ordinance prohibiting carrying weapons in town and to disarm the Cowboys. Wyatt was only a temporary assistant marshal to his brother.

So why do we get it in two versions?

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Same picture, but we gained a guy and a background.

It's a paste-up.

The background guys were all pasted in.

Look closely at the guy to your left.

He appears both very tall and very short at the same time.

He appears tall because he towers over the other guys.

But he appears to be very short if you look at him in isolation.

Look how short he is from waist to shoulder.

Then notice how the floor slopes up as you go back, due to the perspective.

So, his legs would also be very short.

Well, if he is short, how short is that guy next to him?

He is either 4 feet tall or he is standing back about 15 feet.

With that in mind, we can now tell why they cut out the guy to your right.

You can see his foot down in the lower right corner.

So that gives you an idea where the back row was standing.

Now, take that information back to the guy on your left.

Put his feet down on that same line.

Then notice how long that would make his legs relative to his torso.

Impossible.

He would have to be standing on a box for this to make any sense.

Also notice his hand, which is on Earp's shoulder.

Doesn't look right, does it?

The way his forearm goes into his elbow is all wrong.

Also notice the shadow on his neck:


it is two shades darker than everyone else, for no reason.

Also curious is that the gunfight was all but unknown until 1931, 50 years later, when Stuart Lake published a book.

Wikipedia now admits the book was “highly fictional”.

Nonetheless, it was used over the next two decades for many films, including the famous Frontier Marshal and My Darling Clementine.

Of course, it was also used in the 1950s for the popular TV series “The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp”.

The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp | EP 1-4 | COLORIZED | Classic Cowboy Series


This starred Hugh O'Brian, whom I have already outed as a probable agent in my paper on Karl Marx.

O'Brian in 1965 1.01 MB View full-size Download

Hugh O'Brian (born Hugh Charles Krampe; April 19, 1925 – September 5, 2016) was an American actor and humanitarian, best known for his starring roles in the ABC Western television series The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (1955–1961) and the NBC action television series Search (1972–1973). His notable films included the adaptation of Agatha Christie's Ten Little Indians (1965); he also had a notable supporting role in John Wayne's last film, The Shootist (1976).

Reading the Signs – Today’s Lesson: Karl Marx – Library of Rickandria

Strange that Lake the historian was better known as a scriptwriter for Hollywood, also writing:


  • The Westerner
  • Powder River
  • Winchester '73

The last starred Jimmy Stewart:


Studio publicity photograph, 1948 1.43 MB View full-size Download

James Maitland Stewart (May 20, 1908 – July 2, 1997) was an American actor. Known for his distinctive drawl and everyman screen persona, Stewart's film career spanned 80 films from 1935 to 1991. With the strong morality he portrayed both on and off the screen, he epitomized the "American ideal" in the mid-twentieth century. In 1999, the American Film Institute (AFI) ranked him third on its list of the greatest American male actors. He received numerous honors including the AFI Life Achievement Award in 1980, the Kennedy Center Honor in 1983, as well as the Academy Honorary Award and Presidential Medal of Freedom, both in 1985.

see my papers on Lindbergh and Tiger Woods for more on Stewart.

Here I will only remind you he was a Brigadier General in real life.

Before becoming a writer, Lake had been a professional wrestling promoter.

Note that, because we are about to find Wyatt Earp was a fixer of boxing matches.

As for the court transcript, Wikipedia admits this:


Part-time newspaper reporter Howell "Pat" Hayhurst transcribed the testimony from the hearing in the early 1930s as part of a federal Federal Writers' Project, part of the Works Progress Administration.

According to one report, Hayhurst was a friend of the Behan family.

After he completed his transcription, he kept the original document in his home, where it was destroyed in a house fire.

Really?

That's not at all suspicious, is it?

Plus, I can't figure out what the words mean.

Why would the testimony need to be transcribed?

Was it in a foreign language?

I will be told it was in shorthand, but if the trial had been real, the shorthand would have been “transcribed” long before 1930.

Important trials aren't left in shorthand.

Curious this transcription allegedly happened the year before Lake wrote his “highly fictional” book.

I guess the highly fictional book was based on the highly fictional transcript?

Another source of information that has become history is a book by Allie Earp, wife of Virgil.

The American Cowboy Chronicles: The Wives of Virgil, Wyatt, and Morgan Earp

However, historian Allen Barra and Wikipedia both admit the book is a fiction and probably wasn't even written by Allie Earp.

So, that's another one down.

Here's a clue:


Morgan Earp was said to have been murdered sometime later by an unknown assailant.

Morgan Earp, about 1881, in Tombstone 211 KB View full-size Download

Morgan Seth Earp (April 24, 1851 – March 18, 1882) was an American sheriff and lawman. He served as Tombstone, Arizona's Special Policeman when he helped his brothers Virgil and Wyatt, as well as Doc Holliday, confront the outlaw Cochise County Cowboys in the gunfight at the O.K. Corral on October 26, 1881. All three Earp brothers had been the target of repeated death threats made by the Cowboys who were upset by the Earps' interference in their illegal activities. The lawmen killed Cowboys Tom and Frank McLaury and Billy Clanton. All four lawmen were charged with murder by Billy's older brother, Ike Clanton, who had run from the gunfight. During a month-long preliminary hearing, Judge Wells Spicer exonerated the men, concluding they had been performing their duty.

