24 Mar 13
Luke Short, 1854-1893
Luke Short, a weedy, diminutive alcoholic (like most of his gunfighter colleagues of the era) is less well known than his friends and contemporaries Wyatt Earp, âWild Billâ Hickok, âBatâ Masterson, et al.
Like another contemporary, âDocâ Holiday, Short never enjoyed good health, and, like Hickok, never saw his fortieth birthday.
Like Hickok, Short disdained holsters and normally carried a âsnubbyâ revolver concealed in his right pocket.
Like so many of his contemporaries, Short tried to make a living on the western frontier as a gambler and bar-owner, roaming from KS to AZ to TX, although in his early years he had served as an army scout and was competent frontiersman, cowboy, and shootist.
Short was best known for his dapper dressing. In one of the few existing photographs of him, he is sporting a top-hat, cane, coat, vest, and tie. His âhandlebarâ moustache was standard for the era.
Short had been involved in at least one fatal gunfight in Tombstone, AZ, while in the company of his friend, Bat Masterson. It was early in 1881. Short had a reputation for fearlessness and never backing down. As with Doc Holiday, odds never troubled him!
In Ft Worth, TX in February of 1887, Short, then owner of a local bar called the âWhite Elephant,â was angrily confronted by an inebriated Jim Courtright. Courtright was famous for openly wearing two revolvers, one on each side. He cut a dashing figure, but was little more than a perpetually unemployed, down-and-out alcoholic trying to make a living by running a local âprotectionâ racket.
Short was one of the few business-owners who refused to pay protection money to Courtright, so a showdown between the two was probably inevitable!
Courtright, standing (more like tottering) at the front entrance of the White Elephant on the cool evening of Tuesday, 8 Feb 1887, called Short out. Short appeared at the door and greeted Courtright. The two then reportedly started walking together down the street.
At one point, Courtright exclaimed, â… donât pull a gun on me!â He was apparently referring to a gesture by Short of opening his coat. In any event, Courtright didnât hesitate! He attempted to draw one of his pistols, but the pistolâs hammer became entangled in an errant watch-chain. That misstep proved fatal!
Short quickly removed his own pistol from his pocket and fired. Range was very close. His first shot nearly severed Courtrightâs right thumb. It dangled by a piece of skin from his hand, making it nigh impossible for him to manually cock his pistolâs hammer. It is not clear if, at that point, Courtright attempted to transfer the pistol to his left hand, or draw his other pistol with his left hand. In any event, Short didnât pause. He fired at least four more shots, this time directly into Courtrightâs torso.
Courtright, having never fired even his first shot, slumped to the ground, DRT. He subsequently enjoyed an elaborate funeral, having been a former Town Marshall.
Short was charged briefly, but the shooting was ultimately deemed to be self-defense.
Never in good health, Short himself died, of natural causes, barely five years later, at the age of thirty-nine. Official cause of death was listed as âhydropsy.â Today, we would call it âcongestive heart-failure.â Short lived through a number a close scrapes, including the one described above, but hard living, hard drinking, etc are not normally associated with long life!
Lessons: Drinking heavily prior to getting into a serious fight represents a poor plan, as Courtright belatedly discovered. When you require plenty of âliquid courageâ prior to facing a dangerous situation, donât imagine it will have a happy outcome!
Train with all the gear you plan on having with you! That annoying watch chain, which ultimately became the game-changer, was probably not present during Courtrightâs practice sessions!
Finally, a poker-players axiom: âDonât get into poker games with those who canât afford to lose, nor into gunfights with those who can!â
/John