Photo by Off The Beaten Track

Find 3 Star Hotels in Pearce, AZ from SAR 214

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Check availability on Pearce 3 Star Hotels

Compare Pearce 3 Star Hotels with updated room rates, reviews, and availability. Most hotels are fully refundable.

Stampede RV Resort

3.5 star property
8.8 out of 10, Excellent, (107)
"Great location and a cool little mobile home. It had a shuffleboard table and comfy beds. A quick walk gets you to the OK Corral and the staff was great!"
The price is SAR 214
SAR 431 total
includes taxes & fees
5 May - 6 May
Stampede RV Resort

Tirrito Farm

3.0 star property
8.4 out of 10, Very Good, (18)
"This was my second time staying here. Love the domes and the unique stay. Always clean and comfortable. Very easy check in process with the code provided. I only wish they had breakfast at the restaurant - hopefully in the future "
The price is SAR 575
SAR 813 total
includes taxes & fees
5 May - 6 May
Tirrito Farm

Tombstone Monument Guest Ranch

3.0 star property
9.6 out of 10, Exceptional, (1001)
"Our stay was a lot of fun and we look forward to coming back!!"
The price is SAR 559
SAR 685 total
includes taxes & fees
5 May - 6 May
Tombstone Monument Guest Ranch

Secluded Stargazing Mecca Near Cave Creek Canyon

3.0 star property
Secluded Stargazing Mecca Near Cave Creek Canyon

Elfrida Home w/ Yard & Fire Pit: 14 Mi to Wineries

3.0 star property
Elfrida Home w/ Yard & Fire Pit: 14 Mi to Wineries

Sky Islands Retreat in Rodeo w/ Mountain Views!

3.0 star property
Sky Islands Retreat in Rodeo w/ Mountain Views!

Tombstone Miners Cabins

3.0 star property
Tombstone Miners Cabins
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Learn more about Pearce

Escape to romantic Pearce! Enjoy its wineries and golf.

If tourists truly want to see Tombstone, you need to visit Ringo’s Grave, too. It’s a must-see.
 A lonely place, dark and sullen under a giant five-stemmed blackjack oak. You might not believe in Old West lore, but you are heedful when you approach it.

It’s the place where John Ringo died. The tree where he supposedly shot himself in the head with his Colt .45, ending an apparently troubled life.

In front of the tree on the west side of Turkey Creek near the Chiricahua Mountain foothills is a body-length cairn with a scratch-worded epitaph:

“The remains of this noted gunman and outlaw lie here . . . A coroner’s jury reported the death to be suicide, and Ringo was buried on the spot. There were others who viewed the body and maintained that the July 13, 1882 death of Ringo was murder.”

Ringo the legend has had more extravagant claims about him than Wyatt Earp, Billy the Kid, Wild Bill Hickok, Jesse James and Buffalo Bill combined, writes author Jack Burrows in “John Ringo: The Gunfighter Who Never Was.”

There is a feeling he was “a coward and a backshooter,” Duhanich says. “But he did stand up to Doc Holliday.”

Area newspapers, including those in Tucson, bought the Ringo myth of him being a deadly gunslinger, but the closest he apparently came to killing anyone was when he got mad at a guy in a Safford bar who declined his offer of whiskey for a beer. Ringo shot him point-blank, but hit only his ear.

His judged suicide may be the most compelling story. He was cradled in the tree, the rifle placed carefully against it, boots hanging nearby on his saddle. And he was partially scalped.

One rumor was Wyatt Earp was after him. But the close range angle of the bullet to the right temple clearly indicated the wound was self-inflicted.
Photo by Off The Beaten Track
Open Photo by Off The Beaten Track