He was shot in the stomach through a window while playing pool.

Dr. George Goodfellow, allegedly the leading expert on stomach wounds in the entire country, just happened to be in the bar with Earp, and he concluded the wounds were fatal.

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George Emory Goodfellow (December 23, 1855 – December 7, 1910) was a physician and naturalist in the 19th- and early 20th-century American Old West who developed a reputation as the United States' foremost expert in treating gunshot wounds. As a medical practitioner in Tombstone, Arizona Territory, Goodfellow treated numerous bullet wounds to both lawmen and outlaws. He recorded several significant medical firsts throughout his career, including performing the first documented laparotomy for treating an abdominal gunshot wound and the first perineal prostatectomy to remove an enlarged prostate. He also pioneered the use of spinal anesthesia and sterile techniques in treating gunshot wounds and is regarded as the first civilian trauma surgeon.

How's that for a coincidence?

The leading specialist on stomach wounds is in the bar with Earp when he gets a fatal stomach wound.

Next, did you know the alleged gunfight didn't even happen at or near the OK Corral?

We are now told the fight happened on Fremont Street, six doors down.

The Corral wasn't even on Fremont, it was on Allen Street.

Did you know the Corral and everything in the vicinity burned down just a few months later in 1882?

Sound familiar?

It is called destroying the scene of the crime, or the scene of the project.

It prevented any forensic work from later being done.

No one is going to look for bullet holes at the OK Corral, are they, or in the old wood.

One, because we are told the fight wasn't there; two, because the original buildings all burned down.

Did the OK Corral even exist?

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Gunfight at the O.K. Corral - Wikipedia

That is supposed to be the picture in 1882, after the fire.

Boy, does that look fake.

Amazing how the sign avoided any touch of the flames.

Also, I imported a really large file so that you can study the details.

Notice that all the men appear to be black.

At least eight men, and they all look black.

Strange, since I didn't realize Tombstone, AZ, had a predominantly black population in 1882.

That isn't Tombstone, it is some burned out town in Alabama or somewhere, with an OK Corral sign layered in.

Now let's look at a picture of Ike Clanton:



Ike Clanton, c.1881. Photo by C. S. Fly. 497 KB View full-size Download

Joseph Isaac Clanton (c.1847 – June 1, 1887) was a member of a loose association of outlaws known as The Cowboys who clashed with lawmen Wyatt, Virgil and Morgan Earp as well as Doc Holliday. On October 26, 1881, Clanton was present at the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral in the boomtown of Tombstone, Arizona Territory but was unarmed and ran from the gunfight, in which his 19-year-old brother Billy was killed.  Clanton filed murder charges against the Earps and Holliday but after a 30-day preliminary hearing, Justice Wells Spicer ruled that the lawmen had acted within their lawful duty. Clanton was implicated in the attempted assassination of Virgil Earp on December 30, 1881, but other Cowboys provided an alibi and he was released. Six years later Clanton was killed attempting to flee when he was shot by a lawman seeking to arrest him for cattle-rustling.

That's another bad paste-up.

The head has been pasted in.

But he doesn't really look like a cowboy anyway, does he?

At the time, cowboys were outlaw cattle rustlers, and Clanton is sold to us by both sides as some sort of varmint.

But there he looks like Little Lord Fauntleroy, with his forehead curl and his hand in his vest.

Just for fun, I am going to include this one, though it is somewhat beyond the subject in the title:


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I ran across that one searching for other photos of Ike Clanton.

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There aren't any.

But that is supposed to be a young Jesse James.

James c. 1882 1.11 MB View full-size Download

Jesse Woodson James (September 5, 1847 – April 3, 1882) was an American outlaw, bank and train robber, guerrilla and leader of the James–Younger Gang. Raised in the "Little Dixie" area of Missouri, James and his family maintained strong Southern sympathies. He and his brother Frank James joined pro-Confederate guerrillas known as "bushwhackers" operating in Missouri and Kansas during the American Civil War. As followers of William Quantrill and "Bloody Bill" Anderson, they were accused of committing atrocities against Union soldiers and civilian abolitionists, including the Centralia Massacre in 1864.

The problem:


the first one is a woman.

They are messing with you.

She actually looks nothing like the other pictures of a young Jesse James.

It's a paste-up.

See how the neck isn't right?

It is too dark, and it slopes wrong to your left.

They just pasted this woman's head in and then roughed up the photo to make it look old.

There are several other famous photos of James, but none of them match.

They have at least four people playing James, and at least one of them (maybe two) is a woman. 

While we are offtrack, take a look at this one:


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James Butler Hickok (May 27, 1837 – August 2, 1876), better known as "Wild Bill" Hickok, was a folk hero of the American Old West known for his life on the frontier as a soldier, scout, lawman, cattle rustler, gunslinger, gambler, showman, and actor, and for his involvement in many famous gunfights. He earned a great deal of notoriety in his own time, much of it bolstered by the many outlandish and often fabricated tales he told about himself. Some contemporaneous reports of his exploits are known to be fictitious, but they remain the basis of much of his fame and reputation.

That's supposed to be Wild Bill Hickok.

Why does he look so much like a Jewish actor playing Wild Bill?

Look at that nose!

Here he is again:


image.png 267 KB View full-size Download


He has a strong resemblance to actor Kevin Kline, also Jewish.

