The most famous family of lawmen in American history – the “Fighting Earps” consisting of brothers Wyatt, Virgil, Morgan and James – claimed San Bernardino County as their home.

Historians suggest the Earps used their badges to facilitate gambling and brothel enterprises. Playing both sides of the fence was a family tradition that brought them to the region after their father Nicholas Porter Earp lost his job as a lawman, when his role as a bootlegger was exposed to his Iowa neighbors.

The Earps came to San Bernardino from Iowa in December 1864. They set up their first camp near today’s county court building on Sierra Way and Court Street – known as ‘Whiskey Point’ because saloons stood on each corner of the intersection.

They rented a ranch on the banks of the Santa Ana River in northern Redlands and moved to another on Mission Road in Loma Linda. Over time, the Earp clan grew to be instrumental in the growth of the region, serving as police officers, farmers, businessmen and detectives.

After a critically wounded Virgil returned the murdered body of brother Morgan to Colton, after the legendary gunfight at the OK Corral, he stayed on in Colton with his father, who was by then a prosperous community leader who served as justice of the peace.

Even Wyatt, the brother most affected by wanderlust “spent more of his life in San Bernardino County, California, than anywhere else” according to The Earp Clan: The Southern California Years author Nicholas R. Cataldo. In fact, Wyatt’s last commission as a lawman was as a non-salaried San Bernardino County deputy.

Save for a brief return to the Midwest in 1868, the Earps stayed on in the region even after the four Earp brothers set off for their legendary adventures in Dodge City and Tombstone. Nicholas lived the rest of his life in Colton until he moved to the Soldier’s Home in Sawtelle, where he survived all but four of his 11 children and two of his three wives.


Print | Back