Thursday, July 13, 2023

Fascinating Facts About Famous Figures of the American Wild West: Part 2: James Butler “Wild Bill” Hickok

 Copyright by Gary L. Pullman

A Blond


Wild Bill Hickok. This image is in the public domain.


A casting director who chooses an actor with black shoulder-length hair to portray Wild West legend Wild Bill Hickok might suppose that such a choice would be historically accurate, since surviving photographs of Hickok show him to have been a brunette. In fact, however, descriptions of the hero who was, at various times of his life, a fugitive, a stagecoach driver, soldier, an army scout, a town marshal, a cattle thief, a gambler, a showman, and an actor, reveal that Hickok was actually a blond.


A Bear Fighter


When Hickok crossed paths with a bear with her two cubs while he was hauling freight westward from Independence, Missouri, on his way to Santa Fe, New Mexico, he shot the mama bear in the head. She was hardheaded, though, and the bullet bounced off the animal's head, accomplishing nothing more than enraging the beast.


As the bear crushed him against her body, the teamster got off another shot, this time wounding his attacker in the paw. The bear responded by seizing Hickok's arm in her mouth. He could have lost the appendage, had he not been able to slash his attacker's throat with his knife. After four months in bed, he was dispatched to Rock Creek Station, Nebraska, to recover from his injuries while taking on the duties of a stable hand. This is the account of the incident, at least, provided by D. M. Kelsey, author of Our Pioneer Heroes and Their Daring Deeds.


Joseph G. Rosa, author of They Called Him Wild Bill, is more skeptical, declaring, “This legend has been repeated countless times, bowdlerized, twisted, and warped, and just how much truth there is in it has always been in doubt,” and probably originated with J. W. Buel, the city editor of the St. Louis Dispatch and an early Hickok biographer, who used the story to “boost the heroics of his character,” rather than with Hickok himself.


A Showman


Well before his friend (and later, briefly, his employer) “Buffalo Bill” Cody assembled his Wild West Show, Hickok put on his own version of a similar extravaganza. According to Life and Marvelous Adventures of Wild Bill, The Scout, by J. W. Buel, the show, featuring four Comanches and a half-dozen buffalo, took place in Niagara Falls, but attendees refused to cough up the admission fee, and, since the show took place outdoors, they couldn't be required to pay. There would be no repeat performance.


A Painter


He faced down Texas outlaw John Wesley Hardin, who claimed he'd turned the tables on Hickok by performing the maneuver known as the road agent's spin, twirling his six-gun around so that the barrel, rather than the butt, faced the lawman. The story is regarded as highly unlikely, given Hickok's own experience and skill as a gunfighter.


When Phil Coe and his business partner Ben Thompson painted one of the exterior walls of their establishment, the Bull's Head Saloon, with a painting of a bull sporting an erect penis, even the citizens of the rough-and-tumble cow town, Abilene, Kansas, were offended, demanding that Hickok order that the portrait be removed. When they balked, Hickok had the offending member painted over, causing further bad blood between the saloon owners and himself.


Complaining to Hardin of Hickok's high-handed response to their masterpiece, Thompson made a case to him for assassinating the marshal: “He's a damn Yankee. Picks on rebels, especially Texans, to kill.” Hardin, himself a Texan, as Thompson knew, did not take the bait. “If Bill needs killing, why don't you kill him yourself?” Hardin replied.


As Sarah Smarsh recounts in Outlaw Takes of Kansas: True Stories of the Sunflower State's Most Infamous Crooks, Culprits, and Cutthroats, Coe tried a different gambit. Hoping to cow Hickok, he boasted that he could “kill a crow on the wing.” The saloon owner's adversary asked, “Did the crow have a pistol? Was he shooting back? I will be.” Subsequently, as Hickok was dealing with a crowd during a street fight, the marshal killed Coe when the latter tried to shoot him.


On the same occasion, Hickok mistakenly killed his own deputy, Mike Williams, who was rushing to Hickok's assistance. As a result, Hickok was suspended and, later, traveled west, eventually to his death in Deadwood, Dakota Territory.


A Husband


Between Abilene and Deadwood, he briefly became a member of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, but his aversion to acting led to his departure from show business. Along the way, he married Agnes Thatcher Lake (Agnes Lake Hickok: Queen of the Circus, Wife of a Legend by Linda A. Fisher and Carrie Bowers).