Kline in 1989 261 KB View full-size Download

Kevin Delaney Kline (born October 24, 1947) is an American actor. In a career spanning over five decades, he has become a prominent leading man across both stage and screen. His accolades include an Academy Award and three Tony Awards, along with nominations for two British Academy Film Awards, two Primetime Emmy Awards, and five Golden Globe Awards. In 2003, he was inducted into the American Theatre Hall of Fame.

CIA: Central Intelligence Agency – Library of Rickandria

Well, it could be because Hickok's maternal grandmother was Eunice Kingsley, daughter of Samuel Kingsley.

They hail from Massachusetts, and their lines are stiff with Jewish names.

Samuel Kingsley, III (1694 - 1745) - Genealogy (geni.com)

Like:


  • Susannah Knapp
  • Israel Butler
  • Hannah Luce

and so on.

He is also related to:


  • the Blanchards
  • the Bracketts
  • the Hoopers
  • the Packards

and the Whitings.

As a Kingsley, he may be related to slave trader Zephaniah Kingsley.

He may also be related to spook novelist Charles Kingsley.

image.png 2.75 MB View full-size Download

Charles Kingsley (12 June 1819 – 23 January 1875) was a broad church priest of the Church of England, a university professor, social reformer, historian, novelist and poet. He is particularly associated with Christian socialism, the working men's college, and forming labor cooperatives, which failed, but encouraged later working reforms.

And of course, this allows us to read the “dead man's hand”, which Hickok was allegedly holding when he was shot:


aces and eights.

That is another signal of the spooks.

I guess they thought a pair of threes was a little too obvious.

But let's return to the main line.

Here's another clue:


during Wyatt Earp's so-called vendetta ride to kill those he thought murdered his brother Morgan, federal marshal Earp formed a posse.

But this posse was completely illegal, since the men hadn't been tried.

There had been an inquest, but it had failed for lack of evidence.

So technically this wasn't a federal posse, it was an illegal lynch mob.

They are said to have murdered four people in cold blood.

But anyway, the clue is when Earp and Doc Holliday later split.

Autographed portrait, Prescott, Arizona, c. 1879 232 KB View full-size Download

John Henry Holliday (August 14, 1851[citation needed] – November 8, 1887), better known as Doc Holliday, was an American dentist, gambler, and gunfighter who was a close friend and associate of lawman Wyatt Earp. Holliday is best known for his role in the events surrounding and his participation in the gunfight at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona. He developed a reputation as having killed more than a dozen men in various altercations, but modern researchers have concluded that, contrary to popular myth-making, Holliday killed only one to three men. Holliday's colorful life and character have been depicted in many books and portrayed by well-known actors in numerous movies and television series.

Holliday called Earp “a damn Jew-boy”.

Exposing the Jews – Library of Rickandria

Curious to find that raising its head again here, isn't it?

I guess I could be researching deepwater squid, and I would find one squid calling the other a damn Jew-boy.

But it wasn't just a slur:


it is admitted that Earp's wife was Jewish and that he was staying with the very wealthy Albuquerque businessman Henry N. Jaffa, head of the local Board of Trade and later first mayor of Albuquerque.

Henry and Nathan Jaffa (jewishvirtuallibrary.org)

Jaffa was also Jewish.

According to New Mexico Governor Miguel Otero, Earp performed mezuzah upon entering Jaffa's home.

image.png 1.21 MB View full-size Download

Miguel Antonio Otero II (October 17, 1859 – August 7, 1944) was an American politician, businessman, and author who served as the 16th Governor of New Mexico Territory from 1897 to 1906. He was the son of Miguel Antonio Otero, a prominent businessman and New Mexico politician.

This is doubly strange because no Gentile guest in a Jewish home would be expected to perform such a ceremony.

Pagan (Called Satanic, Gentile or Goyim by the Jews) – Library of Rickandria

In fact, it would look odd if he did.

What this indicates to me is that the Earps were Jewish.

Wyatt's mother was named Cooksey, and her sister married James Tilford.

Another sister married an Atherton.

All three names may be Jewish.

I was forced to study sibling marriages since otherwise all the main female lines have been scrubbed— which is also a clue.

But let us return to Henry Jaffa.

First of all, he is related to the later Harry Jaffa, the fake historian who wrote about the Lincoln-Douglas debates.

His 1959 book has been called the greatest book on Lincoln ever, but since I discovered more about Lincoln in my short paper than all these historians put together, that isn't saying much.

Lincoln’s Assassination was a Manufactured Event: Meaning it NEVER Happened – Library of Rickandria

His Wiki page admits his grandmother was from Poland but doesn't admit he is Jewish.

Harry Jaffa was a stooge of the Claremont Institute, another spook front calling itself a conservative think tank.

That should be “doublethink” tank.

It is tied to Leo Strauss and that school of fake economics, but it specializes in faking history.

image.png 134 KB View full-size Download

Leo Strauss[a] (September 20, 1899 – October 18, 1973) was an American scholar of political philosophy. Born in Germany to Jewish parents, Strauss later emigrated from Germany to the United States. He spent much of his career as a professor of political science at the University of Chicago, where he taught several generations of students and published fifteen books.

It also specializes in creating confusion, as you can see from the current Wiki page on the Institute.

Although Jaffa wrote two big books on Lincoln, and the Institute was supposedly founded by his students in 1979, we find a quote by current Senior Fellow Charles Kesler as follows:


We think conservatism should take its bearings from the founders' statesmanship, our citizens' loyalty to the Declaration and Constitution, and the scenes, both tender and proud, of our national history.

