For your consideration are Rare Wyatt and Josephine Earp Photographs. Provenance: Tombstone Western Heritage Museum, Tombstone. Wyatt is seen in Los Angeles standing alongside a 1926 Packard Opera Coupe that is believed to have owned by his friend, silent film actor William S. Hart. The studio photo shows a young teenage Josephine before she left San Francisco for Arizona and Tombstone. Wyatt Earp was a legendary America 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. After leaving Tombstone, Wyatt went to San Francisco to spend time with his convalescing brother Virgil, his wounds received during the Gunfight at the O. K. Corral in Tombstone. Wyatt and Josephine met each other in Tombstone in 1881 a short time before the infamous gunfight, Josephine at the time having been recently involved in a relationship with Sheriff Johnny Behan. Some historians have suggested that Behan and Earp knew of their mutual attraction to the same woman before the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, which may have contributed to their animosity. From 1883 until Wyatt's death in 1929, Wyatt and Josephine stayed together in a commom law marriage. Tombstone Western Heritage Museum labels on the face of the clear protective plastic sleeves read, "WYATT EARP in LOS ANGELES", museum code, "E-019", and, "Josephine Sarah Marcus Earp From the Parke Collection Original photo owned by Dan & Pat Phelps", museum code, "E-55". The protective sleeves measure respectively 4"W x 6"L and 2.625"W x 4"L, combined weight is U6.