Capo
1
Difficulty
Beginner πΆ
Rate for accuracy
🎸
Key: Fm
Intro:
Em7
One day in 1881, The Tombstone Epitaph, a booming newspaper, in a booming silver mining town, screamed out the
headlines about a gunfight at the O.K. Corral, right down town. The headlines read, "MURDER IN THE STREETS OF
TOMBSTONE!" Well, that wasn't such hot news but more stark and spine-chilling than that was a sight on the
boardwalk in front of the Epitaph building. Neatly laid out in beautiful caskets were Tom McLowery, Frank
McLowery, and young Billy Clanton, 28 years old. A witness at the trial later said that he saw Doc Holliday
blast away with a nickel-plated pistol and Billy Clanton screamed, "Don't shoot me! I don't want a fight!"
Today there's no more silver mining in Tombstone but up there on Boot Hill, you can see where the graves of
the men are. The ones who fought over or because of that big silver strike that created Tombstone.
G
Here lies Les Moore,
D
four slugs from a forty-four,
G
no Les no more.
Verse 1:
Em G
Out in Arizona, just south of Tucson,
Em D
where tumbleweeds tumble in search of a home,
G
there's a town they call Tombstone where the brave never cry.
Em D G
They live by a six-gun, by a six-gun they die.
Verse 2:
Em G
It's been a long time now since the town was a boom.
Em D
The jailhouse is empty, so's the Palace Saloon.
G
Just one look will tell you that this town was real.
Em D G
A secluded old dirt road leads up to Boot Hill.
Verse 3:
Em G
Walk up to the fence there and look at the view;
Em D
That's where they were hangin', eighteen-eighty-two.
G
It's easy to see where the brave men have died;
Em D G
Rope marks on the old tree are now petrified.
Verse 4:
Em G
At night, when the moon shines so far away,
Em D
It gets mighty lonesome, lookin' down on their graves.
G
There lies Billy Clanton; never wanted to kill,
Em D G
but he's there with the guilty, way up on Boot Hill.
Video/Audio
Song History
Published: November 22, 2025
Last Updated: February 8, 2026