This kind of approach clears the air.

It concentrates the mind.

It engages and informs the ordinary citizen's patriotism.

And it introduces a new, sharper view of liberalism as descended not from:


  • the French Revolution
  • the Industrial Revolution
  • nor (God forbid) Abraham Lincoln

but from that movement which, a century ago, criticized George Washington's and Lincoln's Constitution as outmoded and, as we'd say today:


  • racist
  • sexist
  • antidemocratic

Note the “God forbid” in reference to Lincoln.

Make sense of that if you dare.

But back to Henry Jaffa and Albuquerque.

Although Wyatt Earp's “posse” had just allegedly killed four men in cold blood, although there were warrants out for the entire posse's arrest, although Albuquerque was swimming with local police and federal marshals, and although Earp was staying with one of the town's most prominent citizens, we are supposed to believe he was just left alone—even after the big posse split up and he was no longer protected by it.

Is that the way things worked?

No.

They don't work that way now and they didn't work that way then.

Earp would have been left alone for only one of two reasons:


one, this was all fake and the authorities knew that; two, Earp was with Intelligence on one of their projects, and was therefore protected from locals and their warrants.

Earp then went to Colorado, first Trinidad and then Gunnison, where we are supposed to believe Arizona murder warrants were also ignored.

After that, we never hear about the murder warrants again.

Earp lived another 48 years, and never once was he inconvenienced for those murders.

Now let us take a breather and study another photo:


image.png 238 KB View full-size Download

That is tagged as Wyatt Earp in Nome with John Clum.

John P. Clum c. 1880 420 KB View full-size Download

John Philip Clum (September 1, 1851 – May 2, 1932) was an Indian agent for the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in the Arizona Territory. He implemented a limited form of self-government on the reservation that was so successful that other reservations were closed, and their residents moved to San Carlos. Clum later became the first mayor of Tombstone, Arizona Territory, after its incorporation in 1881. He also founded the still operating The Tombstone Epitaph on May 1, 1880. He later served in various postal service positions across the United States.

The problem?

Earp is sold to us as very tall for the time, being all of six feet.

Does he look six feet tall there?

Nope, not even close.

Both men look very short.

So, let's go back to this one:


image.png 1.43 MB View full-size Download

Earp is the second seated.

Again, does he look abnormally tall there?

No, he isn't even as tall in the shoulder as the fat man next to him, and he is only an inch taller than the very small man to his left.

As we saw with Custer, Earp's height has been inflated by at least six inches.

Portrait by Mathew Brady, c. 1865 2.33 MB View full-size Download

George Armstrong Custer (December 5, 1839 – June 25, 1876) was a United States Army officer and cavalry commander in the American Civil War and the American Indian Wars.

Custer’s Last Stand was a False Flag – Library of Rickandria

Everything we study is a lie.

Now, what about Earp's wife, the Jewish Josephine Marcus?

Generally accepted to be a picture of Earp in Prescott, Arizona Territory, in 1880. 363 KB View full-size Download

Josephine Sarah "Sadie" Earp (née Marcus; 1861 – December 19, 1944) was the common-law wife of Wyatt Earp, a famed Old West lawman and gambler. She met Wyatt in 1881 in the frontier boom town of Tombstone in Arizona Territory, when she was living with Johnny Behan, sheriff of Cochise County, Arizona.

We are told that although she was born in New York, her father was a baker in San Francisco, where they moved when she was very young.

But that doesn't explain this:


Pauline Markham, c. 1860s. Josephine said she joined Markham's theater troupe in 1879 in San Francisco before it toured to Arizona, but no record of Josephine or Sadie Marcus as a member of the group has been found. 570 KB View full-size Download

Both of these were taken from her Wiki page.

image.png 299 KB View full-size Download


Notice the subtext in the first one.

New York.

How old does she look?

I would say 18 to 24.

But she was supposed to be a runaway by age 14, going to Tombstone to become a hooker.

Looks like that is false.

Then compare the two.

Same woman?

I would say no.

But the New York tag tells us even more.

Why are they hiding or downplaying the New York connection?

Because they don't want you to link her to other wealthy Jewish Marcuses in New York, like the Marcus of Neiman Marcus.

Neiman Marcus - Wikipedia

We are told that Herbert Marcus was from Kentucky and then Dallas, but his father is listed as Jacob, and it appears the family was originally from New York.

His genealogy is mostly scrubbed, but it is possible to discover his mother was Delia Bloomfield, daughter of Jacob.

They may be related to the wealthy and influential Bloomfields of New York and New Jersey, including the fourth Governor of New Jersey.

But regardless of that, ask yourself if Josephine looks like the daughter of a baker in that first picture.

Does she look like she is about to run away to be a Tombstone hooker?

No.

She looks like a Jewish princess.

So, it is somewhat odd to find her hooking up with Earp at age 21.

Why was Earp basically marrying this Jewish princess in 1882?

As usual, Tombstone is starting to stink of a big project, probably having something to do with Intelligence.

Remember, it is admitted the Earp brothers had worked for Wells Fargo Bank, which is a big clue here as well.

And Tombstone was a silver mining town.

Although we are taught it was small, it actually had two banks and three newspapers.

The newspapers are a clue as well.

You should ask yourself why a town of 7,000 would need three newspapers.

