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Wild Bill Hickok

Life and Career

Early

Hickok was born in Homer, Illinois (which is now Troy Grove) on May 27, 1837. His birthplace is now the Wild Bill Hickok Memorial, a historical heritage site under the supervision of the Historic Preservation Agency Illinois. Growing up, his father's farm was a stop on the Underground Railroad, and learned its ability to trigger the protection of the farm with his father slave receivers. Hickok was a good shot from a very young age and locally recognized as an outstanding shooter with a gun.

In 1855, at age 18, Hickok moved to the territory Kansas following a fight with Charles Hudson, who has produced two fall into a canal. Mistakenly believe that he had killed Hudson, Hickok fled and joined Gen. Jim Lane vigilantes "Free State Army" (foot-Red) where he met 12 years, William Cody, later known as "Buffalo Bill" who was then a scout for the army Johnston.

Because of its "nose scan and upper lip projecting," Hickok was nicknamed "duck bill". In 1861, after growing a mustache McCanlies after the incident, called himself Wild Bill. Yet photos showing that Hickok has dark hair, any description of the time actually confirm that gold blond. red hair black in the photo appeared in the former wet and dry plate.

For unknown reasons, use the name of William Hickok Hickok, 1858, and William Haycock during the Civil War. Order as Haycock in 1865, then returned to his real name James Hickok. Interestingly, most newspapers have continued to use the name when William Haycock this is "Wild Bill" in 1869 despite military records after 1865 by its proper name, while recognizing that he was also known as Haycock.

Sheriff

In 1857, Hickok claimed 160 acres (65 hectares) tract of Johnson County, Kansas (which is now Lenexa). On March 22, 1858, was chosen as one of the first four policemen Monticello Township, Kansas. In 1859, he joined the Russell, Waddell, and the carrier Major League called the Pony Express. The following year, was seriously injured by a bear and sent to Rock Creek Station in Nebraska (which the company had recently acquired David McCanlies) to work as a farm hand during my convalescence. In 1861 he was involved in a fatal shooting in the band McCanlies Rock Creek Station McCanlies David after 40 years of age, your 12 years (William) Monroe McCanlies and two pawns, James Woods and James Gordon, has called the office of the station to demand payment of a second installment due on the property, an event that is under debate. David McCanlies "called" Wild Bill in the House of the station. Wild Bill went immediately called one of the Navy SA revolvers .36 caliber, and a confrontation with 75 yards, fired a single bullet in the chest McCanlies, killing him instantly (cf. Am Handgunner). Hickok and his accomplices, the station manager Horace Wellman and his wife and an employee, JW Brink were considered but deemed to have acted in self defense. According to Joseph G. Rosa, a biographer of Hickok, the shot that killed McCanlies the elderly came from inside home, friends, a story of Wild Bill was invented to keep the "heat" McCanlies law and extended family for Wild Bill (Member generations extended). It is unknown who actually fired. Wellman Rosa conjecture that much of a McCanlies reason to kill, a belief supported by the son of McCanlies. As were women in the house, perhaps armed with shotguns. McCanlies Hickok was the first man was known to have died in combat. On several occasions, Hickok was to face and killed several men while fighting alone.

The civil war and exploration

When civil war erupted in April 1861, Hickok was signed as a route the Union Army in Sedalia, Missouri at the end of the year it was Wagonmaster. In September 1862 he was dismissed for an undisclosed reason and no trace of his whereabouts until late 1863 when he was hired by the provost of Southwest Missouri As a member of the police inspector in Springfield. It has been speculated that during the year "lost," Hickok may have been a spy operating in the territory of the South.

Hickok rights as a police detective were mostly trivial and includes counting the number of soldiers to drink while on duty, control of liquor licenses and special hotel indebted Union Monitoring to facilitate payment. In 1864, Hickok and other detectives had not been paid for some time, and Hickok or resigned or were reassigned as he was hired as a scout by General John B. at least five dollars Sanborn day, plus a horse and equipment. In June 1865, Hickok was reached and passed their time in and around gambling Springfield.

