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In the high desert of Southern Arizona , just west of the Dragoon Mountains, Tombstone beckons as a salivating encounter with the Old West, its frontiersmen and gunslingers. Not so in Tombstone, where the old town is your real-deal warts and all experience. Word spread like wildfire of his silver strike and thousands descended on Tombstone in search of their fortune. Prospectors, cowboys, homesteaders, lawyers, gunmen, soiled doves prostitutes and business people flocked there in their droves.
Top of the list should be the O. K Corral, the old saddlery, feed store and stables, which now stages a dramatic re-enactment of the infamous gunfight, on the very spot where it occurred in The shoot-out was the inevitable climax to months of growing tensions between the police and a band of cowboys who had been involved in cattle-rustling and stagecoach robberies.
Romantic rivalries were also in the mix. It was that one event that, many say, has kept Tombstone alive and kicking today. The gunfight is superbly re-enacted several times a day, fusing the right mix of entertainment and historic insight.
Both buildings have been preserved and are packed with history. Admission to the corral also provides you access to the Historama, a minute multi-media spectacle, complete with animated figures and rotating scenes, narrated by Vincent Price. Attempts to pump out the water worked tenuously for a few years, before it became cost prohibitive.
Abuzz with live music, mining boom artefacts and a convivial atmosphere, the food is fittingly indecent, like the foot-long all-beef hot dog. Tombstone was never short of entertainment, whether it be the Schieffelin Hall, the largest standing adobe structure in the southwest, where more refined cultural pursuits were staged β and still are. The Bird Cage Theatre is a whole different story. It was an all-in-one saloon, theatre, gambling hall and brothel. Legend has it that no self-respecting woman in town would even walk on the same side of the street as the Bird Cage.