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English poker and faro player (1851–1930)

Alice Ivers Duffield Tubbs Huckert (February

17, 1851 – February 27, 1930), better known as πŸ‘ Poker Alice, Poker Alice Ivers or Poker

Alice Tubbs, was an English poker[1][2] and faro player[3][4] in the American West.

Her

πŸ‘ family moved from Devon, England, where she was born, to Virginia, United States, where

she was reared and educated. As πŸ‘ an adult, Ivers moved to Leadville, Colorado, where she

met her first husband, Frank Duffield. He got Ivers interested in πŸ‘ poker, but he was

killed a few years after they married. Ivers made a name for herself by winning money

πŸ‘ from poker games in places like Silver City, New Mexico, and even working at a saloon

in Creede, Colorado, that πŸ‘ was owned by Bob Ford, the man who killed Jesse

James.[5]

Early life [ edit ]

"Poker" Alice Ivers was born in πŸ‘ England,[6][7] to Irish

immigrants. Her family moved to Virginia when Alice was twelve. As a young woman, she

went to πŸ‘ boarding school in Virginia to become a refined lady. While in her late teens,

her family moved to Leadville, a πŸ‘ city in the then Colorado Territory.[8]

Personal life

[ edit ]

Poker Alice, early photo

It was in Leadville that Alice met Frank πŸ‘ Duffield,

whom she married[6] at a young age. Frank Duffield was a mining engineer who played

poker in his spare πŸ‘ time.[7] After just a few years of marriage, Duffield was killed in

an accident[7] while resetting a dynamite charge in πŸ‘ a Leadville mine.[9]

Ivers was

known for splurging her winnings, as when she won a lot of money in Silver City πŸ‘ and

spent it all in New York. After all of her big wins, she would travel to New York and

πŸ‘ spend her money on clothes. She was very keen on keeping up with the latest fashions

and would buy dresses πŸ‘ to wear to play poker, partly as a business investment to

distract her opponents.[9]

Alice met her next husband around 1890[6] πŸ‘ when she was a

dealer in Bedrock Tom's saloon in Deadwood,[8] South Dakota. When a drunken miner tried

to attack πŸ‘ her fellow dealer Warren G. Tubbs with a knife, Alice threatened him with her

.38.[10] After this incident, Tubbs and πŸ‘ Ivers started a romance and were married soon

after.[8]

Some sources report Alice and Warren had seven children together,[11][12]

other sources πŸ‘ report they did not have any children together, but Alice brought two

children into the marriage, a daughter and a πŸ‘ son, giving Warren two stepchildren.[13]

Her son, George, who would take on the Tubbs name. In 1934, George would be πŸ‘ saved from

a train, after he was found lying on the tracks. Two women were able to pull him to

πŸ‘ safety just in time to save his life. At the time of the incident, he was 65 years old,

putting πŸ‘ his birth around 1868.[14]

Warren was a painter by trade, and it was speculated

that through his work, he contracted tuberculosis. πŸ‘ For the last years of Warren's life,

Alice tried to help him regain his health. A few months before Warren πŸ‘ died, Alice moved

him to a ranch on the Moreau River, 100 miles from Sturgis. It was there that Warren

πŸ‘ died on December 31, 1909.[15][16][17]

To secure a proper burial and funeral, Alice

wrapped Warren's body in blankets, placed him in πŸ‘ their lumber wagon, and with her team

of horses, traveled to Sturgis. It would take Alice four days to travel πŸ‘ along the snow

covered trails to the city of Sturgis, where she was able to arrange for a funeral for

πŸ‘ Warren. In order to pay off the funeral costs, Alice would travel to Rapid City, where

she worked as a πŸ‘ bartender for Black Nell in Nell's resort.[18]

Alice's third husband

was George Huckert,[10] who worked on her homestead taking care of πŸ‘ the sheep.[19]

Huckert was constantly proposing to Ivers. Eventually, Ivers owed HuckertR$1,008, so

she married him, figuring that it would πŸ‘ be cheaper than paying his back wages.[10]

Huckert died on October 12, 1924.[20]

Poker career [ edit ]

After the death of πŸ‘ her

first husband, Alice started to play poker seriously.[7] Alice was in a tough financial

position. After failing in a πŸ‘ few different jobs including teaching, she turned to poker

to support herself financially.[19] Alice would make money by gambling and πŸ‘ working as a

dealer. Ivers made a name for herself by winning money from poker games.[7] By the time

Ivers πŸ‘ was given the name "Poker Alice,"[8] she was drawing in large crowds to watch her

play and men were constantly πŸ‘ challenging her to play. Saloon owners liked that Ivers

was a respectable woman who kept to her values. These values πŸ‘ included her refusal to

play poker on Sundays.[10]

As her reputation grew, so did the amount of money she was

making. πŸ‘ Some nights she would even makeR$6,000,[10] an incredibly large sum of money at

the time. Alice claimed that she wonR$250,000, πŸ‘ which would now be worth more than three

million dollars.