As we know, newspapers are propaganda machines, and they are always owned by the wealthiest people in the area.

So, apparently someone thought Tombstone was in need of serious amounts of propaganda.

We are told that Tombstone was founded by a U. S. Army scout from Camp Huachuca in 1877.

Fort Huachuca - Wikipedia

This Army Camp has been a base of Intel projects from the beginning, and we have run across it already.

It is a base for Intel to this day, and that is admitted.

Huachuca was founded by General Whitside, who had been involved with the 7th Cavalry (see Custer).

Brig. Gen. S. M. Whitside at Santiago de Cuba, 10 Jun 1901, while serving as Commanding General of the District of Santiago 1.28 MB View full-size Download

Samuel M. Whitside was a United States Cavalry officer who served from 1858 to 1902. He commanded at every level from company to department for 32 of his 43 years in service, including Army posts such a Camp Huachuca, Jefferson Barracks, and Fort Sam Houston, the Departments of Eastern Cuba and Santiago and Puerto Principe, Cuba, commanded a provisional cavalry brigade (consisting of the 10th and 5th Cavalry Regiments), a squadron in the 7th Cavalry Regiment, and a troop and platoon in the 6th Cavalry Regiment. The pinnacle of his career was serving as the commanding general of the Department of Eastern Cuba before retiring in June 1902 as a brigadier general in the U.S. Army. Most history books record three events during his career: the founding of Fort Huachuca, Arizona, the massacre at Wounded Knee, and his continued role as a battalion commander during the Pine Ridge Campaign of 1890–91. These events are arguably the most noteworthy in Whitside's four decades in the U.S. cavalry.

He was also battalion commander at Wounded Knee in 1890.

Guess who was Whitside's early commander and overseer in the Civil War?

image.png 104 KB View full-size Download

Charles Russell Lowell III (January 2, 1835 – October 20, 1864) was a railroad executive, foundryman, and General in the Union Army during the American Civil War. He was mortally wounded at the Battle of Cedar Creek and was mourned by a number of leading generals.

Charles Russell Lowell III.

Yes, this is a Lowell of the Lowells of Boston, the Brahmins who have always been prominent in Intelligence.

He was an early railroad and iron tycoon.

His brother was the poet James Russell Lowell.

James Russell Lowell, c. 1855 8.65 MB View full-size Download

James Russell Lowell (/ˈloʊəl/; February 22, 1819 – August 12, 1891) was an American Romantic poet, critic, editor, and diplomat. He is associated with the fireside poets, a group of New England writers who were among the first American poets that rivaled the popularity of British poets. These writers usually used conventional forms and meters in their poetry, making them suitable for families entertaining at their fireside.

His mother was Anna Cabot Jackson [note both the Cabot and the Jackson], and her father was Patrick Tracy Jackson, one of the wealthiest men in Massachusetts.

image.png 2.31 MB View full-size Download

Patrick Tracy Jackson (August 14, 1780 – September 12, 1847) was an American manufacturer, one of the founders of the Boston Manufacturing Company of Waltham, Massachusetts, and later a founder of the Merrimack Manufacturing Company, whose developments formed the nucleus of Lowell, Massachusetts.

With Francis Cabot Lowell he owned the Boston Manufacturing Company, the largest factory in the US at the time.

Anyway, Charles Lowell III was also a general in the Civil War, and he is probably the one who recruited Whitside for Intelligence.

Whitside was also a member of MOLLUS, which we saw in my paper on Custer.

Custer’s Last Stand was a False Flag – Library of Rickandria

It was probably an Intel front, since it seems to have had connections to the Pinkerton Agency—which was a precursor of both the CIA and the Secret Service.

Whitside's son-in-law was Lt. Col Archie Miller (note the rank), involved in the fake wars in Cuba and the Philippines.

image.png 60.8 KB View full-size Download

Archie Miller (September 23, 1878 – May 28, 1921) was a United States Army officer who received the Medal of Honor for actions during the Philippine–American War July 2, 1909. Lieutenant Miller defended a machine gun from capture by the enemy. He later rose to lieutenant colonel.  He was serving as a first lieutenant in the 6th U.S. Cavalry at Patian Island, Philippine Islands, on July 2, 1909, when he earned his Medal of Honor. Sergeant Joseph Henderson also received the medal for the same action.

Ft. Huachuca was involved in the Buffalo Soldiers propaganda.

Buffalo Soldier - Wikipedia

More recently it was involved in the Gabby Giffords event, as we saw in my paper on the fake Boston Marathon bombing.

Giffords in 2022 2.23 MB View full-size Download

Gabrielle Dee Giffords (born June 8, 1970) is an American retired politician and gun control activist. She served as a member of the United States House of Representatives representing Arizona's 8th congressional district from January 2007 until January 2012, when she resigned because of a severe brain injury suffered during an assassination attempt. A member of the Democratic Party, she was the third woman in Arizona's history to be elected to the U.S. Congress.

The Boston Marathon or the Case of the Four Fences – Library of Rickandria

So, finding this Army Fort connected to Tombstone is another big clue.

There were several mines in Tombstone, including the famous Tough Nut Mine.

We are told the army scout Ed Schieffelin sold his claim there in 1881 for a million dollars to Philadelphia capitalists, but they are not named.

