Luke L. Short (January 22, 1854 - September 8, 1893) was an American Old West gunfighter, cowboy, U.S. Army scout, dispatch rider, gambler, boxing promoter and saloon owner. He survived numerous gunfights, the most famous were against Charlie Storms in Tombstone, Arizona Territory and against Jim Courtright in Fort Worth, Texas. Short had business interests in three of the most well-known saloons in the Old West: the Oriental in Tombstone, the Long Branch Saloon in Dodge City, and the White Elephant in Fort Worth.
Video Luke Short
Early life
Short was born in Polk County, Arkansas in January 1854. He was the fifth child of Josiah Washington Short (February 2, 1812 - February 8, 1890) and his wife Hetty Brumley (February 2, 1826 - November 30, 1908). Short had nine siblings. Martha Frances, John Pleasant, Josiah, Jr., Young P., Mary Catherine and Henry Jenkins Short were all born in Polk County. The family soon moved to Montague County, Texas, where Josiah and Hetty had three more children: George Washington, Belle Nannie, and William B. Short.
In 1862, Luke Short witnessed first hand one night when his father was ambushed and attacked by Comanches in their yard. His father was surrounded by the Indians who wounded him with arrows and lances. Inside the house, Luke, who was a little boy at that time, helped the elder Short by dragging his large rifle to his brother, who then ran and handed it to his father. At the age of 13, Luke was said to have carved the face of a bully when he was still schooling, which was a reason why he and his father moved to Forth Worth, Texas.
As a Texas cowboy, civilian scout and outlaw
In 1869, at age 15, Short started work as a cowboy, which he continued through 1875 and during which he made several trips to the Kansas railheads.
Short was reported by Bat Masterson to have killed six drunken Sioux Indians at various times. Later writers have relied on Masterson's story as truthful and added to it, but no documentation of these killings has been found. Nonetheless, Short did experience fighting Indians while working for the government. He has been in over thirty engagements with Indians, with his first battle happening in 1869. The Omaha Daily Bee wrote an obituary for Luke Short which mentioned that he worked as a scout for General George Crook in 1876, and was stationed in the Black Hills during the Sioux insurrection. While conducting one of his usual dispatches for the army in the hills, a band of fifteen Indians suddenly ambushed and fired at him with rifles. Short managed to draw his pistols and fired back, killing three of them in quick succession. Some of the Indians gave chase on horseback, and Short killed two of them before finally reaching safety.
From October 6 to 8, 1878, Short worked as a dispatch courier from Ogallala for Major Thomas Tipton Thornburgh; Short earned $30 (about $740 in 2016). He then served as a civilian scout for Thornburgh until October 20. He enlisted at Sidney, Nebraska to be paid $100 a month (around $2480 today) but he only served for 12 days, for which he was paid $40. The Fort Worth Daily Gazette later described him as "the bravest scout in the government employ."
In an interview later in his life, Short told researcher George H. Morrison that he moved to the Black Hills in 1876 and to Ogallala, Nebraska the next year. Accounts written in Short's later years stated that he was an outlaw during his time in Nebraska. It was around this time where Luke Short was said to have traded whiskey with Indians around Camp Robinson, Nebraska. According to his nephew Wayne Short, Luke was arrested by the army. They put him to a train destined to Omaha, but Luke managed to escape the army escort and went to the makeshift mining and cowtowns of Denver, Colorado and took up a profession as a gambler. He is said to have killed two men on separate occasions due to altercation during their card games.
Maps Luke Short
Gambling days
Short moved to Leadville, Colorado in 1879 to take up gambling. Bat Masterson later wrote that Short seriously wounded a man during a gambling dispute in Leadville. He remained in Colorado, and was in Buena Vista, about 30 miles (48 km) from Leadville, until June 1880, when he moved to Kansas City. Short remained in Kansas City only until late November, but was accused of swindling Texan John Jones "out of $280 on Three Card Monte" and jailed on October 5 for six days. In late November 1880, Short moved to Tombstone in the Arizona Territory.
