Television Timeline History
Posted in Coloured Television on 05/02/2009 02:09 am by admin
Johnny Ringo
Biography
Ringo was born in Greens Fork, Indiana. His family moved to Liberty in Missouri in 1856. He was a contemporary of Frank and Jesse James, who lived near Kearney, Missouri, and a cousin of Cole Younger.
In 1858 the family moved to Gallatin, Missouri, where they had rented the property the father of John W. Clothing (which should be the first "official" victim of the band when they stole James Davis County Savings Association in 1869).
The July 30, 1864, while the family was traveling through Wyoming Ringo on the way to solve California, Martin Ringo (Johnny's father) went out of his car while holding a shotgun accidentally fired. The loaded shotgun next to the entrance of his face, leaving the top of the head. The 14-year-old John Ringo and the rest of his family was buried on a hill beside the track.
Mason County War
In mid-1870, Ringo has emigrated from San Jose, California, central Texas, in the area of Mason County, Texas. Here is knowledge of a former Texas Ranger named Scott Cooley, which has been adopted son of a local rancher named Tim Williamson. For years, the relations between Americans and Germans living in the area had been tense (an extension of the civil war) because most Americans support the Confederate while the Germans were in favor of the Union.
The problems began when two robbers America, Elijah Backus and Pete, were released from jail and lynched Mason by a crowd mostly Germans. real war has started May 13, 1875, when Tim Williamson was arrested by a detachment hostile and killed by a German farmer named Peter Bader. Cooley and his friends, including Johnny Ringo, a campaign of terror directed against their rivals. Officially called "Mason County War, was known locally as the "Hoodoo" War. Cooley retaliated by killing the local German deputy sheriff, John Worley, based on it, scalp him, and throwing her body a well August 10 1875.
Cooley had a dangerous reputation and was respected as a Texas Ranger, and kill several others during the war. "After Cooley murder of a follower of Moses Baird, Ringo committed his first murder account of the September 25, 1875, when he and a friend named Bill Williams ran before the house of James Cheyney, man Baird, who led the ambush. As Cheyney came out unarmed, and the guests began to wash his face on the porch, both Ringo and Williams shot fired. Both went to the house of Dave Doole, and called out, but when it came out with a gun, fled to the city.
Some time later, and Johnny Scott Charley Cooley Ringo Bader confused with his brother Pete, and killed him. After both men were jailed in Burnet, Texas Sheriff AJ Strickland. Both Ringo and Cooley left from prison by his friends, soon after, and separate company to avoid the law.
In November 1876, the Mason County war had exhausted after have cost a dozen victims, Scott Cooley thought he was dead, and Johnny Ringo and his friend George Gladden were locked again. One of the cellmates Ringo was the notorious murderer John Wesley Hardin. Legend has it that Wes Hardin fears Ringo because of the cruelty and unpredictability of Ringo, but there is nothing documented to support the claim. While it has Gladden sentenced to 99 years, Ringo seems to have been acquitted. Two years later, Ringo said as a guard at the Valley Fair, Texas. Shortly after, he appeared in Arizona for the first time.
Tombstone
Ringo first round of Cochise County, Arizona in 1879 with Joseph Graves Olney (also known as Joe Hill ") a comrade in arms of war in Mason County. For the most part, Johnny Ringo kept for himself, without mixing with the issue outside the local law when it suited him. In December 1879, an intoxicated sparked Ringo unarmed Louis Hancock in a Safford, Arizona room where he refused a drink of whiskey, beer, saying he preferred. Hancock survived his wound.
While in and around Tombstone, Arizona, Ringo kept his mouth shut while others walked in fear of him. He was reputed to be bad humor at the time, but outside the two unarmed men and Cheyney Hancock had not been documented shootings and murders to his credit. It may have been involved in robberies and killings with the "cowboy" element, and the rumor is attributed to a high position in the chain of command allowed, perhaps the second Brocius Curly Bill.
