Offered in this lot is a Rare Original Wyatt Earp Photograph, 1925. Provenance: Tombstone Western Heritage Museum, Tombstone. Wyatt Earp was a legendary Old West gunslinger, gambler, and lawman in Dodge City, Kansas, Deadwood in Dakota Territory and Tombstone in Arizona Territory. Earp was involved in the gunfight at the O. K. Corral, during which lawmen, which included his brothers Morgan and Virgil as well as Doc Holliday, killed three outlaw Cochise County Cowboys on October 26, 1881. He left Tombstone in 1882 for San Francisco. Later after a short time in Gunnison, Colorado, the Earps spent time in Seattle, Alaska, Idaho, Nevada, eventually settling in the Los Angeles area from 1911 until his death in 1929. Earp's time in Los Angeles was split between summers in Los Angeles and the rest of the years at their "Happy Days" gold mining camp near Vidal, California. The Poplar trees in the background indicate the photo is from the Los Angeles area as Vidal receives very little rainfall in a normal year. Photo was taken before Wyatt was diagnosed with liver disease which eventually caused his death four years later. The attached Tombstone Western Heritage Museum label on the face of the clear protective plastic sleeve, "WYATT EARP 1925", reverse has handwritten museum code, "E20", handwritten in ink at the top, "Wyatt Earp 1925". Photo is in good preserved condition, age tanning exhibited. Photo measure 2"W x 3.25"L, sleeve is 3"W x 5"L. Weight is U6.