Kurt Russell’s Western classic Tombstone features a huge number of real historical figures, but it doesn’t fully explain what happened to the survivors of the Earps’ fight against the Cowboys. There are plenty of deaths in Tombstone, from the righteous killings of hardened criminals like Curly Bill Brocious (Powers Boothe) to the tragic demise of Doc Holliday (Val Kilmer). In fact, by the ending of Tombstone, most of the movie’s cast had died, and only a handful of major characters actually survived. Those lucky few survivors would go on to live for several more years, and viewers may wonder what became of them.
There is a short bit of narration at the end of Tombstone that explains the eventual fates of some major characters, but it doesn’t capture the full story of their lives after leaving Arizona. Some of the survivors lived long, happy, and wildly eventful lives, while others met their tragic demise just years later. Tombstone also gets a few facts about the survivors wrong, and one character who died in the movie likely lived for at least a few more years. Everyone who made it out of Tombstone alive, however, had something interesting happen to them.
Wyatt Earp
Wyatt Married Josephine & Lived Adventurously Until 1929
The events of Tombstone were just the start of Wyatt Earp’s incredibly long and eventful life. As shown in Tombstone, Wyatt married Josephine Marcus (Dana Delany) and began travelling the country with her, getting into various adventures along the way. At various times, Wyatt worked as a boxing referee, a gold prospector, and as a movie consultant during Hollywood’s golden age. He also moved all across the country: Wyatt Earp opened a saloon in Nome, Alaska, and he also reunited with his brother, Virgil, at some point in California. The list of things Wyatt didn’t do after Tombstone is shorter.
Wyatt Earp also had a huge amount of time after the gunfight at the OK Corral. Tombstone takes place in and around 1882, but Wyatt Earp didn’t die until 1929, when he was 80 years old. Ultimately, it was a urinary tract infection that took Wyatt’s life (via Casey Terfertiller), and he died in his home on January 13, 1929, with Josephine by his side. He had no children, but his legend has lived on for well over a century.
Josephine Marcus
Josephine & Wyatt Traveled & Gambled Across The United States
Josephine’s life after the events of Tombstone was very similar to Wyatt’s, as the couple were reportedly inseparable. Josephine and Wyatt traveled the country together for decades, though she lived almost 20 years longer than him. Josephine Marcus died on December 19, 1944 in the same home she shared with Wyatt in Los Angeles (via West Adams Heritage ᴀssociation). Both Josephine’s and Wyatt’s bodies were cremated and buried together in Colma, California.
Virgil Earp
Virgil Worked As A Lawman & Saloon Owner Until He Died Of Pneumonia In 1905
Aside from Wyatt, the only Earp brother to survive their time in Tombstone was Virgil (Sam Elliott). As shown in the film, Virgil was the victim of an ᴀssᴀssination attempt by the Cowboys, and he lost the use of his left arm. He and his wife at the time, Allie, moved back to Colton, California for two years while his wounds healed. In spite of his injury, however, Virgil continued to have a successful career as a lawman. Virgil was employed by the Southern Pacific Railroad as armed protection and he was later the first city marshal of Colton (via Historynet).
Later in life, Virgil owned both saloons and mining operations. In Vanderbilt, California, Virgil owned a saloon named Earp’s Hall. In 1895, Virgil moved to Prescott, Arizona, and began mining. Unfortunately, he was inside a mine during a cave-in, which seriously injured him yet again. Those wounds would ultimately prove fatal, as Virgil Earp died of pneumonia in 1905, partially because he was too weak to fight off the infection (via Goldfield Historical Society). Virgil had one daughter, Nellie, who survived him after his death.
Mattie Blaylock
Mattie Returned To Prosтιтution & Died From Opium Overdose In 1888
While Wyatt and Josephine got their storybook romantic ending, the same can’t be said for his previous wife, Mattie Blaylock (Dana Wheeler-Nicholson). After the events of Tombstone, Wyatt effectively abandoned Mattie for Josephine and left her to fend for herself. As such, Mattie returned to the profession she was in prior to meeting Wyatt: prosтιтution. Mattie left Tombstone and did Sєx work in Pinal, Arizona, until her death in 1888. Unfortunately, as Tombstone depicted, Mattie was also addicted to laudanum, and she either died by suicide or by accidental opium overdose.
Ike Clanton
Clanton Continued His Life Of Crime Until He Was SH๏τ To Death In 1887
One of the only Cowboys that Wyatt Earp spared, Ike Clanton (Stephen Lang), didn’t live much longer after avoiding the Earp Vendetta. After Wyatt left Tombstone, Ike Clanton rejoined the rest of his family and began operating as a criminal and bandit yet again. The Clantons had a ranch and regularly engaged in murder and thievery. In June 1887, a Pinkerton named Detective Jonas Brighton was on Ike’s trail, and he sH๏τ and killed the former Cowboy when he tried to draw on the lawman (via Apache County Critic). According to Brighton, Ike Clanton was sH๏τ in the heart and died before his body hit the ground.
Sherman McMasters
Contrary To Tombstone, There Are 3 Conflicting Accounts Of McMasters’ Death
Tombstone is fairly accurate the real history of the Earp brothers’ time in Arizona, but it got one major detail wrong. Sherman McMasters (Michael Rooker) dies at some point in Tombstone, and his beaten body was delivered to Wyatt when Johnny Ringo invited him to a solo gunfight. However, in real life, McMaster (Tombstone added an “s” to his name) has three conflicting accounts of his death. One letter claimed he died during the Earp Vendetta, but Wyatt Earp himself claimed McMaster died in 1898 while serving in the Spanish-American War, and McMaster’s siblings claimed he died in Colorado in 1892 (via Paul Cool).
Historians generally tend to accept the final account – that McMaster died in Colorado in 1892 – due to the fact that it came from his relatives in a legal filing, and because McMaster didn’t appear in any Army registers. In any event, the fact that Wyatt Earp claimed McMaster died in 1898 is proof enough that Tombstone got his death wrong. That being said, McMasters’ death was still well-done and added to the film’s suspense, and it’s far too trivial of a complaint to mar Tombstone‘s impeccable legacy.