By Jan MacKell Collins

Of all of the wild women serenaded by the famous Earp brothers and Doc Holliday, Big Nose Kate was the first to woo the men who would later find fame in Tombstone. Born in Hungary in 1850 as Mary Katharine Haroney, Kate immigrated with her family in 1860. They were living in Iowa when Kate’s parents died in 1866. She and her siblings were sent to a farm, where grueling work conditions enticed Kate to run away. She stowed away on a steamship for New Orleans where she entered the Ursuline Convent.

A very young Mary Katherine “Big Nose Kate” Haroney (seated on left) with her sister Wilhelmina, c. 1865. This picture was taken close to the time when their parents died and they both became orphans. Kate used my aliases during her lifetime but we know for sure that she was born a Haroney and was buried as Mary K. Cummings in the Prescott’s Pioneer Cemetery (SHM Call Number: PB-007-F2-I5).

Life in the convent failed to suit Kate, whose wanderlust soon sent her traveling West. Along the way she adopted various aliases such as Fisher, Elder and her infamous nickname, Big Nose Kate. By 1869, she was working for madam Blanch Tribolet in St. Louis but in 1874 she moved to Kansas and began working for madam Bessie Earp, wife of James Earp—Wyatt Earp’s older brother. The following year, she was in Dodge City working at Tom Sherman’s Dance Hall. 

In late 1877, at Fort Griffin, Texas, Kate met John Henry “Doc” Holliday, the dentist-turned-gambler who was trying to alleviate his tuberculosis.  Also, it was here that Kate introduced Holliday to Wyatt Earp. Later, when Wyatt moved to Dodge City, Holliday and Kate followed. The couple registered at the Deacon Cox’s Boarding House as Mr. and Mrs. J.H. Holliday. Doc set up a dental practice but he spent much of his time playing cards and drinking. Kate would stay by Holliday’s side during his coughing fits, but the two quarreled regularly and sometimes violently. According to Kate, the couple later married in Valdosta, Georgia. They began traveling frequently, but lived in Las Vegas, New Mexico for about two years. Holliday worked as a dentist by day and ran a saloon by night. Kate also occasionally worked at a dance hall in Santa Fe.

In 1879, Wyatt came for a visit and talked Holliday and Kate into moving to Prescott. Wyatt’s brother, Virgil, was already in Prescott when Wyatt, his girlfriend Mattie Blaylock, Kate, Holliday and James and Bessie Earp arrived. Wyatt and James traveled on to Tombstone, but Holliday hit a winning streak and stayed in Prescott. As of June 1880, he was living in a boarding house on Montezuma Street, working as a dentist and gambling. In the meantime, Kate traveled to Globe as she learned there was good money to be made there. When Holliday‘s lucky streak ended, he left for Tombstone and wrote to Kate asking her to visit him.

In March 1881, Kate arrived in Tombstone only to find Holliday very sickly and decided to stay with him. However, their reunion was hardly blissful. An angry Kate told Sheriff John Behan that Holliday was responsible for a local stage robbery involving two murders. Holliday was arrested, but Kate later recanted and the charges were dropped. Furious, Holliday sent her back to Globe, but by October he was writing for her to return. Kate did indeed return and moved with Holliday into Fly’s Boarding House. By this time, Wyatt, Virgil and Morgan Earp had become noted lawmen in Tombstone.  However, the Earps’ disagreements with the McLaury and Clanton brothers, as well as Billy Claiborne, were leading up to the notorious shootout at the O.K. Corral. On the morning of October 26, Kate remembered Holliday leaving, telling her, “I may not be back to take you to breakfast, so you better go alone.” Instead, Kate remained in room only to witness the gunfight that afternoon. In the aftermath of the shootout, Kate returned to Globe and Holliday hit the road traveling. Each rarely saw one another.

Kate continued working as a prostitute in Cochise, Courtland and Bisbee, but by 1887 she was back in Globe when she heard Holliday was ill in Glenwood Springs, Colorado.  Kate traveled to Colorado to care for Holliday while staying at her brother Alexander Haroney‘s ranch.  On November 8 Holliday died. It is unsubstantiated if Kate was present or not present at his death.

Following Holliday’s death, Kate married blacksmith George Cummings in about 1888. By 1900, she was working as John Howard’s housekeeper in Dos Cabezas, where she remained until Howard’s death in 1930. In 1931, Kate moved to the Arizona Pioneer’s Home in Prescott, claiming American citizenship to gain admittance and living there quietly until her death on November 2, 1940. Big Nose Kate is buried under the name of Mary K. Cummings at Prescott’s Pioneer Cemetery and would likely be surprised at how many visitorsshe receives each year.

Big Nose Kate poses with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Alexander Haroney, c. 1930s. Kate’s brother, Alexander, had a ranch near Redstone, Colorado and she visited him at least twice at the ranch—once, in 1887, as Doc Holliday lay dying in nearby Glenwood Springs, and again shortly before she entered the Arizona Pioneer Home, located here in Prescott (SHM Call Number: PB-007-F1-I4).

 

 

(Days Past is a collaborative project of the Sharlot Hall Museum and the Prescott Corral of Westerners, International. The public is encouraged to submit articles for Days Past consideration. Please contact Assistant Archivist, Scott Anderson, at SHM Archives 928-445-3122 or via email at archivesrequest@sharlot.com for information.)