Schieffelin in 1882 395 KB View full-size Download

Edward Lawrence Schieffelin (1847–1897) was an Indian scout and prospector who discovered silver in the Arizona Territory, which led to the founding of Tombstone, Arizona. He entered into a partnership with his brother Al and mining engineer Richard Gird in a handshake deal that produced millions of dollars in wealth for all three men. During the course of Tombstone's mining history, about US $85,000,000 in silver was produced from its mines.

Also curious is that the various sites can't get his name right, some spelling it “ie” and some “ei”.

Wikipedia tells us the former, but the University of Arizona says the latter, and its evidence is a document dated 1881.

They also can't get the first and middle names right.

Wikipedia tells us he is Edward Lawrence Schiefellin, while U of A tells us he was A. E. Scheiffelin.

The population of Tombstone is also inflated, being given as 14,000 at Wiki but half that at U of A.

The document also tells us the mines were producing half a million in silver bullion a month, so it is hard to understand why Schiefellin would sell his stake for a million.

He could have made that in two months.

In its short history, the mines around Tombstone made over 85 million, which would be almost 2 billion today.

But remember, if Schieffelin were working for the US Army, he wouldn't own the stake.

The Army would.

So, none of this makes any sense, as usual.

The U of A document makes it clear that the mines are all owned by big companies out of state, so the idea that private prospectors were working veins is more hooey.

One of the largest veins, the Grand Central South, was owned by parties in San Francisco.

That is where Josephine Marcus was from, remember?

It is worth mentioning that Schieffelin was also probably Jewish.

A perusal of the genealogies finds not only that, but other interesting things.

For one, the Schieffelins were business partners with the Lowells.

See the page of Col. Edward Schieffelin, where at the bottom we find the company Bailey, Wright, Lowell and Schieffelin.

They owned a large tannery in Stokesdale, PA, in 1871 which later became the Wellsboro Leather Company.

1897 Tioga County PA History - Chapter 23 - Delmar Township (joycetice.com)

This is curious, because Wiki tells us the Ed Schieffelin in Tombstone was born in Wellsboro, PA.

They give no month or day, but the year is given as 1847.

Note the date.

Looks like an Intel marker, doesn't it?

If we check the Col. Ed Schieffelin at Geni, we find a birth year of 1836.

So, they were from the same period.

Geni tells us one was the uncle of the other, but I smell a rat.

Ed's wife Mary Brown has no genealogy.

Even worse, none of the photos of Ed Schieffelin match.

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The first is dated 1882, the second 1880, and the third we assume is in the 1890s.

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He sure went bald fast, didn't he?

At age 33 he had a receding hairline and at age 35 he was bald as cueball?

And the third photo looks like a total fake to me.

It looks like a modern photo posing as a period photo.

It is too good.

One, it has no flaws, two, it has been offered to us blurry, three it is the wrong color.

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Finally, we get this one from the New York Public Library Collection, where he looks very Jewish, but where he looks nothing like the other listed photos.

That might possibly match the second one above, but it definitely doesn't match the first or third.

They haven't bothered posting that at Wiki, for what I think are obvious reasons.

He looks like someone out of a Dostoevsky novel.

We also find Willets on Schieffelin's mother's side.

Sharon Tate's mother was named Doris Willet.

And finally, we find on his Geni page that Col. Edward G. Schieffelin had a twin who allegedly died at birth.

Oy vay!

That ties us to my papers on Elvis and Paul McCartney.

Intel loves twins, as we know.

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That is supposed to be Wyatt Earp and Bat Masterson, from Masterson's Wiki page.

Bat Masterson in 1879, age 26 65.6 KB View full-size Download

Bartholemew William Barclay "Bat" Masterson (November 26, 1853 – October 25, 1921) was a U.S. Army scout, lawman, professional gambler, and journalist known for his exploits in the late 19th and early 20th-century American Old West. He was born to a working-class Irish family in Quebec, but he moved to the Western frontier as a young man and quickly distinguished himself as a buffalo hunter, civilian scout, and Indian fighter on the Great Plains. He later earned fame as a gunfighter and sheriff in Dodge City, Kansas, during which time he was involved in several notable shootouts.

Do you think it might be a paste-up?

Hard to believe they even publish stuff like this.

It looks like it was pasted up by a child with little round scissors and a pot of Elmer's Glue-All. 

Look how long Masterson's neck is!

And the line of his neck to your left is outside his shirt.

How does that happen?

Read Masterson's Wiki bio and you will quickly come to the same conclusion I did:


he was another covert agent for the banks.

All of his derring-do looks manufactured, and he was mostly just a faro dealer, boxing fixer, and then journalist.

Do gunfighters normally become journalists?

No.

But faro dealers were fronts for the banks.

They even admit on his Wiki page that faro dealers were known as makeshift bankers.

Like the rest of these people, Masterson skated all charges in many projects, and that only happens for agents.

Masterson was the protege of many spooks, including the Lewis brothers.

William E. Lewis owned the New York Morning Telegraph, where Masterson wrote a sports column.

His brother Alfred Lewis was a famous writer, and he later wrote a biography of Masterson which even Wikipedia admits was “fictionalized”.

He was editor of the Chicago Times-Herald and later wrote for Cosmopolitan.

His most famous book is a biography of Andrew Jackson, which is also fictionalized— although they don't usually admit that. [Remember, we saw the name Jackson already: Charles Lowell's mother was a Jackson.]

These Lewises were related to Philadelphia railroad tycoon William D. Lewis, and his son New York railway baron Daniel Lewis.

