

DOC HOLLIDAY FREE
Knowing that the mob would quickly overtake the local lawmen, “Big Nose” Kate devised a plan to free Holliday from his confines. Bully or no, a vigilante group formed to seek revenge on Holliday. However, he was still arrested and incarcerated in a local hotel room, there being no jail in the town. Knowing that his actions were in self-defense, Doc did not run. With blood spilled everywhere, Bailey lay sprawled across the table. Bailey immediately brought out his pistol from under the table, but before the man could pull the trigger, Doc’s lethal knife slashed the man across the stomach. This time, Doc raked in the pot without showing his hand, nor saying a word. Though Holliday warned Bailey twice, the bully ignored him and picked up the discards again. Looking at the discards was strictly prohibited by the rules of Western Poker, a violation that could force the player to forfeit the pot. Bailey was unimpressed with Doc’s reputation and in an attempt to irritate him he kept picking up the discards and looking at them. While still in Fort Griffin in 1877, Doc was dealing cards to a local bully by the name of Ed Bailey, who was accustomed to having his own way without question. Their relationship was often rocky, with Kate still plying her trade as a prostitute from time to time. Kate would spend the next several years with Holliday, traveling to Kansas, Colorado, South Dakota, and New Mexico. She said she worked the business because she liked it, belonging to no man, nor to any house! Kate was tough, stubborn, and with a temper that matched Doc’s. While the dance hall girl and prostitute was attractive, she did have a prominent nose. By this time, Kate had earned the nickname “Big Nose” Kate. A couple of years later she moved south to Fort Griffin, Texas, she met Doc Holliday at John Shanssey’s Saloon, where Holliday was dealing cards. In 1875 she was going by the name of Kate Elder and was listed as being in Dodge City, Kansas working as a dance hall girl. Though Kate always stated that she did not meet Wyatt Earp until she was in Fort Griffin, Texas, she and Wyatt Earp were in Wichita at the same time, and it has been speculated that she had a relationship with Wyatt at that time. Later, Kate married a dentist by the name of Silas Melvin and the couple had a child. However, both husband and child passed away in the same year.īy 1874 Kate was said to have been in Wichita, Kansas and later she was working in a sporting house for Nellie Bessie Earp the wife of James Earp. There, she assumed Fisher’s name and enrolled in a convent school. Though the ship’s captain, a man named Fisher, found her, he did not put her off the ship, but rather, allowed her to stay on to St. In 1867, Kate was in the care of a man by the name of Otto Smith, but the young woman cut her stay with Smith short, stowing away on a steamship headed for St. Kate and the rest of the children were placed in foster homes. On March 26, 1865, when Kate was just fourteen years old, her mother died and just two months later, her father passed away too. The Haroney family fled the country and settled in Davenport, Iowa. With the appointment, the family left Hungary for Mexico, but in 1865 Maximillian’s rule crumbled. Though she was born to a prominent family, Kate would grow up to be just one of the many “soiled doves” of the American West, as well claiming a small slice of fame as Doc Holliday’s on and off girlfriend.īorn Mary Katherine Haroney in Hungary on November 7, 1850, Kate was the daughter of a physician who had been appointed as the personal surgeon of Mexico’s Emperor, Maximillian, in 1862.