Gunfight with Charlie Storms
Short first met Wyatt Earp, William H. Harris and Bat Masterson in Tombstone. Earp had lived in the town for nearly a year when Short arrived in November 1880. Harris arrived about a month after Short and Bat Masterson left Dodge City for Tombstone on February 8, 1881. On February 24, the Dodge City Times noted that "C.M. Beeson received a letter from W. H. Harris, which stated that W. B. Masterson arrived in Tombstone, Arizona." Harris was well-acquainted with Wyatt Earp from Earp's time in Dodge City. Based on their previous friendship, Harris had no problem convincing his partners to engage Earp as a faro dealer at their Oriental Saloon in Tombstone.
On Friday, February 25, 1881, Short was serving as the lookout, seated next to the dealer at a faro game in the Oriental, when he was involved in what became a well-known gunfight. His opponent was Charlie Storms. Bat Masterson, who was in Tombstone at the time, described what happened in a magazine article he wrote in 1907:
Charlie Storms and I were very close friends, as much as Short and I were, and for that reason I did not care to see him get into what I knew would be a very serious difficulty. Storms did not know Short and, like the bad man in Leadville, had sized him up as an insignificant-looking fellow, whom he could slap in the face without expecting a return. Both were about to pull their pistols when I jumped between them and grabbed Storms, at the same time requesting Luke not to shoot, a request I knew he would respect if it was possible without endangering his own life too much. I had no trouble in getting Storms out of the house, as he knew me to be his friend. When Storms and I reached the street, I advised him to go to his room and take a sleep, for I then learned for the first time that he had been up all night, and had been quarreling with other persons ...
I was just explaining to Luke that Storms was a very decent sort of man when, lo and behold! There he stood before us, without saying a word, he took hold of Luke's arm and pulled him off the sidewalk, where he had been standing, at the same time pulling his pistol, a Colt's cut-off, 45 calibre, single action; but like the Leadvillian, he was too slow, although he succeeded in getting his pistol out. Luke stuck the muzzle of his pistol against Storm's heart and pulled the trigger. The bullet tore the heart asunder and, as he was falling, Luke shot him again. Storms was dead when he hit the ground.
Storms' body was taken to the undertaker, where the coroner's jury was convened and testimony was heard. The jury reached a verdict that Storms died from three pistol wounds at the hands of Short, and that Short's actions were justifiable. The court recorded a "Disposition of Cause" that stated that any further action following the preliminary hearing had been "Ignored by Grand Jury". Short was free to go as no further legal action was taken.
Five days after Storms died, the Leadville Democrat wrote about the shooting. It said that Storms approached Short and "catching him by the ear", demanded an apology. According to the account, Storms grabbed Short's ear with his left hand and his right hand contained a pistol aimed at Short. Short drew his weapon and shot Storms, who returned fire but missed. Short then put two more bullets into "the sinking soul of Storms."
Dodge City
Short left Tombstone in early 1881. He briefly turned up in Deming, New Mexico before arriving in Dodge City in April 1881. He remained in Dodge City until the final months of 1883, although he made frequent trips to other places to pursue gambling opportunities. Short's friend, William H. Harris, had sold out his interest in the Oriental Saloon in Tombstone. He and his partner, Chalk Beeson, owned the Long Branch Saloon in Dodge City; Harris gave Short a job as a faro dealer. By this time Harris had become one of the wealthiest men in Kansas.
During February 1883, Chalk Beeson sold his interest in the Long Branch to Short. The legal dissolution notice stated that "Mr. Beeson is selling his interest in the business to Luke Short who will continue the business with Mr. Harris." In March, Harris was nominated to run for mayor of Dodge City. Within a few days, on March 19, a "law and order" group nominated Lawrence E. Deger to run against Harris. Deger defeated Harris by 214 votes to 143 in the election of April 3. All five of the city council candidates running with Deger were also elected.