William E. Lewis married Frances Oviatt, which name we have seen before.

She is also related to the Newtons. William D. Lewis married Sarah Claypoole.

They were also related to the Steeles and Barnes, including Julius Steele Barnes.

That's curious, because Wild Bill Hickok's sister Lydia married James Hughes Barnes.

These people may also be related to the later Albert Barnes of the Barnes Collection, Philadelphia.

Albert C. Barnes in 1940 1.39 MB View full-size Download

Albert Coombs Barnes (January 2, 1872 – July 24, 1951) was an American chemist, businessman, art collector, writer, and educator, and the founder of the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

That Barnes looks like another spook, with a scrubbed genealogy and an impossible bio.

His mother was a Schafer, which may be Jewish.

Although he was said to have been from a working-class background, putting himself through the University of Pennsylvania by boxing and semi-pro baseball, he allegedly was a doctor of medicine by age 20.

Really?

Even Doogie Howser didn't put himself through school, as far as I remember.

We are told Barnes graduated high school in 1889 and medical school in 1892.

At that link, we discover something Wikipedia didn't wish to tell us:


Barnes studied in Berlin in 1894-95, though we aren't told what he was studying.

He then got another doctorate (in pharmacology?) in Heidelberg in 1900.

He married the very wealthy Laura Leggett in 1901, although we aren't told how he managed that.

He wasn't yet wealthy himself.

Only after marrying Leggett did Barnes start manufacturing the drug which made him wealthy.

Within a decade Barnes was very wealthy and collecting modern art.

He met the Steins in Paris in 1912.

Barnes also became a protege of John Dewey.

image.png 1.4 MB View full-size Download

John Dewey (/ˈduːi/; October 20, 1859 – June 1, 1952) was an American philosopher, psychologist, and educational reformer. He was one of the most prominent American scholars in the first half of the twentieth century.

All this is a red flag, as we have seen in my paper on the Paris Salon.

The Stolen Century – Library of Rickandria

Barnes purchased Cezanne's The Card Players in 1925, a painting whose twin recently sold for $300 million to the King (Emir) of Qatar.

The Card Players - Wikipedia

See my paper on money laundering for more on that.

I Would Like to File a Suspicious Transactions Report on the entire 20th century – Library of Rickandria

Which brings us back to Wyatt Earp.

Like Masterson, Earp was a boxing fixer, and I don't use the word “fixer” as speculation.

In his own time, Earp wasn't known as he is now as a great lawman and gunfighter.

Instead, he was known as the one who got caught fixing the Fitzsimmons-Sharkey fight.

Bob Fitzsimmons vs. Tom Sharkey - Wikipedia

It was one of the few times the fixers got caught.

Earp was the last-minute replacement as referee, so when the fix eventually became known, he had nowhere to hide.

A caricature of Earp from The New York Herald mocking him after the Sharkey-Fitzimmons fight. The image dogged him the rest of his life. 940 KB View full-size Download


We are told the fix destroyed his reputation, but he didn't actually have much of a reputation.

His reputation came later, and was totally manufactured, as we are seeing.

One of the ring doctors involved in the fix was later arrested for the fraud, but of course Earp skated.

He fled to Alaska, where he hung out with Jack London, another actor, agent and fraud.

London in 1903 1.41 MB View full-size Download

John Griffith Chaney (January 12, 1876 – November 22, 1916), better known as Jack London, was an American novelist, journalist and activist. A pioneer of commercial fiction and American magazines, he was one of the first American authors to become an international celebrity and earn a large fortune from writing. He was also an innovator in the genre that would later become known as science fiction.

Outing Jack London in all ways – Library of Rickandria

Earp returned to Seattle to open another gambling house, but by then [1899] he had been pretty thoroughly outed and his contacts were dwindling.

Back then, the State still had some power against the Feds, and Washington State soon drove him out as a small-time mobster.

Earp moved around a lot after that and was not a celebrity anywhere he went.

He ended up in LA in 1910, doing some small-time dirty work for the cops, so we may assume his money had run out.

Even there he got arrested for running faro cons, but of course skated.

Interestingly, we find that his Jewish wife Josephine was still receiving substantial money from her family in 1923, although she was by then 63.

This is more proof she was from wealth, not from a family of bakers.

Notice that we only have to add an “n” to that for bakers to become bankers.

Global Banking System – Library of Rickandria

Clever of them, right?

At about this time Earp began working on his autobiography.

It is admitted it is highly exaggerated, but a better word would be fake.

All the high points were made up from whole cloth and all the low points were whitewashed or jettisoned.

But Earp couldn't find a publisher.

No one was interested, which may suggest to you the real fame of Earp at the time.

Although the manuscript survives, no publisher has taken it up to this day.

Why not?

Because despite being a total fiction and whitewash, it conflicts with some of the current propaganda.

It is also interesting to discover Earp and Jack London hanging out in Hollywood with director Raoul Walsh.

Walsh, c. 1918 3.52 MB View full-size Download

Raoul Walsh (born Albert Edward Walsh; March 11, 1887 – December 31, 1980) was an American film director, actor, founding member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), and the brother of silent screen actor George Walsh. He was known for portraying John Wilkes Booth in the silent film The Birth of a Nation (1915) and for directing such films as the widescreen epic The Big Trail (1930) starring John Wayne in his first leading role, The Roaring Twenties starring James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart, High Sierra (1941) starring Ida Lupino and Humphrey Bogart, and White Heat (1949) starring James Cagney and Edmond O'Brien. He directed his last film in 1964. His work has been noted as influences on directors such as Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Jack Hill, and Martin Scorsese.