Lawman and reputation shooter

Hickok 1869. Like a knife was not used shot as a photographer is likely prop. Although buckskins are often seen in movies depicting earlier periods, Hickok was one of the first to use them.

On July 21, 1865, in the town square of Springfield, Missouri, Hickok killed Davis Tutt, Jr. in a "quick draw" duel. Later characterized Fiction this type of shooting, but Hickok is actually the first record that matches the performance.

Hickok met A first time the former Confederate Army soldier Davis Tutt in 1865 at the beginning, while the two played in Springfield, Missouri. Hickok often borrowed money Tutt. Initially, they were good friends, but ended up falling on a woman, and was rumored to Hickok, once had an affair with the sister of Tutt, perhaps the father of a child. This was probably exacerbated by the fact that there was a long dispute date on Hickok's girlfriend, Susannah Moore. Hickok refused to play cards with Tutt, who responded by funding from other players in an attempt to bankruptcy.

According to the official version, the dispute reached its climax when an opponent has been training Tutt Hickok during a card game. Hickok was on a winning streak and Tutt, frustrated, asked him to repay a loan of U.S. $ 40, which was Hickok. Tutt asked another $ 35 if a card game before. Hickok refused because he had "exposure" to prove it for $ 25. Tutt then took the watch Hickok, who was on the table, as collateral for $ 35 at the time Hickok warned not to wear or, Hickok, shoot him. The next day, Tutt appeared in the square wearing the watch in one place clearly visible, and Hickok tried to negotiate the return of the watch. Tutt said today he would not accept less than $ 45, but both agreed they do not fight for it and went for a drink together. Tutt has left the room, but returned to the place at 6 pm, while Hickok reached the other side and warned not to approach him while wearing the watch. The two men face each side in the position of mourning, and both fired almost simultaneously. Tutt shot missed, but not Hickok, drilling Tutt side about 75 feet away. Tutt yelled: "Guys, I'm dead," and ran to the porch of the court local, then back to the street where he collapsed and died.

Hickok was arrested for murder two days later, however, subsequently reduced charge of manslaughter. He was released on bail of $ 2,000 and was held on August 3, 1865. After the trial, the judge gave the jury two contradictory instructions Boyd Sempronius. The first time the jury that the conviction was his only option before the law. Then he ordered them could be applied the unwritten law of "fair fight" and acquit. The jury voted for acquittal, a verdict that was not popular at that time.

A few weeks later, Hickok was interrogated by Colonel George Ward Nichols and the interview was published in Harper's New Monthly. Using the name "The Wild Project Bill Hitchcock "(sic), the article tells the hundreds of men who were killed and Hickok personally exaggerated exploits. Section has been controversial where Hickok was known, and led several newspapers aboard replicas of writing. As you can see in this account, excluding Indian, five men killed Hickok (One by accident), was complicit in the deaths of three, and one was wounded. Hickok was reported that bitter enemy of the Indians, but it is difficult to separate fact from fiction. Eyewitnesses confirmed that although the analysis of Fort Harker Kansas May 11, 1867, Hickok was attacked by a group of Indians who fled after Hickok was shot and killed two. In July, Hickok told a reporter who had been soldiers in search of Indians who had killed four men near the fort July 2. report back with five prisoners after killing ten. Cookies confirmed the story was partly true: The game was to find those who killed the four men, but the group returned to the fort, without even a dead Indian, or even see a living.

In September 1865, Hickok was second in the election of the City of Marshal of Springfield. Leaving Springfield, was recommended for the post of Deputy U.S. Marshal Fort Riley in Kansas. Was during the Indian Wars had the Great Plains into a battlefield, and sometimes Hickok served as a scout for George A. '7 s Custer Cavalry.

In 1867, Hickok took a break from the west and moved to Niagara Falls, which proved his hand at acting in a play called "The Audacity Chase the Buffalo Plains. "Turned out to be a terrible actor and returned to the West, where he led Ellsworth County Sheriff, Kansas, November 5, 1867, but was defeated by a former soldier EW Kingsbury.