On April 23, the Dodge City Council posted two ordinances that were immediately approved by Mayor Deger. Ordinance No. 70 was "An Ordinance for the Suppression of Vice and Immorality Within the City of Dodge City." Ordinance No. 71 was "An Ordinance to Define and Punish Vagrancy." Reports of that time recorded an event where Short beat a man with a pistol which resulted with the man being bedridden and "in despair" for several days. On April 28, three prostitutes employed at the Long Branch were arrested by City Marshal Jack Bridges and policeman Louis C. Hartman. Soon afterward Short and Hartman exchanged gunfire. Neither man was hurt. Short was quickly arrested and released on $2000 bond. His preliminary examination was set for May 2.
Forced out of town
On April 30, Short was again arrested (along with five other gamblers) and placed in jail. The following day Short and the five others were escorted to the train depot and given their choice of east or west-bound trains. Short went east to Kansas City, Missouri, where he looked up Charles E. Bassett at the Marble Hall Saloon. Bassett and Short had a lot in common, and both had at different times owned an interest in the Long Branch Saloon. Bassett had served as the first sheriff of Ford County, as well as city marshal of Dodge City. Both Wyatt Earp and Bat Masterson had served under Bassett as deputies.
Short and Bassett, along with William F. Petillon, began conceiving a plan to get Short back to Dodge City. Short went to Topeka, the capital on May 10, where he presented a petition to Governor George W. Glick. Short returned to Kansas City and was joined there by Bat Masterson. Wyatt Earp arrived in Dodge City, along with several gunfighters on May 31. Short, Earp and Petillon met in Kinsley, Kansas on June 3, 1883, and took the afternoon train to Dodge City. Deger issued a proclamation the following day ordering the closing of all gambling places in Dodge City.
Dodge City Peace Commission
Deger's action came during the cattle season and promised ruin for the seasonal boom, and it was economics rather than bloodshed that resolved the "Dodge City War." Additional pressure to resolve the issue had come from the governor as well as the Santa Fe Railroad, which did considerable business in the town. The gambling halls, dance halls and saloons, including the Long Branch, were then ordered to be reopened. On June 9, both sides met in a dance hall that opened that night and resolved their differences. The following day eight men gathered and posed for a widely reproduced Wild West history photo. The group was dubbed the Dodge City Peace Commission. The men in the historic photo were William H. Harris, Luke Short, Bat Masterson, William F. Petillon, Charles E. Bassett, Wyatt Earp, Michael Francis "Frank" McLean and Cornelius "Neil" Brown. Shortly after the photo was taken, Bat Masterson and Wyatt Earp departed on a westbound train for Colorado.
The Long Branch Saloon had reopened, and the "Dodge City War" had ended without a shot being fired, but Short decided to move on. On November 19, 1883, Short and Harris sold the Long Branch to Roy Drake and Frank Warren. Short moved to San Antonio, Texas, for a brief time before relocating to Fort Worth.
Fort Worth
Partnership in White Elephant Saloon
In December 1884, Jacob Christopher "Jake" Johnson, Short, and James A. "Alex" Reddick became the new owners of the Fort Worth White Elephant Saloon. Several other investors also owned shares, including Sam Berliner and the former Dodge City "peace commissioner", Michael Francis "Frank" McLean. The new partnership was announced in the Fort Worth Daily Gazette on December 16, 1884: "The White Elephant saloon has changed hands. Messrs. G. Burgower and Nath Bernstein selling out their interest to Messrs. Jake Johnson and Luke Short". Jake Johnson was one of the wealthiest men in Texas, and his part ownership of the White Elephant was just one of his many business and real estate enterprises. As a co-owner, Short did not deal cards but had card dealers working for him.
On May 9, 1885, in what became a routine element of doing business, Short, Jake Johnson, and M.F. "Frank" McLean and three others pleaded guilty and were each fined $25 for "gaming." Late in 1885 or very early in 1886, Jake Johnson sold his share of the White Elephant to John L. Ward, and in May 1886, Alex Reddick sold his share to William H. Ward, John Ward's brother.
