For your consideration is a Tombstone John Heath Grand Jury Trial Photograph, circa 1884. Provenance: From the Tombstone Western Heritage Museum in Tombstone, Arizona. This mounted enlargement is labeled similarly as the original photo, most likely taken by C. S. "Buck" Fly or his wife, Mary E. "Mollie" Fly, the famous Old West photographers of Tombstone and the Old West. Also included is a historical society museum photograph of C. S. Fly's original photo of John Heath's lynching. John Heath, a member of the Cochise County Cowboys outlaw gang and organizer of the Bisbee Massacre on December 8, 1883, was convicted of second degree murder and sentenced to life at the Yuma Territorial Prison by Judge Pinney. Unsatisfied with Heath's sentence, a lynch mob forcibly removed Heath from jail and hanged him from a telegraph pole on February 22, 1884. The C. S. Fly photograph of Heath's hanging by the vigilante mob, is one of the more infamous images of Tombstone and the Old West. The members of the grand jury are seen in this photograph including Prosecutor Marcus A. Smith #12, Judge Bryant L. Peel, Tombstone lawyer James Reilly and Defense Counsel Col. Wm. Herring, father of former Tombstone school teacher and attorney Sarah Herring Soren, the first female attorney in Arizona history. The large format photograph was mounted for display at the Tombstone Western Heritage Museum in Tombstone, Arizona. The photograph is in good overall condition, mat mounting displays slight soiling. Visible image measures 9.625"W x 19.125"L, matting is 16.625"W x 27.25"L. Combined weight is 1lb.