In December 1867, the press reported the arrival of Hickok in Hays, Kansas. On March 28, 1868, was back in Hays as a deputy U.S. Marshall, collecting 11 Union deserters accused of stolen state assets to be transferred to Topeka for the trial. He requested a military escort from Fort Hays and William F. Cody assigned a sergeant and five soldiers, the group arrives in Topeka, April 2. Hickok was still, or more, in Hays in August 1868, when he brought 200 Hays Cheyenne range of motorhomes. On September 1, Hickok was in the town of Elkhorn in Lincoln County, Kansas, where he was hired as a scout for the 10th Calvary Regiment, a unit segregation of African-American. On September 4, Hickok was shot in the foot by saving several breeders in the Bijou Creek watershed, which were surrounded by Indians. The 10th arrived at Fort Lyon, Colorado, in October and stayed the remainder of 1868.

In July 1869, Hickok was back in Hays and was elected sheriff and the sheriff of the town Ellis County, Kansas, during a special election on August 23 1869 .. The county had particular difficulty holding sheriffshree had left within 18 months. It is likely that Hickok served as sheriff when he was elected as a newspaper reported that arrests, 18 August and the commander of Fort Hays commended for his work at Hickok the arrest of deserters in a letter he wrote to the General Assembly deputy, August 21. However, the "election Special "can not be legal, as a letter dated September 17, the Governor of Kansas said that Hickok had filed an arrest warrant was rejected by the commander of Fort Hays, because when asked to produce his Hickok Commission admitted that he never had. Ellis County elections were held November 2, 1869, and Hickok (independent) has lost his deputy Peter Lanihan (D). Lanihan Hickok and maintained, respectively, and a deputy sheriff as defendant irregularities and misconduct JV Hickok Macintosh elections. On December 9, Hickok and Lanihan served legal documents on the Macintosh and newspapers Local acknowledged that Hickok had custody of the City of Hays.

In his first month as sheriff of Hays, who killed two men by shootings. The first, Bill 24 was Mulvey, who "fell" on Hickok. Hickok air before him and shouted: "Do not shoot from behind but baby, "who was distracted enough to let him win the fight. The second was Samuel Strawhun cowboy after Hickok, sheriff and Lanihan was called into a room where Strawhun causing a disturbance at 1 pm Sept. 27. After Strawhun commented cons Hickok, Strawhun died instantly from a bullet in the head when he tried to restore order Hickok. In Strawhuns investigation, despite "very mixed" depositions of witnesses, the jury found the shooting justifiable.

On July 17, 1870, also in Hays, he was involved in a shootout with soldiers disorderly conduct of the 7th U.S. Cavalry. Two soldiers, Jeremiah and John Lonergan Kile (Kyle) made Hickok in a saloon. Lonergan Hickok pinned to the ground while Kile put the gun in the ear of Hickok, however, has not given Hickok meet their own weapons. Lonergan was shot in the knee while Kile, who was shot twice, died the next day. Later failed to win reelection. April 15, 1871, Hickok became marshal of Abilene, Kansas, taking over from former quarterback Tom "Bear River" Smith, died 2 November 1870. The bandit John Wesley Hardin was in Abilene in 1871 and became a friend of Hickok. In his autobiography, 1895 (published after his death and 19 years According to Hickok) Hardin said he had disarmed Hickok turn the agent famous street in an attempt to arrest him for carry his gun in a classroom. He also said that Hickok, therefore, had two guns cocked and pointed. This story is considered apocryphal, or at least an exaggeration, that Hardin said that at a time when Hickok could not defend themselves. Hardin was a very accomplished gunslinger and is known for killing over 40 men in her life, which in turn identified with idealized and Wild Bill Hickok. Also records that when Hardin cousin Mannen Clements was jailed for the murder of two cowboys, Hickok, Hardin's request, prepared for his escape.