Johnny Ringo did not face openly Wyatt Earp faction until January 17, 1882, less than three months after the shooting at the OK Corral, but not long after he had retired Virgil Earp of the functions of Chief of Police for attempted murder. Ringo and Doc Holliday had a public disagreement, threats of negotiations seemed to lead to confrontation armed. However, before the fight could happen, both were arrested by the new chief of police of Tombstone James Flynn, dragged before a judge to carry weapons in city, and two to the fine.
Two months later, Ringo was suspected by the Earp to participate in the killing Morgan Earp on March 18, 1882. After Wyatt's revenge by his murder, has been completed with Ringo, John Behan to apprehend the early Earp Earp Vendetta Ride. Within months, Ringo's best friends were killed or expelled from the region and some died in battle. However, in mid-April, the Earp and his friends had left the area and apparently fled to Colorado.
Death in Turkey Creek Canyon
Memoryplate and burial of Johnny Ringo
v, d, e
Arizona War
Gunfight at the OK Corral – Murder Morgan Earp – Virgil Earp attempted murder – Shooting in Tucson
Earp Vendetta Ride
South Pass Tyre – Tyre Iron Springs
Turkey Creek Shooting
On July 14, 1882, Johnny Ringo was found dead in the fork of a large tree in the west of Turkey Creek valley with a bullet hole in the right temple and an exit in the back of his head. Ringo revolver went one round, was found hanging from a finger. His body was apparently there all night from the day before (when they heard a shot from the general area by a resident of the country). His feet were wrapped in pieces of his shirt. His boots were found attached to the saddle of his horse, who was captured two miles away. A forensic investigation has officially declared his death a suicide.
However, years later, the wife of Wyatt Earp is 47 years attributed the death to Earp Doc Holliday and the provision of earlier hit his head from a distance with a rifle. Fred Dodge, Wells Fargo detective and confidant Earp, attributed the death to a player named Mike O'Rourke, aka Johnny Behind the Deuce-recorded by Nathaniel Stuart Lake.
Johnny Ringo is buried near where his body was found in Turkey Creek Canyon West (315149 1092016 / 109.33778W 31.86361N / 31.86361, -109.33778), the location is near the base of the tree in which it was found that recently fell. The tomb is now on private land and permission is required to display the website (see link below).
Theories of Ringo's death
Many people in recent years been suspected of killing Johnny Ringo, Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday, and Buckskin Frank Leslie O'Rourke. The tombstone of 1993 provides a face-to-face drama Doc Holliday shoots dead when Ringo, one of the ends of the legendary "King of the Cowboys.
According to the coroner's report, Ringo has suicide. A few weeks before the death of Ringo, Tombstone biggest fire had destroyed most of the city. The silver mines were producing less and the demand for meat is declining. Many friends from Ringo disappeared, while his lifestyle was becoming a thing of the past. Ringo was depressed after being rejected by members of his family in California and the recent death of his friends outside the law. Stoked by a period of Excess alcohol consumption, Ringo is prepared to camp in a remote area, away of the city. He tied his boots in the chair, a common practice in Arizona to keep the scorpions of them, but the horse out of his post and fled. Ringo tied pieces his shirt at his feet to protect (These were found in his body and found in the survey), and got into the fork of a tall tree for the night. Night came, killed their general, Ringo shot himself.
Wyatt Earp killed Ringo. Earp and Holliday returned to Arizona and met with some friends at Hooker Ranch. Among them, Charlie Smith, Johnny Green, John Meagher and Fred Dodge. Ringo was found encamped about two miles from where it was found. Ringo grabbed his arms and ran toward the throat. Troops fired once, then he Earp was shot in the head with a rifle.
