
The cowboys from Doc Holliday’s Gunfight Palace in Tombstone stage a jail break at the old Gleeson jail. Re-enactments such as this can be arranged to coincide with your Into The West Jeep Tours in and around Tombstone, Arizona.
Take one of the many Tombstone jeep tours offered by Into The West Jeep Tours and Mark and his crew will transport you back in time to the Old West of Cochise, Geronimo, Johnny Ringo, Wyatt Earp, and Doc Holliday. If you’re planning to visit Tombstone, these back country excursions are highly recommended.
You will not only see the rugged beauty of Cochise County from vantage points few get to experience. These jeep tours can also take you to historic sites, such as Cottonwood Springs where Wyatt Earp killed Curley Bill Brocius, and real ghost towns, such as Fairbank, Gleeson, Courtland, & Pearce. Read More

Into The West Jeep Tours can take you through historic & scenic Cochise County on back roads you might not want to travel in your sedan.
On a pleasant Thursday in March (2013) Richard, my driver & guide, drove me through the hills above Tombstone to see the mining district that made hard-rock miners, like Ed Schieffelin, unimaginably rich almost overnight. As well-versed as I am on the history of this area and as many old mines as I have explored in my younger days, Richard explained a great deal that I had been unaware of. His shared knowledge was indeed an advanced history lesson taught by a man who is clearly passionate about his subject. He made my tour both enjoyable and enlightening.

We were in an open-air jeep that Mark had modified to handle the demands of the rocky, uneven roads up there. What had been a standard Jeep with stick-shift and 6-cylinder engine was now an automatic with a powerful V-8 outfitted with some serious tread. This high-clearance beast could go anywhere it could get traction.
That said, they also have enclosed 4-wheel drive vehicles for those who want to see the Old West in climate-controlled comfort.

Into The West has several standard tours that take 2 to 4 hours and cost anywhere from about $55 to $95 per person. But they can easily create custom tours to suit the occasion, including weddings, cookouts, and outlaw shootouts.

Death In A Tombstone Saloon: circa 1882. This particular gunfight took place in Doc Holliday’s Gunfight Palace on Allen Street in Tombstone, Arizona.
My Jeep tour included a half-hour gunfight in a mock 1880’s saloon on Allen Street near the Bird Cage Theater. These theatrics at Doc Holliday’s Gunfight Palace are what tourists want to see. However having seen many, I can attest that Doc’s gunfights are the most realistic. The audience is particularly close to the action.
For more on Tombstone, check out our Southern Arizona Guide’s Tombstone Section, including our 1881 video interviews with Virgil Earp and Tom McLaury just before they walked out of a saloon and headed down to the OK Corral.
Also, if you’re interested in some of the ghost towns you can visit on these Jeep tours, check out our Ghost Towns section.
Learn more about the sights of Tombstone on our “Things to Do in Tombstone” page. More about Tombstone’s colorful history can be found here.