Warren Earp
Warren Baxter Earp (March 9, 1855 – July 6, 1900) was an American frontiersman, lawman, and the youngest son of Nicholas Porter Earp and Virginia Ann Cooksey Earp, brother to Wyatt, Virgil, Morgan, James, and Newton Earp.[1][2]
Arriving in Tombstone, Arizona Territory, around 1880, he joined his brothers amid rising tensions with local outlaws, working odd jobs, guarding prisoners, and serving briefly as a deputy constable and policeman following the town's 1881 fire; though absent for the October 26, 1881, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, he participated in related posses and was injured in a confrontation with rustlers that year.[1][2]
After an assassination attempt on Virgil Earp in December 1881 and the murder of Morgan Earp on March 18, 1882, Warren joined Wyatt's vendetta posse—alongside Doc Holliday and others—in a month-long pursuit that resulted in the killings of Frank Stilwell, Florentino Cruz, Curly Bill Brocius, and others suspected in the attacks.[1][3][4]
Post-vendetta, Earp drifted through California and Arizona, engaging in mining, gambling, stagecoach guarding, and occasional detective work for cattle associations, though plagued by frequent arrests for drunkenness, assaults, and disputes reflective of his quarrelsome disposition.[1]
On July 6, 1900, he was fatally shot by rancher Johnny Boyett during an argument in Willcox's Headquarters Saloon, with the coroner's inquest ruling the act justifiable self-defense amid Earp's aggressive advances while armed and intoxicated.[1][2]