Doc Holliday killed Ringo. Ringo and Earp assumed that one day duel. Holliday, who hated Starr, spoke with his friend and shot him in the head. This theory has been popularized by the movie Tombstone. Holliday, however, was fighting a lawsuit Colorado, at the time of the death of Ringo. The official records of the District Court of Pueblo County, Colorado indicate that both Holliday and his lawyer appeared in court July 11, 14 and 18, 1882, making it impossible to have Holliday killed Johnny Ringo. Karen Holliday Tanner, however, said that the Doc was not in town at the time that some have asserted, pointing to an order issued against him in court July 11. Instead his lawyer appeared on his behalf that day. Despite the wording of a file court stating that no person may have seemed Propera on his own person, the legal standard dummy text does not mean that the person who was there. It also doubt, Holliday arrived in Salida, Colorado (500 miles from the shooting that occurred six days later Ringo, just 80 miles from Pueblo) 07 July As reported in a small town newspaper. Therefore, the participation Holliday, while unlikely, is unknown.
Buckskin Frank Leslie gunman dead Ringo. Leslie Ringo found drunk and asleep in a tree. Hoping to do a favor to fans in the office Earp, Ringo shot in the head. Billy Claiborne believed Leslie killed Ringo, and said his fatal shooting Leslie was due to that fact. However, in reality requires Leslie Claiborne refer to him as "Billy the Kid, and when Leslie Claiborne rejected the challenge. Claiborne was shot through the right side, the ball out of the back and died a few hours later. His last words were "Frank Leslie killed John Ringo. I saw him do it, "another statement without supporting evidence.
Mike O'Rourke killed Ringo. O'Rourke has a debt to save Earp lynching. Ringo was supposed to be the leader of the crowd. Ringo O'Rourke slipped and shot in the head. Ringo Pony Diehl believes O'Rourke friend was killed, and was told O'Rourke that killed shortly thereafter. However, while Diehl was in town when O'Rourke died, his actual death was not seen by any person who, in reality and O'Rourke died shortly after being caught cheating in the game. If the rumors of his involvement in the death of Ringo had something to do with this has never been tested or Pony Diehl did not confess to the murder.
Popular culture
In the 1950 film The Gunfighter, the main character, played by Gregory Peck, Jimmy Ringo is called, no doubt, a reference to the famous outlaw. In film, Ringo is sympathetically portrayed as a man constantly trying to put its past noticeable behind him.
In a 1954 episode of the syndicated Western Stories' Ringo century was played by Donald Curtis as "John B. Ringgold." Emlen Davies played her unmarried sister, Helen, trying in vain to convince him to move away from anarchy. Stories of the Century was the first Western to win an Emmy Award.
Ringo played by John Ireland in the 1957 film shooting at the OK Corral. In this version of the animosity between Ringo and Doc Holliday is caused by Big Nose Kate (called "Kate Fisher" here) leaving to become loving Ringo Doc. This is not historical, but in the lyrics of Kate, who notes that Ringo Holliday visited when he was briefly jailed in November 1881 as part of the hearing Spicer OK Corral, and it is very possible that Holliday got jealous. The film is still not historical, equivalent to Ringo as a participant in the battle for titans, when in fact it is not present. The film tells the lesson to a Holliday Ringo wounded in the triumph of good over evil before Ringo dead.
"Johnny Last Ride Ringo is an episode of ABC Western Tombstone Territory, which was broadcast on February 19, 1958 with Myron Healey in the role of Ringo. The series starring Pat Conway and Richard Eastham.
A CBS television program 19591960 name used by Ringo, but had little to do with real life (The real Ringo probably never wore a badge, unless that as a town constable). Johnny Ringo aired for one season (38 episodes). Ringo is played by Don Durant and carrying a revolver Lemat (accessory nine gun with the second gun designed to fire a shotgun cartridge).
Ringo is the source of inspiration for the story inaccurate, but the popular song "Ringo" sung by former TV cowboy Bonanza Lorne Greene, who on top of the charts at No. 1 in late 1964 (replacing The Shangri-Las Leader "of the pack ").
