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Gun Fight - Nov. 23
Gun Fight on Village's Main Street

Tickets can be purchased at the gate.

Event Information


Who's that stranger cheatin' at cards in the Saloon?



Visit Dallas Heritage Village and witness early Dallas law and order, settler style, on the Village's Main Street. See what happens when a friendly game of cards in the Alamo Saloon goes bad.

Free with museum admission.


Dallas Law Enforcement Historical Facts


Dallas Police Department forms in 1872...

Prior to 1872,
Dallas citizenry relied on the local marshall to help them with lawbreakers or they handled criminals on their own...

1880...15 police officers protected 10,300 citizens, or one officer per 687 citizens.

1890...one detective and 25 patrolmen protected 38,000 citizens, or one officer per 1,461 citizens.

1900...three detectives and 31 patrolmen protected 45,000 citizens, or one officer per 1,323 citizens.

2007...2,928 officers protecting 1,188,580 citizens, or one officer per 405 people.


Dallas' First Jailhouse...

Dallas
’ first city jail was located on Ross Avenue near Market Street in the West End Historic District. The building is still there today.

Crime in Dallas...

In June 1872, Mayor Henry S. Ervay signed an ordinance “to preserve peace and good order, to prevent vice and immorality, to define certain crimes and misdemeanors and prescribe the punishment thereof.”
This ordinance revised or added punishments for disorderly houses and saloons, obscene publications, public indecency, prostitution, residing in brothels….gaming and betting, …and ‘suffering minors to play billiards.'


Doc Holliday in Dallas...

Holliday got his start as one of the most notorious outlaws of the West in Dallas. Trained to be a dentist, Holliday fell from respectable circles when he came down with gambling fever. Before long, he was involved in two shootouts causing him to flee Dallas and begin carousing throughout the West, earning a reputation for deadly gunmanship along the way. His most famous escapade was the gunfight at the OK Corral in Tombstone, Arizona.

Gambling in Dallas...

The first anti-gambling ordinance in Dallas under the 1871 City Charter was the encompassing Ordinance Number Eight. The gambling climate at the time Doc Holliday haunted the saloons and hotels of Dallas was pervasive and unstoppable in spite of the city’s best efforts. In police department annual reports from the 1880s and 1890s, for example, gambling and gaming regularly outstripped all other categories of arrests.


Myra Maybelle Shirley aka Belle Star...

Belle Star grew up in Scyene in the eastern part of Dallas County, making a name for herself as a dance hall singer, dancer and horse thief. Outlaws such as Jesse James and the Younger brothers supposedly paid calls on Miss Starr. Many fantastic and outlandish tales were spun about Belle Starr after her death in 1889 – many of which are probably grounded more in imagination than truth.


Bonnie and Clyde in Dallas...

Contrary to popular rumor, Bonnie and Clyde, Texas’ most notorious criminals did not rob the Citizen’s Bank here at Dallas Heritage Village! The bank at the Village is originally from Justin, Texas, and while it served the citizens of Justin for many years, it was not the scene of a Bonnie and Clyde holdup.


FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Q: Are the guns used during the gun fights real?
A: Yes. Our trained volunteers are using black powder weapons with blanks. All gun fight participants have previous weaponry experience and are required to attend numerous training sessions.

Q: How do I volunteer to join the gun fight?
A: There are several requirements you must meet to volunteer as a gun fighter. All gun fighters are members of the Trinity River Desperados. F
or more information on joining, visit www.esrnet.com/trd.htm.


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