Tombstone's Finest Still Serves the Dead
The Crystal Palace Saloon stands as Tombstone's most authentic and continuously operating saloon, its ornate bar and tin ceiling witnessing over 140 years of drinking, gambling, and dying. Unlike the rough saloons that catered to miners, the Crystal Palace served Tombstone's elite - and attracted the kind of trouble that came with money and power. This is where the Earp-Clanton feud simmered before boiling over, where million-dollar mining deals were made and broken, and where at least a dozen men met their ends over cards, women, or wounded pride. The original Brunswick bar still serves drinks, though some of its patrons have been dead for over a century.
Blood, Bullets, and Bourbon
The Earp Connection
The Crystal Palace served as neutral ground where the Earps and Cowboys would drink in tense proximity. On December 28, 1881, Virgil Earp was ambushed and shot outside the saloon, his arm permanently crippled. The assassination attempt's psychic shock still reverberates - visitors report hearing gunshots and seeing a man clutching his bloody arm stumbling through the doorway.
The High Stakes Games
The saloon's back room hosted poker games where fortunes changed hands and lives ended over accusations of cheating. At least four men died at the gaming tables, shot point-blank for palming cards or simply winning too much. Their spirits still play, dealing invisible cards and calling bets no one can match.
The Working Girls
Though more refined than other establishments, the Crystal Palace employed 'percentage girls' who earned commissions on drinks and more. Several died here - one thrown from the second floor, another poisoned by a jealous rival. Their perfumed ghosts still work the room, whispering propositions to male visitors.
The Palace's Permanent Patrons
The Cowboy at the Bar
A tall figure in a black duster stands at the bar's far end, never ordering but always watching. Believed to be one of the Cowboys involved in shooting Virgil Earp, he appears most clearly in the bar's antique mirrors. Bartenders report feeling watched and finding bullets on the bar where he stands.
The Gambling Ghost
Known as 'Swiftwater Bill,' this professional gambler who was shot for cheating in 1882 still plays poker in the back room. Cards shuffle themselves, chips move across tables, and cigar smoke appears without source. Some visitors report being dealt into invisible games, feeling compelled to ante up with real money that disappears.
Golden Dollar
A prostitute named Golden Dollar, murdered by a client in 1881, haunts the upstairs rooms (now storage). Her distinctive laugh echoes through the building, and the scent of her rose perfume precedes her appearances. Male employees report feeling invisible hands on their shoulders and whispered invitations to 'come upstairs.'
The Protective Bartender
Frank, a bartender killed defending the cash register in 1884, still guards the bar. Cash registers malfunction when someone with ill intent approaches, bottles fall on would-be thieves, and honest mistakes in change are mysteriously corrected. Frank appears as a reflection in the back bar mirror, nodding approval or shaking his head in warning.
Documented Phenomena
The Mirror Portal
The saloon's original back bar mirror acts as a window to the past. Patrons see reflections of people who aren't there - cowboys, dance hall girls, gamblers in period dress. Some report seeing their own reflections in period clothing, as if the mirror shows who they were in a past life. Photographs of the mirror often reveal faces and figures invisible to the naked eye.
The Musical Manifestations
The saloon's antique piano plays by itself, usually songs from the 1880s. The player piano has been disconnected for decades, yet it still produces music. Phantom violins and harmonicas join in, creating concerts from beyond. The music typically starts at 2 AM, the same time the saloon would have been at its rowdiest.
The Temporal Shifts
The Crystal Palace experiences time slips where modern patrons suddenly find themselves in the 1880s. Electric lights become oil lamps, tourists vanish replaced by cowboys, and modern music changes to period tunes. These shifts last seconds to minutes, leaving witnesses disoriented but with vivid memories of the Old West.
Belly Up to History
The Crystal Palace Saloon remains fully operational, serving drinks to both the living and the dead. The staff embraces the paranormal activity, pointing out where famous gunfights occurred and which bar stools the ghosts prefer. They'll even pour shots for invisible patrons - a tradition that keeps the spirits calm. The saloon offers ghost tours after midnight when the spirits are most active. Paranormal equipment is available for rent, and the staff maintains a log of encounters. The basement, scene of numerous violent deaths, requires special permission to access but guarantees paranormal activity. Whether you come for the history, the hauntings, or just a cold beer, the Crystal Palace delivers an authentic Tombstone experience. The original fixtures, tin ceiling, and Brunswick bar create an atmosphere where past and present blur. Just remember - if someone challenges you to cards in the back room and you can see through them, it's best to decline. The house always wins, especially when the house has been dead for 140 years.