William Robert Earp has written:
'The New Testament life of Christ' -- subject(s): Biblical Sources, Biography
Charlie Earp has written: 'Down under par' -- subject(s): Golf
Martin K. Earp has written: 'Listed companies' -- subject(s): Corporation law, Stocks, Law and legislation
Thomas Wade Earp has written: 'Van Gogh (second volume)'
RW Earp is the author of various Western-themed books, including the "Horseman" series and other novels such as "Lakota Winds" and "Son of a Gun." His works often focus on the Wild West, featuring cowboys, outlaws, and frontier life.
amy lowell, robert todd lincoln, wyatt earp, woodrow wilson, william vanderbilt, and your moms face.
J. R. Earp has written: 'Geology of the country around Chester and Winsford' -- subject(s): Geology 'British regional geology: the Welsh borderland' -- subject(s): Geology
Matt Braun has written: 'Santa Fe' 'Outlaw Kingdom' 'Wyatt Earp' 'Jury of six' 'Cimarron Jordan' -- subject(s): Fiction 'Manhunter' 'Tenbow'
William L. Urban has written: 'MEDIEVAL MERCENARIES: THE BUSINESS OF WAR' 'The Dean Is Dead' 'The Prussian Crusade' -- subject(s): History, Teutonic Knights 'BAYONETS FOR HIRE: MERCENARIES AT WAR, 1550-1789' 'Wyatt Earp' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, Biography, History, Peace officers, Violence, Frontier and pioneer life, United States marshals 'Juvenal, Juvinall, Juvenile: a family history'
Wyatt Earp was 6' tall and 160 pounds during his Dodge City & Tombstone days according to a piece written by Bat Matterson titled My friend Wyatt Earp. He was also very muscular at the time.
William S. Hart was a pallbearer and Tom Mix was there. John Wayne knew him as well and could have been there. Earp worked as an advisor for early westerns and Wayne was working as a prop boy. Earp would sit and tell stories about the “old west” and his influence can be seen in the movies.
In the 1939 Movie "Frontier Marshal" Wyatt Earp was played by Randolph Scott. There was a 1934 movie based on the same story that had the hero's name being Michael Wyatt and was played by George O'Brian. The first time Wyatt Earp was portrayed in a movie is in Wild Bill Hickock, a 1923 film directed by Clifford Smith. William S. Hart plays Hickock and Bert Lindlay is Wyatt Earp. Wyatt who then lived in the Los Angeles area was contacted to be a consultant on the film! Wyatt Earp died in 1929.
Clifford Earp was born in 1879.