In the 1986 TV remake diligence Ringo Kid is played by Kris Kristofferson. The player character is moved to Hatfield Doc Holliday (Holliday is probably the source of inspiration for both the player and the original Doc Boone in Hatfield). In the new version, Holliday has played in the name of Willie Nelson and Ringo Holliday Kid and allies, which is ironic since their relationship in real life.
In 1993, Tombstone, Ringo is played by Michael Biehn. In this version, is second Remote Cowboys band. It is characterized as a violent sociopath seeks to humiliate and destroy Doc Holliday. It is also characterized as highly educated, less a matter for negotiation with Holliday American jokes.
In 1994 the film Wyatt Earp, Ringo is played by Norman Howell. In this film, Curly Bill Brocius is the main antagonist.
Johnny Ringo was the protagonist a novel entitled Confessions of Johnny Ringo (ISBN 0451159888) by Geoff Aggelos. In the novel, the real name of Ringo Ringgold, and is portrayed as a young law school, leading to the proscription of the Civil War, where his girlfriend is killed by Union troops in Missouri. He was killed by Wyatt Earp that frees the mind to bring the lovers.
Ringo is an antagonist of the History of Doctor Who gunmen. In the novelization is portrayed as a classic intends to spend his salary on an encyclopedia of classical biography.
In "Dead Man's Hill in the TV series The Lost World, Johnny Ringo is played by David Orth as an outlaw league with the ruthless sheriff Jack Challenger, which have developed an innocent man for murder the husband of another woman. In this portrait, which has an interesting piano hatred.
Notes
Ab ^ Wilkinson, Darryl (7/22/1992). Johnny Ringo Gallatin called home as a boy. "North Gallatin Http Missourian.: / / Www.daviesscountyhistoricalsociety.com / modules.php? Op = modload & name = News & file = article & sid = 123 & mode = mode = thread & order = 0 & thold = 0.
^ Clanton, Terry (1997). "Ringo Family History, John. History of Tombstone. Http://clantongang.com/oldwest/ganringo.html. Retrieved on 28/03/2007.
^ Hadel, Glenn. "The Mason County Hoo Doo Wars Texas." The history of Texas. Http: / / www.texfiles.com / texashistory / hoodoowar.htm.
Ab ^ Earp, Josephine Sarah Marcus (1976). I Married Wyatt Earp by Josephine Sarah Marcus memories Earp, compiled and edited by Glenn G. Boyer. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona. pp. 107 108, 111, note 20, 21 and 22. ISBN 0816504849.
^ Http: / / www.docholliday.info / timelineb.htm
^ "Lorne Green lyrics" Ringo ". OldieLyrics.com. Http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/lorne_greene/ringo.html. Retrieved on 28/03/2007.
References
Burrows, Jack (1987). Ringo, John: The shooter never existed. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona. ISBN 0-8165-0975-1.
Gatto, Steve (2002). Johnny Ringo. Lansing: Home PROTAR. ISBN 0-9720910-1-7.
The main sources of Johnny Ringo
References
"Johnny Ringo" (1959) Internet Movie Database
"JohnnyRingo.com. Http://www.johnnyringo.com. – The most complete biographical information available on the web.
"Ringo, John family history. "History of Tombstone. Http: / / clantongang.com / oldwest / ganringo.html. – This site has a picture of Ringo, gives a chronology of the precious life Ringo, and directions to find the tomb of Ringo. Photographs of the grave or death are included.
"Grave Site Johnny Ringo. Ghost towns in Arizona. http://www.ghosttowns.com/states/az/johnnyringogravesite.html. – This is a link from the grave.
"Mason County War." The Guide of Texas Online. Http: / / www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/RR/fri51_print.html.
Categories: 1850 births | 1882 deaths | Wayne County, Indiana Popular | Daviess County, Missouri | Outlaws of the American Old West | Cochise County, Arizona | James-Younger Gang | Arizona WarHidden categories: Articles needing references from February 2010 | All articles lacking sources About the Author
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