Hand was born in
New York City, and raised in
Boston. She studied music in
Europe and became an
opera singer in New York City. After contracting
tuberculosis, she traveled west. She married musician Theodore Hand, but divorced in Indiana. She later travelled to
Memphis, Tennessee, and in 1876 was in
St. Louis, Missouri. Hand arrived in Dodge City in June 1878 to work for Kelley. Kelley had met Hand earlier at Camp Supply. Kelley joined P. L. Beatty and founded the Beatty and Kelley Restaurant. He became a part-owner of the Dodge City Alhambra Saloon, and later became mayor of Dodge City, in 1877. The city's
law enforcement was very weak, as a group of the town’s merchants, saloon operators, and gamblers called
the Gang liked the business that the cowboys brought to the town and did not want
law and order to slow business. In May 1877
cowboys in town were so out of control that they shot up the businesses while drunk. Kelley took action, sending a
telegraph to lawman
Wyatt Earp in
Deadwood, South Dakota, asking him to come to Dodge City and restore law and order. Wyatt and his brother Morgan became the marshals and restored order. In 1885 a fire destroyed the wood-built Beatty and Kelley Restaurant. The fire also destroyed the Alahambra Saloon/Junction Saloon. In its place Kelley built and opened the Kelley Opera House at the corner of First Avenue and Front Street. Hand became one of the well known singers at the Alahambra Saloon/Kelley Opera House, singing five nights a week. Hand was known for her version of the songs "Blessed Be the Ties That Bind" and "
Because I Love You So". While Kelley was out of town, in a hospital in Fort Dodge, he let Hand and her friend Fannie Garretson stay at his home. Fort Dodge was a United States Army outpost about five miles from Dodge City. On October 4, 1878 at 4 am, cowboy James Kenedy (1855–1884), known as "Spike", fired shots into Kelley’s home, thinking the mayor was home sleeping. One of the shots hit Hand in the side and killed her instantly. She was 34 years old. James Kenedy was the son of a rich
Tascosa, Texas cattleman, Mifflin Kenedy, owner of the Laureles Ranch. Before the Laureles Ranch, Mifflin Kenedy was in a partnership with
Richard King in the
King Ranch. Cattlemen took
cattle drives on the
Chisholm Trail to deliver their product to Dodge City. This is what made Dodge City a
boomtown. James Kenedy and Kelley had a dispute that led Kenedy to shoot at his house. Hand’s friends and the town's lawmen, Sheriff Bat Masterson, Assistant US Marshal Wyatt Earp,
Charlie Bassett and
Bill Tilghman pursued Kenedy. A
posse also took after Kenedy. Masterson caught up with Kenedy the next day. Masterson fired a 50-caliber rifle and hit Kenedy in the shoulder, causing him to fall off his horse. Kenedy was arrested, but did not go to trial for the murder of Hand. Judge R. G. Cook acquitted him, claiming lack of evidence. Rumors are that Mifflin Kenedy may have paid Cook money. Kenedy had been arrested in Dodge City two times before. Wyatt Earp arrested Kenedy for carrying and brandishing a pistol in Dodge City and on August 17, Marshal Charlie Bassett arrested Kenedy for disorderly conduct, but the judge gave Kenedy only a warning. ==Television and film depiction==