It was also around this time in Forth Worth when Short did one of his amazing acts of marksmanship. While dining in a restaurant, the waiter handed him a glass of milk that had a small fly treading on the surface. Short then calmly threw his milk in the air, jerked his gun and shot the fly.
Sporting pursuits
Bat Masterson was a boxing enthusiast and tried to interest Short in the sport. At first Short was indifferent, but by June 28, 1885, he found himself acting as the "third man in the ring" when he was called upon to referee a match fought near Weatherford, Texas between the 6-foot-2-inch "Kid Bridges" and the 5-foot-8-inch "St. Joe Kid." The decision of referee Short was that the "St. Joe Kid" won on a foul.
Jake Johnson was responsible for making horse racing a major part of Short's sporting agenda. Johnson and two partners opened the Fort Worth Driving Park in January 1885. Short bought his own race horse named "Tobe," along with some jockey silks for himself, and drove his two-wheeled sulky in a race held on November 13, 1886. Short and "Tobe" came in last in a field of five.
Selling his interest in the White Elephant
1887 began with Short's younger brother, Henry Jenkins Short, killing a man named Charles T. Schuyler at San Angelo, Texas on January 23. San Angelo, 200 miles south-west of Fort Worth, was the town where Short's parents and other family members lived. Initial reports indicated that Schuyler was shot twice, the bullets entering his back and coming out at the front, either one of which would have been fatal. Henry Short fled to Fort Worth, before he could be arrested, to enlist the aid and funds that his brother Luke could provide for his defense. Luke and Henry returned to San Angelo on January 29, and Henry voluntarily surrendered to the sheriff and gave bond for his appearance in the district court. The money that would be needed to defend Henry Short would have to be provided by Luke, who had already put up the money for Henry's bond. In addition, Luke had at the time some unrelated but very expensive legal problems of his own looming in the Dallas court. The amount that would be needed to handle all of these legal issues was more than Luke had on hand. In order to raise the needed funds, Johnson agreed to purchase Luke Short's one-third interest in the White Elephant on February 7, 1887. The press informed the public that Short had no intention of leaving town "but will continue to call Fort Worth home."
One historian has suggested that Short's selling his interest in the White Elephant was prompted by problems that Short was having with Timothy Isaiah "Jim" Courtright, a former marshal of Fort Worth, who reportedly offered his "protection" to saloon and gambling house owners. Short would not be intimidated and refused, saying that he would personally provide any protection that his saloon needed. This irritated Courtright, who felt that it was necessary to show Short what could happen if his services were declined. It has also been suggested that Short needed the money to start fresh in another town where he would not have to worry about Courtright, who had a reputation as an excellent gunman. In reality, raising the money needed for his brother's legal defense, as well as the funds needed for his own legal problems in Dallas, were Short's top priorities. Jake Johnson was an assured source for the kind of cash he needed, and had no interest in again being a partner in the White Elephant, but Short needed help so Johnson agreed to buy Short's share.
Duel with Jim Courtright
On the night of February 8, 1887, another argument broke out between Luke Short and Jim Courtright about the latter's persistence on putting his protection racket on Luke's establishment. An infuriated Courtright stormed off the saloon, but later returned with two pistols visibly holstered in his pockets. He yelled for Luke Short to come out but Jake Johnson, a friend of both men, managed to calm Courtright down so that they can talk about the argument instead. Luke Short met with the two men outside and talked about their dispute as they walked through the street. The group however, suddenly stopped at Ella Blackwell's Shooting Gallery. Luke Short was facing Courtright three to four feet apart when the latter suddenly went for his pistol, making the former draw his own in return. In the celebrated gunfight that followed, Short was the last man standing. In his own words, Short described what happened:
Early in the evening I was getting my shoes blackened at the White Elephant, when a friend of mine asked me if there was any trouble between Courtright and myself, and I told him there was nothing. A few minutes later I was at the bar with a couple of friends when some one called me. I went out into the vestibule and saw Jim Courtright and Jake Johnson. Jake and I had talked for a little while that evening on a subject in which Jim's name was mentioned, but no idea of a difficulty was entertained. I walked out with them upon the sidewalk, and we had some quiet talk on private affairs. I reminded him of some past transactions, not in an abusive or reproachful manner, to which he assented, but not in a very cordial way. I was standing with my thumbs in the armholes of vest and had dropped them in front of me to adjust my clothing, when he remarked 'Well, you needn't reach for your gun,' and immediately put his hand in his hip-pocket and pulled his. When I saw him do that, I pulled my pistol and began shooting, for I knew that his action meant death. He must have misconstrued my intention in dropping my hands before me. I was merely adjusting my clothing, and never carry a pistol in that part of my dress."
