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  2. Boot Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boot_Hill

    Tombstone, Arizona's Boothill Graveyard in 2009. Boot Hill, or Boothill, is the generic name of many cemeteries, chiefly in the Western United States. During the 19th and early 20th century it was a common name for the burial grounds for paupers.

  3. Boothill Graveyard (Tombstone, Arizona) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boothill_Graveyard...

    Boothill Graveyard is a small graveyard of at least 250 interments located in Tombstone, Cochise County, Arizona. [2] Also known as the "Old City Cemetery", the graveyard was used after 1883 only to bury outlaws and a few others. It had a separate Jewish cemetery, which is nearby. [3] "Boot Hill" refers to the number of men who died with their ...

  4. Merrell (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merrell_(company)

    Merrell All Out Crush Light trail running shoes. Merrell was established in 1981 when two executives for the Rossignol ski company, Clark Matis and John Schweizer, launched a new maker of hiking boots. The pair joined forces with Randal Ivan Merrell (R.I. Merrell), a maker of praised custom boots which retailed for $500 a pair. [1]

  5. Mr. Garrity and the Graves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Garrity_and_the_Graves

    In the year 1890, a traveling peddler named Jared Garrity arrives in the little recently renamed town of Happiness, Arizona, offering to bring the townsfolk's dead back from Boot Hill. Initially, they do not believe him, but, when he appears to resurrect a dead dog struck by a traveler's horse-drawn wagon, they believe him.

  6. Bolo tie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolo_tie

    The bolo tie was made the official neckwear of Arizona on April 22, 1971, by Governor Jack Williams. New Mexico passed a non-binding measure to designate the bolo as the state's official neckwear in 1987. On March 13, 2007, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson signed into law that the bolo tie was the state's official tie. [2]

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