Tombstone

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Tombstone
Japanese Name トゥームストーン

Tombstone render.png

Tombstone (Explosive☆Gunman) render.png

Tombstone (Wandering Outlaw) render.png

Tombstone (Cowgirl Gunman) render.png

Weapon Weapon Gun.png Gun
Race Human
Nationality St. Iris.png St. Iris
Birthday August 18
Constellation Leo
Talents Gun handling, Horseback riding, Poker
Likes Beloved horse Silver, Western things, Gunmen
Dislikes Law, Fruits such as apples
Strengths Not worrying about anything and not dragging her emotions
Weaknesses Doesn't listen to others
Hobbies Brushing beloved horse Silver, Gun maintenance and song shooting, Entertainment

I'm Tombstone! I can't lose to anyone if it comes to rapid-firin' mah gun and ridin' me horse! I don't know how difficult it will be, but until the day I'd be sleepin' under a tombstone I'll shoot a gun for Doctor! Bang Bang Bang!

Layers

Icon Title Release Date Where to Obtain
Tombstone (Outlaw Girl) icon.png [Outlaw Girl] Tombstone 2022 January 17 (EN) [The Course of Justice] Pick Up Gacha, Premium Gacha
Tombstone (Explosive☆Gunman) icon.png [Explosive☆Gunman] Tombstone 2022 July 23 [Amorous Owl and the Pure Archer] Limited Gacha
Tombstone (Wandering Outlaw) icon.png [Wandering Outlaw] Tombstone 2022 March 24 (EN) 0.5 Anniversary Limited Gacha 2
Tombstone (Cowgirl Gunman) icon.png [Cowgirl Gunman] Tombstone 2023 May 23 [White Horse Shooter and the Dropout Mage] Limited Gacha

Trivia

  • Tombstone's birthday is the founding date of Tucson, Arizona in 1775.
  • Tombstone's design is based on the Wild West theme famous in Tombstone, Arizona, notably the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral incident, as well as the Tucson railway station.
  • The name of Tombstone's beloved horse is Silver, which is based on the Western drama (radio drama broadcast from 1933) called The Lone Ranger. Silver is the Lone Ranger's great white stallion.
  • The background of [Wandering Outlaw] is a standard template of a Wild Western saloon with a lot of dance, such as a bar with an object that resembles the skull of Buffalo, its equipment, and a Wanted poster.
  • The Wanted poster in the left area of the background of [Wandering Outlaw] features a portrait of Wyatt Earp.
  • The right revolver in her SS art resembles a locomotive train (without wheels), much likely the Mist Train.

Counterpart

Tucson station entrance.

Tucson station is an Amtrak train depot in Tucson, Arizona, served three times a week by the Sunset Limited and Texas Eagle trains. The depot was built in 1907 by the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP). It was designed by the SP's architect, Daniel J. Patterson, who designed a number of depots during the same era, including the San Antonio Station.

In 1998, the City purchased the entire depot property from the Union Pacific Railroad, which had absorbed the SP. Restoration of the main depot building and the three adjacent buildings, to their 1941 modernized Spanish Colonial Revival architectural style, was completed in 2004. Spanish Colonial Revival elements include the brick walls, red clay roof tiles, and colorful, decorative tilework in the waiting room. The station and other railroad buildings are included as contributing resources to the National Register-listed Tucson Warehouse Historic District.

The Old Pueblo Trolley extended their historic streetcar line to the depot in 2009. Sun Link assumed operation of the line on July 25, 2014. The Southern Arizona Transportation Museum is located in the old Records Vault building. Wikipedia

Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday statue.

The Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday statue is situated here. According to historian David Leighton, of the Arizona Daily Star, the Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday statue near the train depot commemorates the revenge killing of Frank Stilwell. On March 18, 1882, in the aftermath of the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, Morgan Earp was murdered by unknown killers, in Tombstone, Arizona. Two days later, Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, and a few other men were escorting the injured Virgil Earp and his wife to Tucson, with their final destination being California. While at the Tucson train station, Wyatt Earp learned that Frank Stilwell, one of the individuals suspected in the Morgan Earp murder, was lurking in the area. Earp, Holliday, and the others pursued Stilwell along the train tracks, eventually catching and killing him.

Tombstone library.

Tombstone is a historic city in Cochise County, Arizona, United States, founded in 1877 by prospector Ed Schieffelin in what was then Pima County, Arizona Territory. It became one of the last boomtowns in the American frontier. The town grew significantly into the mid-1880s as the local mines produced $40 to $85 million in silver bullion, the largest productive silver district in Arizona. Its population grew from 100 to around 14,000 in less than seven years. It is best known as the site of the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral and presently draws most of its revenue from tourism. It also houses the highest-rated brewery in the state of Arizona. The gunfight at the O.K. Corral was a gunfight that lasted less than a minute between lawmen led by Virgil Earp and members of a loosely organized group of outlaws called the Cowboys that occurred at about 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, October 26, 1881, in Tombstone, Arizona, United States. It is the most famous gunfight in the history of the American Old West.

The railway line to Tombstone started out as a two-mile graded right-of-way heading east out of the town of Fairbank. The grading was done by the New Mexico and Arizona Railroad from a connection with their Benson-Nogales mainline, constructed in 1882. However, the NM&A's parent, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, decided to not pursue a line to Tombstone, and only the grading was left, sans tracks.

In 1902, a mining boom in the town of Bisbee prompted the El Paso and Southeastern Railway to construct a line between Benson and Bisbee, which too traveled through Fairbank (indeed paralleling the nearby NM&A line for some of its length). Thanks to a similar mining boom in the town of Tombstone, the EP&SW constructed a branch line from Fairbank (utilizing the prior right-of-way graded by the NM&A from 1882) into Tombostone, completing it in 1903.

Operations over the line continued under the Southern Pacific Railroad (who leased the EP&SW in 1924 and purchased it outright in 1955). However, after production of the mines dwindled and stopped altogether, SP filed for abandonment of the line in 1959. Abandoned Rails

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