The showdown was also witnessed by Bat Masterson who was with Luke Short at the time. In 1907, Masterson published his own account of the events where he stated that it was Jim Courtright, carrying a "brace of pistols", who challenged Luke Short to a duel:
No time was wasted in the exchange of words once the men faced each other. Both drew their pistols at the same time, but, as usual, Short's spoke first and a bullet from a Colt's 45-calibre pistol went crashing through Courtright's body. The shock caused him to reel backward; then he got another and still another, and by the time his lifeless form had reached the floor, Luke had succeeded in shooting him five times.
Investigations of the gunfight concluded that while it was Courtright who went for his pistol first, it was Short who ultimately outdrew and killed him. Courtright's inability to fire off a shot was due to a number of possible reasons; one was that his pistol broke when one of Short's bullets struck it and his thumb, or that his pistol got caught on his watch chain for a second as he drew it, which Western historian DeArment considered to be unlikely or a "feeble excuse".
The gunfight became well known due to the notoriety of both men with Courtright's funeral being attended by hundreds of Fort Worth residents. Short was arrested for the shooting and though he was almost lynched after the shootout, he was never brought to trial. Just nine days after buying out Short's one-third interest in the White Elephant, Jake Johnson sold it to William H. Ward. Finally, Short was able to settle his legal problems with the court in Dallas. All of the cases against him were dismissed with no explanation.
Marriage to Hattie Buck
Following the resolution of his legal problems, Short was now financially stable. He traveled to Kansas, where he married Hattie Buck (born October 5, 1863) in Oswego, Kansas, on March 15, 1887. Harriet Beatrice Buck was born in Coles County, Illinois on October 5, 1863. She was the fourth of eight children born between 1858 and 1878. Buck's family later moved to Emporia, Kansas, where her father died a few years prior to her marriage. Short and his wife went to Fort Worth, Texas shortly after their wedding but soon boarded a train "for a brief stay in Hot Springs." A.G. Arkwright later recalled, "Luke Short came there, to the hotel where I was staying, with his wife, the beautiful and accomplished daughter of an Emporia banker, whom he married under romantic circumstances."
The couple remained in Hot Springs for two months, and in May they returned to Fort Worth for 11 days before leaving town again for Kansas City, where they arrived on June 8. A local paper reported that Short "made his appearance in this city this morning." On June 15, 1887, the Shorts attended the wedding of William H. Harris in New York. Harris and Short both had an interest in horse racing. Short and Hattie then followed the racing circuit to Saratoga Springs, New York. A reporter from Albany described Short as "a quiet little man" whom he had met "at the Monmouth race track" a few days before. The reporter wrote that "Short is accompanied by his wife and is doing the racing circuit."
Horse racing and the Palais Royal
"Doing the racing circuit" was a large part of Short's career as a sporting man. He and his friend, Jake Johnson, along with their wives, attended the inaugural running of the Futurity Stakes on Labor Day 1888. That event was held in New York at the Sheepshead Bay racetrack on Coney Island. According to the New York Times, one-quarter of those in attendance were women. Two of those women were Mrs. Jake Johnson and Mrs. Luke Short. By October 1888, Short and Johnson were back in Fort Worth. Short was no longer connected with the White Elephant, and Johnson had decided to open what the local paper headlined as a "super resort" called the Palais Royal, which was designed to rival the White Elephant. Short may have been part owner but remained a silent partner.