A Dead Man


In Deadwood, while playing poker in a saloon, he was shot in the back of the head by Jack McCall. Hickok died almost immediately, and his prediction that he would be killed in Deadwood was fulfilled. The cards he was holding at the time of the shooting, a pair of aces, spades and clubs, and a pair of aces, also spades and clubs, became known as “the dead man's hand.”


The Butt of an Everlasting Practical Joke


Most of Deadwood's citizenry attended Hickok's funeral. Had Charles Rich, another of the gamblers participating in the game the night that Hickok was killed agreed to either of the famous gunfighter's two requests to change seats with him so that Hickok could face the saloon's door, Hickok would, in all likelihood, have dispatched McCall, had the drunken killer been bold enough to have tried to shoot Hickok face to face instead of in the back of the head.


Despite his marriage to Lake, Hickok's admirer was buried beside him, as had been her wish. According to some accounts, those who honored her last wish did so for their own amusement, it seems, as they explained their action by starting that Hickok had had “no use” for Jane, so they'd supposed their planting her next to him for eternity would be an appropriate prank.


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My series An Adventure of the Old West is available on Amazon, as a prequel novelette and and four single novels or as a boxed set of all five works.

 


 

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Fascinating Facts About Famous Figures of the American Wild West: Part 1: Bat Masterson

 Copyright 2023 by Gary L. Pullman

Bat Masterson. This image is in the public domain.


Collecting Money Due

Hired, along with his brother Ed and their friend Theodore Raymond, to grade a five-mile stretch of railroad bed, Bat Masterson collected the $300 pay overdue to them at gunpoint when he encountered Raymond Ritter, the man who'd hired them before skipping out aboard a Santa Fe-bound train that stopped in Dodge City, Kansas. Reportedly, a crowd cheered.

Royal Gorge. This image is in the public domain.

Recruiting Mercenaries

Masterson also recruited a small army of fighting men to oppose the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad's mercenaries, who sought to prevent the Santa Fe Railroad from using the Royal Gorge near Pueblo, Colorado. The latter company claimed that it held an exclusive right-of-way to the gorge and that the former company had no legal access to it. When guns weren't sufficient to end the situation, the “Royal Gorge War” was resolved in an out-of-court settlement.

Committing Election Fraud

During elections in Denver, Colorado, presumably drunken saloon patrons were escorted to the polls, and “mobs” were paid $2 each for voting for the candidate of the payer's choice, i. e., the city's “liquor dealers” who fronted the money for such payments. Police and bartenders did their part to ensure “the flow of ballots for mayoral candidate Wolfe Londoner,” including those of the town's soiled doves. As a not-so-surprising result, Londoner handily defeated his opponent, Elias Barton. During Londoner's tenure, cronyism reigned, with the mayor's favorites filling so many municipal offices that the city was on the verge of bankruptcy. During a trial, it was determined that Bat Masterson and his pal, infamous con man Soapy Smith, had had a hand in the shenanigans, “compiling voter registration lists” that included names of the dead and out-of-towners.

 

George Gould, Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad executive. This image is in the public domain.

 

Acting as a Bodyguard

After moving to New York City in 1895, Masterson served, briefly, as a bodyguard for George Gould, an executive for the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad, the same company that was involved in the 1878-1880 Royal Gorge War. It seems the stint was more pleasurable than arduous, including, as Masterson wrote to friends, fishing from aboard Gould's yacht.

Writing a Newspaper Column

After this employment, Masterson became a columnist for the New York Telegraph, writing “Masterson's Views on Timely Topics.” He also penned some fanciful biographical sketches of men he'd known during his days in the Wild West: Ben Thompson, Wyatt Earp, Luke Short, Doc Holliday, and Bill Tilghman, and Buffalo Bill Cody, which appeared in Human Life: The Magazine About People Edited by Alfred Henry Lewis.

Serving as a U.S. Marshal

Masterson was fast friends with President Theodore Roosevelt, who paved the way for Bat's appointment as deputy U.S. Marshal for the Southern District of New York, a position that paid $2,000 per year, which Masterson held until 1908, when William Howard Taft, who was not a fan of the Wild West lawman, “abolished” Masterson's “position.”

Bat Masterson in New York City. This image is in the public domain.

Having a Massive Funeral

Masterson died at his desk in the office of the Morning Telegraph, after suffering a heart attack. He had just finished his final column for the newspaper, His funeral service was attended by nearly 500 mourners.

 

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Enjoy my four-novel series An Adventure of the Old West AND the novella prequel!

 


This series is also available as a box set!


 

 

Confessions of an Armchair Traveler and Historian

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