Ed Masterson

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Ed Masterson
Born (1852-09-22)September 22, 1852
Henryville, Montérégie, Quebec, Canada East
Died April 9, 1878(1878-04-09) (aged 25)
Dodge City, Ford County, Kansas, USA
Cause of death
Shot to death in the line of duty
Resting place
Boot Hill in Dodge City; then Fort Dodge, Kansas; possibly removed to a city cemetery thereafter
Occupation
  • Buffalo hunter
  • Lawman (Deputy marshal and U.S. Marshal)
Years active 1870s
Parents
  • Thomas M. Masterson
  • Catherine U. McGurk Masterson
Relatives James Masterson (brother)
Bat Masterson (brother)

Ed Masterson (September 22, 1852 April 9, 1878) was a lawman and the brother of the American West gunfighters Bat Masterson and James Masterson.

Lawman career

Ed Masterson was born in Henryville in Canada East. In the early 1870s, his family moved to the area about Wichita, Kansas. Ed Masterson, as reported by those who knew him, never possessed the characteristic personality of his more famous brother, Bat Masterson, or his other brother James.[citation needed] He was killed by gunfire while trying to disarm a drunken cowboy.[1]

Prior to beginning his lawman career, he and his two brothers worked as buffalo hunters. During his service as deputy marshal and then marshal of Dodge City, Kansas, Ed Masterson was shot twice. The first incident occurred in November 1877, when he was shot in the breast by Bob Shaw in the Lone Star Dance Hall. Although his right arm was paralyzed, Ed switched his gun to his left hand and shot Shaw in the arm and leg. After Masterson's recovery, he replaced Larry Deger as the town marshal. It is commonly believed that he replaced lawman Wyatt Earp, but it was actually Deger. On March 15, 1878, Masterson assisted his brother Bat Masterson, who was the Ford County sheriff at that time, and lawman Charlie Bassett in the capture of two train robbery suspects.[1]

Later that same month, Masterson announced publicly that he had a new plan to rid Dodge City of vagrancy and street violence, which included the disarming of gun-carrying men inside the city limits, with immediate implementation. On April 9, 1878, while attempting to disarm a drunken cowboy, Jack Wagner, Ed was shot once in his right side. Bat Masterson, who was nearby, responded, ran across the street, and shot at both Wagner, and his employer Alf Walker. Ed Masterson died about an hour thereafter, after walking across the street and collapsing. Wagner, hit in the abdomen, died in agony the next day at a nearby room. Walker, hit in the lung and twice in the arm, was thought likely to die but was taken back to Texas and subsequently recovered to take the trail to Kansas again. Witnesses who saw the killing of Ed Masterson report that it appeared he was carrying a rather pungent cigar in his hand. Actually it was the close range muzzle blast from Wagner's gun which had set Ed Masterson's clothes smoldering.

There has been some debate as to whether Bat Masterson or Ed shot Wagner and Walker. Local papers [2] reported that Ed, after being shot, staggered across the Santa Fe tracks to the north side and into Hoover's Saloon. All the "Texan" bars were on the south side of the tracks and this is the area that Ed Masterson patrolled, while the more "respectable" establishments were on the north side of town. Bat was the elected Ford County sheriff and thus did not have direct jurisdiction in town. The incident occurred approximately 10:30 at night and the local newspapers were ambiguous, perhaps trying to shield Bat from Texan vengeance, although Dodge City residents of the time generally suspected that Bat had been responsible. In later years, the newspaper reports led some historians to conclude that Ed had shot his own attackers, and two or three reminiscences have come to light that suggest that Ed might have shot Wagner at least. However, far more of the published accounts by those who were in Dodge City at the time were clear that Bat shot both Wagner and Walker. This is supported by accounts by another Masterson brother, Tom, and Alf Walker's family always believed that Bat had shot him. The recent discovery of two court cases in which Bat testified that he had shot both men when it was hardly in his interests to do so means that it is now generally accepted that Bat avenged his brother.[1][3][4]

Masterson was replaced by Charlie Bassett as marshal, with Wyatt Earp, James Earp, and Ed's brother, Jim Masterson, working as deputies. His brother Jim would later replace Bassett as marshal. Despite common belief, Wyatt Earp never served as the marshal of Dodge City. Ed Masterson was initially buried at the notorious "Boot Hill" plot overlooking the town, but was eventually moved to the cemetery at Fort Dodge. In later years all but military graves were moved to a new city cemetery, but it is unknown whether Ed's grave was moved. His current location is unknown.

Westerns

On April 2, 1957, the western actor Brad Johnson played Ed Masterson in the episode "The Nice Ones Always Die First" of the ABC television series, The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, a Desilu Production starring Hugh O'Brian in the title role.

In the 1959 MGM film, The Gunfight at Dodge City, Harry Lauter portrayed Ed Masterson, historically portraying him as killed, shot in the back by a man avenging his own brother's death.[5]

In the 1994 Warner Bros. film, Wyatt Earp, Bill Pullman portrayed Ed Masterson, whom Wyatt Earp (played by Kevin Costner) claimed did not have the temperament to be a lawman.[6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Spartacus International: Edward Masterson
  2. Nyle Miller and Joseph Snell, Great Gunfighters of the Kansas Cowtowns, 1867-1886 (University of Nebraska Press, 1986)
  3. DeArment, Robert K. Broadway Bat: Gunfighter in Gotham (Talei Publishers, 2005).
  4. Legends of America: Bat Masterson
  5. "The Gunfight at Dodge City". Retrieved March 27, 2010. 
  6. "Wyatt Earp". Retrieved April 16, 2010. 
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