Chicago
Boxing promoter
Short spent part of each year, from 1889 until 1893, in Chicago. He usually went there during the summer months to get relief from the Texas heat as well as to attend thoroughbred horse races. Hattie always went with him on these extended visits that often lasted weeks and sometimes months. The Shorts always stayed at the Leland Hotel on Michigan Avenue. In July 1889, Short was among the party going from Chicago to New Orleans in a private railway car to attend a prize fight. Short was described by a reporter as "the noted sporting man of Fort Worth," who was "not interested in the fight ... but will go because his friend 'Bat' Masterson insists on his doing so." Short explained to the reporter that he would "go anywhere in the world for Bat." Short and Masterson went from New Orleans to Richburg, Mississippi, where they were ringside at the John L. Sullivan - Jake Kilrain championship fight on July 8, 1889. Bat Masterson was not there merely to observe the action; he was the designated timekeeper for Kilrain. Reportedly Short, Johnny Murphy, and "twelve other good men were scattered around the ring side where they would do the most good in case of an emergency." Short's return to Chicago on July 12, 1889 was noted by several newspapers in the city. He had returned from Richburg with a new enthusiasm for boxing, along with an ambition to become a boxing promoter.
By the end of 1889 Chicago was well aware of who Short was. The Daily Inter Ocean reported that Short, "who is numbered as one of the prominent figures of the Richburg battle" had cabled Charles E. "Parson" Davies offering $20,000 to have John L. Sullivan defend his title in a championship fight at Fort Worth. On January 11, 1890, Short decided to make the match more attractive by writing Richard K. Fox, the editor and publisher of the National Police Gazette, at that time the sporting man's "Bible." Short stated in this letter, which was quoted in a newspaper, that he was ready to give both Sullivan and his challenger $20,000, adding: "If you [Fox] think $25,000 or $30,000 is a sufficient inducement, the bank will authorize me to give it."
Despite Short's eagerness for success in his boxing promotion endeavor, events beyond his control continued to occur in his life. On February 8, 1890, Short's father, Josiah Washington Short, died in San Angelo, Texas, "at the ripe age of 78 years", although Short only learned of his father's death after the burial. Soon thereafter, Short's youngest brother, William B. Short, was killed at the age of twenty-two "by a herd of stampeding cattle on the Tankersly ranch."
The racing circuit
The Shorts were on the move during most of what remained of 1890. On April 24, Short was at the Belle Meade sale of thoroughbred race horses in Nashville, Tennessee, with Jake Johnson. It was reported that "Jake Johnson ' who laid out about $20,000 for yearlings in the Belle Meade sale is ambitious to shine on the turf." It is not known if Short bought a yearling at the Belle Meade sale, but in less than a year he would have horses running on tracks in Chicago and New York. Following the Belle Meade sale, Short and Johnson left Nashville and went to Memphis to watch the races. Also in Memphis was a gambler named Charles M. Wright. Short, Johnson, and Wright, along with other sporting men, were partners in some Memphis faro games. The partners won significant amounts of cash, reported as "thousands of dollars," which were entrusted to Wright. He was designated as the banker for the group and was supposed to place the winnings in a hotel safe where the group stayed. For some reason, Wright decided to keep the cash in his hotel room and was robbed of the entire amount. Wright wanted Short and his other partners to bear an equal share of the loss but they refused and turned the matter over to the authorities, who decided against Wright. According to a later report, Wright was never satisfied with that decision and had "hard words with several of his ex-partners on the subject since that time, particularly with Short."
Following the racing circuit occupied much of Short's time during the late spring and early summer of 1890. The presence of the Shorts at Saratoga Springs, New York, was reported in the local press. While he had enormous success at racetracks across the country, boxing promotion remained an unattainable goal for Short. He was destined to be remembered for gunfights rather than prize fights.