While working Abilene, Hickok and Phil Coe, a salon owner, had an ongoing conflict which later resulted in a shootout. Coe had been the business partner the famous killer Ben Thompson, who co-owns the Bulls Head Hall. On October 5, 1871, Hickok was standing off a crowd during a street fight, the during which Coe, who fired two shots. Hickok ordered to be arrested for a gun in city limits. Coe said he was fired at a stray dog, but suddenly turned his gun on Hickok, who fired first and killed Coe. Hickok had the idea of a movement person running and quickly shot two shots in the reaction, accidentally shot and killed Deputy Special Abilene Chief Mike Williams who came to his aid, an event that haunted Hickok for the remainder of his life. There is another account of the shooting Coe. Theophilus Little, mayor of Abilene and owner the local sawmill, log your time in Abilene, wrote in a notebook that was recently donated to the Historical Society in Abilene. Editorial in 1911, detailed his admiration for Hickok and included a paragraph on the shooting, which differs considerably from the accepted version.

"-" Phil "Coe Texas, led the" Bull Head "a den of life and the game sold whiskey and souls of men as despicable a character I have never known. for some reason Wild Bill Coe committed to hatred and pledged to ensure the death of Marshall. Not having the courage to do himself, a day filled with about 200 cowboys and whiskey with intent to obtain problems with Wild Bill, hoping that shoot and kill the body body quarterback. But Coe "said his host." Wild Bill had learned the system and stalled Coe had two guns drawn in Coe. As highlighted the police rushed to the corner of Coe shot and ball pistols and two entered his body, killing him instantly. in an instant pulled the trigger again sending two bullets in the abdomen Coe (Coe lived one or two days) and hanging out with his two arms in hand cons drunken crowd fellow cowboy, and now some of you want the rest of the balls. "Not a word was uttered."

Coe had said he could "kill a flight on the wing, and replication of Hickok is one of the famous quotes of the West (but perhaps apocryphal) "" The line has a gun? Were you shooting? I will be. "Hickok was relieved of his duties grand marshal less than two months after being accidentally shot by Mike Williams, allegedly because of this incident is one of a series of shootings and ask for allegations of misconduct.

Weapons Hickok was preferred a pair of cap-and-ball Colt Navy 1851 model 36 pistols, which led to his death. They were plated with ivory handles, and were saved: ". Hickock JB-1869" He wore the gun in his waistband or belt (when the town or wear pants, respectively), and cases are rarely used by itself, took weapons to fire with a "backward" or "spin" to draw, as you would a rider.

Wild Bill Omohundro Texas Jack and Buffalo Bill Cody in 1873

In 1873, Buffalo Bill Cody and Texas Jack Omohundro Hickok invited to join them in a new game called Scouts of the Plains after his previous success. Hickok and Texas Jack eventually left the show before Cody formed Buffalo Bill Wild West Show in 1882.

In 1876, Hickok was diagnosed by a doctor in Kansas City, Missouri, and ophthalmia glaucoma, a condition that has been widely rumored at the time by opponents of Hickok is the result of various sexually transmitted diseases. In truth, seems to have been affected by trachoma, a disease common vision of the era. It was evident that their purpose and health suffered for some time, as he had been arrested several times for vagrancy, despite earning a good income play and talent shows for the concert only A few years earlier. On March 5, 1876, Hickok married Agnes Lake Thatcher, owner of the circus 50 years in Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory. Hickok left his new wife a few months later, joining Charlie Utter wagon train to find fortune in the gold fields of South Dakota. Martha Jane Cannary, popularly known as Calamity Jane, said in his autobiography that she was married to Hickok and divorced him, he could be free to married Agnes Lake, but no records have been found to support account Jane. It is believed that the two met for the first time after Jane was released from the guard house at Fort Laramie and joined the caravan traveling with Hickok. The caravan arrived in Deadwood in July 1876. Jane confirmed this account In an interview to a newspaper in 1896, but said he had been hospitalized with an illness and not in the guardhouse.