Although we are told Walsh was Irish, it is very doubtful.

I could find no genealogy for either Raoul Walsh or Albert Edward Walsh.

His mother is given as Elizabeth Bruff, but she is also a ghost.

Walsh is interesting for many reasons, not the least of which is that he gained fame for playing John Wilkes Booth in The Birth of a Nation—one of the first major propaganda pictures. 

Remember, we have discovered the actor Booth was Jewish:


his own descendants are now admitting it.

A Jewish actor, imagine that.

Walsh became a top director, and he is the one who discovered John Wayne, working at the time as a prop boy, we are told.

Wayne c. 1965 681 KB View full-size Download

Marion Robert Morrison (May 26, 1907 – June 11, 1979), professionally known as John Wayne and nicknamed "the Duke", was an American actor who became a popular icon through his starring roles in films which were produced during Hollywood's Golden Age, especially in Western and war movies. His career flourished from the silent era of the 1920s through the American New Wave, as he appeared in a total of 179 film and television productions. He was among the top box-office draws for three decades and appeared with many other important Hollywood stars of his era. In 1999, the American Film Institute selected Wayne as one of the greatest male stars of classic American cinema.

Walsh also worked with Ida Lupino, whom I have outed in recent papers, including my paper on Karl Marx.

Lupino before performance on the radio series Cavalcade of America 1.44 MB View full-size Download

Ida Lupino (4 February 1918[1] – 3 August 1995) was a British actress, director, writer, and producer. Throughout her 48-year career, she appeared in 59 films and directed eight, working primarily in the United States, where she became a citizen in 1948. She is widely regarded as the most prominent female filmmaker working in the 1950s during the Hollywood studio system. With her independent production company, she co-wrote and co-produced several social-message films and became the first woman to direct a film noir, The Hitch-Hiker, in 1953.


One of Walsh's greatest quotes is also worth repeating here:


"You can really double anybody.

If the action is good enough, it can be a monkey with top-hat and spats.”

Hmmm.

He is admitting that audiences are easy to fool with body doubles.

I said pretty much the same thing in my paper on the Kennedys, though I used a gorilla in a tutu rather than a monkey in a top hat in my analogy.

THE HIDDEN KING(S): Camelot Ruled from the Cave of Merlin – Library of Rickandria

Griffith in 1922 866 KB View full-size Download

David Wark Griffith (January 22, 1875 – July 23, 1948) was an American film director. Considered one of the most influential figures in the history of the motion picture, he pioneered many aspects of film editing and expanded the art of the narrative film.

In that line, it is informative to read that Walsh worked with D. W. Griffith in the making of The Life of General Villa, starring as Pancho Villa. . . wait for it. . . Pancho Villa.

Pancho Villa on horseback c. 1908–1919 2.3 MB View full-size Download

Francisco "Pancho" Villa (UK: /ˈpæntʃoʊ ˈviːə/ PAN-choh VEE-ə,[3][4] US: /ˈpɑːntʃoʊ ˈviː(j)ə/ PAHN-choh VEE-(y)ə,[3][5] Spanish: [ˈpantʃo ˈβiʎa]; born José Doroteo Arango Arámbula; 5 June 1878 – 20 July 1923) was a Mexican revolutionary.

We are told parts of the film were shot on location in Mexico during the actual battles.

Talk about blurring the line between history and propaganda, I mean between truth and fiction.

So, to find Earp with both London and Walsh in Hollywood is a big red flag, one that confirms my thesis here.

Like the others, he was an agent in the big project to manufacture history.

Finally, it is admitted that Earp was buried in the Marcus family plot in a Jewish cemetery.

As usual, he was cremated, and the ashes have since been undiscoverable.

Although said to be in that cemetery in Colma, they were unlocatable twice in 1957, once by the Tombstone Restoration Commission and once by thieves.

The thieves actually dug up the whole plot.

Finding nothing, they stole the headstone.

Despite Earp being mostly a fictional character, his Wikipedia page is longer than the pages of Leonardo da Vinci or Isaac Newton.

To give you an example, Leonardo's page has 21 footnotes; Newton's has 157; Earp's page has 287.

So, if most of this never happened, what is it all about?

As we have seen, it was all one more front for Intelligence and the Industrialists.

These “marshals” and so on, when they weren't just Jewish actors, were agents acting as cover for hidden projects.

As usual, it was a kind of diversion.

They wanted your eyes off the bankers, Industrialists and real events, and on the agents and their fake events.

Same as now.

Nothing much has changed but the clothing and mustaches.

They have to keep the real history out of the papers, replacing it with a manufactured history. 

Since this manufactured history is much more:


  • colorful
  • sexy
  • violent

and cinematic, it was not hard to sell:


people prefer the fake history to the real thing every time.

I should know.

Despite the fact that a minority find my research fascinating, I admit it is a difficult sell to your average movie-goer or even your average book collector.

The truth would require people to dispense with a large part of their past entertainment, including most of their old heroes, so it is not something they are clamoring for.

I mean, once we clear out all this fake history, what do we have left?

With only the truth, how do we fill our days?

SAUCE:

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