The last gunfight
The long-simmering feud between Short and Wright finally reached the boiling point in Fort Worth on December 23, 1890. The gunfight took place at the Bank Saloon and gambling house on Main Street that was owned by Wright. In testimonies presented by eyewitnesses, Wright was conducting gambling in his house and Short went there to close it down. After Short got all the patrons evicted at gunpoint, Wright suddenly ambushed him with a shotgun, wounding Short in the left hip and leg as well as injuring his left hand. Short retaliated by drawing his pistol and shooting Wright in the right wrist, disarming him. Both men then sluggishly separated ways, with Short going out to meet his friends, while Wright stayed in the building clutching his wound.
In describing Short's leg wound, the local paper said, "the full charge of buckshot passed through the flesh, making a tunnel, the muscles on the outside were torn out." The wound on his left hand resulted in his thumb being "taken off at the joint." Reports of the shooting, along with updates on Short's condition, were published in newspapers in several states. A paper in Hutchinson, Kansas observed that "his wounds are enough to kill a common man but Luke may get well." Short would remain bedridden for months. In 1891, a Chicago newspaper published a lengthy profile of Short. When discussing the gunfight with Wright, the paper reported: "It was supposed at the time that Short was fatally wounded, and his recovery was wholly due to the careful nursing of his wife, who for three months hardly left his bed side." Both Short and Wright were indicted and charged with assault with intent to murder. Both men made bonds without trouble in the sum of $1,000. The trial date was changed more than once, and a final decision was not reached until March 1, 1892.
Nearly killing a man by mistake in Chicago
While awaiting his trial date, Short was free to come and go as he pleased. He was feeling well enough by May 21, 1891 to board a train for Chicago with Johnson. This was going to be an extensive stay, as his wife accompanied Short on the trip. The racing season was about to begin and Johnson and Short both owned a string of horses that would be running at Washington Park in Chicago. During his several visits to Chicago, Short and Hattie always stayed at the Leland Hotel. Short was accosted in the lobby of the Leland by a drunken attorney named James J. Singleton during late October 1891. According to the report, Short did not have his pistol, but managed to give Singleton a few kicks which knocked him down, and then Short picked him up, and pushed him out "into the frosty night air." Short then went upstairs for his gun in case Singleton decided to return. While Short was gone, an actor named William F. Hoey (1854-1897) walked into the hotel lobby. The actor turned out to resemble closely the lawyer Short had just kicked out. Short saw Hoey, thought he was Singleton, and charged at him with his pistol. A quick-thinking hotel clerk named Ed Kennedy jumped between the two men and prevented a homicide. When Short realized his mistake, he apologized to the actor and treated him to drinks and a late supper.
The Sullivan-Corbett heavyweight championship fight (1892)
On March 1, 1892, a decision was reached in the State v Luke Short. Short was found guilty of aggravated assault against Charles Wright, and a fine of $150 was assessed against him. On September 7, 1892, the heavyweight championship fight between John L. Sullivan and James J. Corbett was held at the Olympic Club in New Orleans. Short and his friend Charles Bassett were at ringside. Also there was their mutual friend Bat Masterson, who was acting as the timekeeper for Corbett. Masterson and Short had placed their bets on Corbett, while "Bassett bet his money on Sullivan." This gathering at the Sullivan-Corbett fight was the last time the trio got together.
Final days
Bright's disease
By the start of 1893 it had become apparent that something was seriously wrong with Short's health. Doctors determined that he was suffering from one of the kidney diseases that then went under the now obsolete classification of Bright's disease. These diseases would be described in modern medicine as acute or chronic nephritis. Short's symptoms would have included high blood pressure and urine of a dark or bloody color. Edema, then called "dropsy", would have contributed to a slight puffiness in his face, as well as the accumulation of fluids in his lower legs that would have made it difficult for Short to stand for prolonged periods of time. Short was in Fort Worth when a Kansas newspaper reported that he was "lying at death's door." Short and a number of friends, and with Hattie beside him, took the north-bound Santa Fe train for Geuda Springs, Kansas. The place offered a change of climate as well as the medicinal qualities of the famous waters, which, it was hoped, would "prolong his life." The move did not have the desired effect.