Shortly before Hickok's death, wrote a letter to his new wife, which reads in part: "Agnes Darling, if it should be we shall ever see, then I was fired that last shot, you breathe gently called my wife Agnes and well wishes for my enemies and I will step trying to swim to the other side. "

Death

Wild Bill had a premonition that this would be his last camp of Deadwood and expressed this belief in two of his friends Charlie Colorado. He was right, never to live Deadwood.

On August 2, 1876 Hickok was playing poker at Nuttal & Mann's No. 10 Hall of Deadwood in the Black Hills, Dakota Territory. On that fateful day Wild Bill Viola one of his own cardinal rules and I was sitting with his back to a door. Twice asked Rich to change places with him and both times refused rich.

Wild Bill was a period of bad luck that day and was forced to borrow a poker game at the waitress. This series of bad luck worsened when a former Buffalo hunter named John (Jack Roken nose) McCall walked unnoticed. Jack McCall walked a few meters from Wild Bill, and suddenly drew a pistol and shouted: ake that! before shooting.

Hickok shot in the back of the head, killing him instantly. The bullet exited through The Wild Project Captain Bill Massie amazing right cheek on his left wrist. Legend has it that Hickok had lost his game and took $ 50 from home to follow play. During firing, holding a pair of aces and eights, all black. The fifth card is torn or, as some say, had been removed and replaced by not even made.

Other letters were mentioned, but there are four main proposals of the fifth card.

Jack Diamondsccording to transcripts of McCall's second trial.

Nine witnesses Diamondsontemporary newspaper account.

Five diamonds in the city of Deadwood, he said it was the card.

Queen of Clubs ipley Believe It or Not.

"Dead Man's Hand"

Given the number of poker players who died during the conflict, the hand of the dead man's language of poker has already been established by a number of different hands, Hickok died long before. In 1886, ten years after Hickok's death, the hand of death, as explained three cats and a pair of points in a newspaper of North Dakota, which assigns term to a specific game organized in Illinois for 40 years indicating that the hand Hickok had yet to gain popularity. Finally, Hickok 'Aces and Eights "has been widely accepted as the hand of the dead man. In 1979, Hickok was inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame.

The cause of death remains controversial. McCall may have been paid by the writing, or may have been the result of a recent conflict between the two. Most likely, McCall was furious at what he perceived as a condescending offer Hickok leave him enough money for breakfast, having lost all his money playing poker the night before. In the trial which resulted in juvenile jury two hours (an ad hoc group of miners and businessmen alike), McCall said he was avenging Hickok killing his brother before he could be true. A Lew McCall was known to have been killed by a man Law in Abilene, but it is unclear whether he was involved, and the name of law enforcement has not been recorded. McCall was acquitted of murder, resulting in the Black Hills Pioneer editorial: "If ever our misfortune to kill a man … just ask our trial may have place in some mining camps of these hills. "Calamity Jane was reputed to have carried out a lynching mob threatened to McCall, but for now Wild Bill's death, Jane was arrested by military authorities.

McCall was subsequently rearrested After bragging about their work, and a new trial was held. The authorities do not consider the double jeopardy because at the time Deadwood was not recognized by the United States as a nation legally constituted, as it was in Indian territory and the jury was improper. The retrial was held in Yankton, the capital of the territory. Hickok brother, Lorenzo Butler Hickok, from Illinois to attend the reopening of the case and went to McCall after the trial, noting that he showed no remorse. This time McCall was found guilty. Leander Richardson Hickok reporter interviewed shortly before his death and helped bury. Richardson wrote about the meeting in April 1877 issue of Scribner's Monthly, in which he mentions the second trial of McCall.

"As I write the closing lines of this brief overview, word reaches me that the murderer of Wild Bill was again arrested by the authorities, and after the trial has been sentenced to death for murder premeditated. He is now in Yankton, DT awaiting execution. The trial showed that the killer was hired to do their work players who feared the moment Improving public should appoint Bill Champion and order – a position formerly held by life on the border of Kansas, with credit to his manhood and courage. "

McCall was hanged March 1, 1877 and was buried in the Catholic cemetery. The cemetery was moved in 1881 and his body was exhumed and found that the link still around his neck. The murder of Wild Bill and the capture Jack McCall is staged every evening (in summer) in Deadwood.