Ivers used her good looks to distract men at the poker πŸ‘ table. She

always had the newest dresses,[9] and even in her 50s was considered a very attractive

woman. She was πŸ‘ also very good at counting cards and figuring odds, which helped her at

the table.[21]

Alice was known always to have πŸ‘ carried a gun with her, preferably her

.38, and frequently smoked cigars.[22]

Poker's Palace and jail time [ edit ]

After

Warren πŸ‘ Tubbs death, Alice eventually purchased a building which sat on the south side

of Bear Butte Creek, between the city πŸ‘ of Sturgis and Fort Meade, South Dakota, where

the current Sturgis City Park now stands.[23] "Poker Alice's" resort, as it πŸ‘ was

commonly known,[24] gained notoriety in 1913 due a confrontation between soldiers of

Troop K, stationed at Fort Meade, and πŸ‘ Alice herself.

Trouble had initially developed

between the soldiers and Alice in the early part of July, 1913, a little over πŸ‘ a week

before the shooting. Later that week, the trouble was rekindled, and finally once again

on Monday, July 14.[25] πŸ‘ Around 10:30pm, five soldiers of Troop K, accompanied by a

number of members of the South Dakota guard, which had πŸ‘ recently been stationed at Fort

Meade, went to Alice's resort for the intention of starting a "rough house." After the

πŸ‘ soldiers were refused admittance, they began throwing stones through the windows of

Alice's resort and cutting telephone and electric wires. πŸ‘ In response, Alice opened

fire, landing five shots. One struck a Private Fred Koetzle of Troop K in the head, πŸ‘ and

around midnight, he died from the wound.[26] Another soldier, 22-year-old Joseph C.

Miner was also shot, with the bullet πŸ‘ passing three inches above his heart. While he was

initially expected to also die from his wounds, he would later πŸ‘ recover.[27] Three other

individuals were also struck, including a civilian.[28]

Immediately following the

shooting, police, the sheriff and his deputies arrived πŸ‘ at the scene. Alice, along with

six of her girls would be placed under arrest, and sent to the county πŸ‘ jail.[29] No

charges would be filed by State's Attorney Gray of Meade county against Alice, for the

shooting and subsequent πŸ‘ death of Private Koetzle. After investigating the facts of that

night, it was determined that Alice was justified in the πŸ‘ shooting as she was defending,

or attempting to defend, her personal property. However, she was charged with keeping a

house πŸ‘ of "illfame," and her six girls, Jennie Palmer, Bessie Brundidge, Ann Carr,

Birdie Harris, Mabel Smith, and Edith Brown, were πŸ‘ convicted of frequenting a house of

"illfame."[30]

Two years later, another confrontation at Poker Alice's resort led to

the shooting of πŸ‘ several soldiers, and one civilian. Private Cadwell was shot in the

abdominal region, Private Wood in the neck, and an πŸ‘ unnamed civilian in the arm. The

incident was written off simply as a "booze" fight.[31]

Alice continued to have run-ins

with πŸ‘ the law, culminating in the 1920s. In 1924, her resort was raided for

bootlegging.[32] The following year, her resort was πŸ‘ raided, possibly for the last time,

and Alice was charged and convicted of operating a house of prostitution.[33]

In 1928,

facing πŸ‘ time in the state penitentiary for her convictions of bootlegging and running a

house of prostitution, Alice's community came together πŸ‘ to petition the governor to

grant her a pardon. The claim made was that Alice was in poor health, and πŸ‘ confinement

to prison could be fatal for her. Hundreds signed the petition.[34] On December 20,

1928, the pardon was granted πŸ‘ by then Governor William J. Bulow.[35]

Death [ edit

]

After being pardoned by then Governor William J. Bulow, Poker Alice appears πŸ‘ to have

retired. No future run-ins with the law would be reported.

On Thursday, February 6,

1930, Alice underwent a gallbladder πŸ‘ operation in Rapid City. There was a general fear

that recovery would be difficult due to her advanced age; however, πŸ‘ just two days later,

it appeared that Alice was recovering speedily and it appeared as if she would be able

πŸ‘ to return home before long.[36] Her recovery continued to appear to be progressing, but

her doctors did warn that there πŸ‘ was no surety she was out of danger.[37] On February

27, 1930, Alice died.[38]

Funeral services would be held for Alice πŸ‘ on March 1, 1930, at

the St. Aloysius Cemetery in Sturgis, South Dakota. Father Columban, of the Catholic

Church, gave πŸ‘ a sermon at her grave.[39]

Alice left one final surprise: when her will

was read, it was revealed that Alice had πŸ‘ disinherited her relatives for not paying

attention to her in her declining years; instead, she divided her estate among her

πŸ‘ friends.[40][41]

Legacy [ edit ]

Comic book loosely based on Ivers' life

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