Death
Short died at the Gilbert House in Geuda Springs on September 8, 1893. The local paper reported that: "Luke Short died at the Gilbert this morning of dropsy. The remains were embalmed by W.A. Repp today and will be shipped this evening to Ft. Worth, Tex. The remains will accompanied by the wife and two brothers of the deceased." Just two days before Short's death, while Hattie sat at his bedside in Kansas, word arrived that her mother had died in Fort Worth. A Dodge City newspaper belatedly printed a dispatch from Fort Worth which stated that "two days ago his mother-in-law died and the two funerals will take place here at the same time." Death had already claimed two of Hattie's sisters and her father. Now her mother and her husband had died just forty-eight hours apart. She had suffered an unusual amount of early death in her family, and found herself a widow at 29 years old.
The funeral of Short took place in Fort Worth on September 10, 1893. Short's body lay in state until 2:30 that afternoon. At 3:00 a line of carriages more than a mile long followed Short's body to Oakwood Cemetery in Fort Worth. Short had purchased a grave stone shortly before his death. It is a plain, upright marker simply inscribed: L. L. SHORT 1854 - 1893.
In popular culture
On February 22, 1955, Short was played by actor Wally Cassell in an episode of the syndicated western TV series Stories of the Century. The part of Jim Courtright was portrayed by actor Robert Knapp (1924-2001).
On February 25, 1958, Grant Richards played Short in the episode "Wyatt Fights" of the ABC/Desilu western series The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp. In the story line, deputy Wyatt Earp (Hugh O'Brian) is caught in the middle when two saloon owners want to take over a third establishment, the Long Branch Saloon. Paul Brinegar played the role of James H. "Dog " Kelley, the mayor of Dodge City.
On January 7, 1960, an episode called "The Pied Piper of Dodge City" (Season 2, episode 13) was broadcast on the Bat Masterson TV series which starred Gene Barry as Masterson. In that episode an actor named Donald "Red" Barry, who was no relation to Gene Barry, portrayed Short. That episode concluded with Gene Barry, Don Barry, and other actors posing for the television version of the Dodge City Peace Commission photo.
On January 25, 1960, Bob Steele played Short in the episode "The Terrified Town" of the CBS western television series The Texan, starring Rory Calhoun.
Notes
References
Bibliography
- Cox, William R. Luke Short and His Era: A Biography of One of the Old West's Most Famous Gamblers, Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co., 1961.
- DeMattos, Jack. "Gunfighters of the Real West: Luke Short," Real West, December 1982.
- DeMattos, Jack. "The Dodge City Peace Commission Revealed," Wild West History Association Journal, (Vol. VI, No. 2), April 2013.
- DeMattos, Jack and Parsons, Chuck. The Notorious Luke Short: Sporting Man of the Wild West, Denton, TX: University of North Texas Press, 2015 ISBN 978-1-57441 594-0
- Masterson, W.B. (Bat). "Famous Gun Fighters of the Western Frontier: Luke Short," Human Life Magazine (Vol. 5, No. 1), April 1907.
- Masterson, W.B. (Bat) The 75th Anniversary Edition of Famous Gun Fighters of the Western Frontier (Annotated and Illustrated by Jack DeMattos), Monroe, WA: Weatherford Press, 1982 ISBN 0-9604078-1-2
- Miller, Nyle H., and Snell, Joseph W. Why the West Was Wild. Topeka: Kansas State Historical Society, 1963.
- Ryall, William. "The Luck of Luke," True Western Adventures, April 1961.
- Short, Wayne. Luke Short: A Biography of one of the Old West's Most Colorful Gamblers and Gunfighters, Tombstone, AZ: Devil's Thumb Press, 1997. ISBN 0-9644980-7-3
- Walker, Wayne T. "Killer in Fancy Pants," True West, October 1956.
Source of article : Wikipedia