Funeral and Burial

Steve and Charlie Utter at the grave of Wild Bill Hickok

Charlie Utter, a friend and colleague Hickok, Hickok claimed his body and put an ad in the local newspaper, the Black Hills Pioneer, which reads:

"Died in Deadwood, Black Hills, August 2 1876, the effects of a pistol shot, JB Hickock (sic) (Wild Bill) before Cheyenne, Wyoming. Funeral services will be held at Camp Charlie Utter, the afternoon Thursday, 3 August 1876, at 15:00 All are invited to participate with respect. "

Almost everyone attended funeral, and Utter Hickok was buried with a headstone reading of wood:

"Wild Bill Hickock JB (sic) killed by the murderer Jack McCall in Deadwood, Black Hills, August 2, 1876. My friend, we meet in the hunting ground for no more. Goodbye, Charlie Colorado, CH Utter. "

Hickok was buried in the cemetery Ingelside, Deadwood original cemetery. This cemetery was filled quickly, to prevent their future use, and in 1879, the third anniversary of his funeral home, all his attention on Hickok moved to the new Mount Moriah Cemetery. As the old cemetery was an area that was best suited to the constant influx of new residents to live, remaining organizations are not settled in the heights of Mount Moriah Cemetery, in the 1880s.

Today the tomb

Absolute under the supervision of the move and said that, while perfectly preserved, embalmed Hickok was imperfect. Consequently, the calcium carbonate from the surrounding soil has replaced the flesh that leads to petrification. One worker, Joseph McLintock, wrote a description Details of the new burial. McLintock uses a cane to take the body face and head, not finding the soft tissue on the web. He noted that the sound was like playing a brick wall and it is believed that the rest weigh over 400 pounds (181 kg). William Austin, the keeper of the cemetery, about 500 pounds (227 kg) making it difficult for men to take them to the new school. The original grave marker is moved also the new school, but in 1891 had been destroyed by souvenir hunters carved pieces of it and was replaced by a statue. In turn, was destroyed relics by hunters in 1902 and replaced by a sandstone sculpture size Hickok. This was also attacked the evil that has led his cabinet in a cage. This was opened by relic hunters in the 1950s and the statue removed.

Hickok is currently buried in ten feet (3 m) square plots at Mount Moriah Cemetery, surrounded by an iron fence with a U.S. flag flying by. A monument was built there. It was reported that Calamity Jane was buried next to him because it was his last wish. However, four men in the self-appointed committee that planned the funeral of Calamity (Albert Malter, Ankeney Frank, Jim Carson and Anson Higby) reported more later that since the bill had bsolutely Jane does not fit into this life, they decided to make a joke posthumously Hickok put to rest for eternity beside her. Potato Creek Johnny, a local celebrity deaths of 1800 and 1900, is buried next to Wild Bill.

"Dime Novel" Fame

It is difficult to separate fact from fiction about Hickok, the first "dime novel" hero of the West was in many ways a hero of the first comic strip, keep company with another management Part of his fame in such a way, Davy Crockett colonizer. In the dime novels, Hickok's exploits were presented as heroes, which seems larger than life. In fact, most stories were greatly exaggerated or fabricated by the two authors themselves.

Media

The lists of individual information should be avoided. If Please transfer the relevant information into appropriate sections and articles. (August 2008)

TV

With Guy Madison in the 1951-1958 series The Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok and the series of judicial radio broadcasting "The Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok, "271 half-hour from 1951 to 1954.

Played by Lloyd Bridges in a 1964 episode of the anthology The Great Adventure.

Portrayed by Josh Brolin in the 1989-1992 series The Young Riders.

Played by William Russ in episode 1.06 of the series The Legend of 1995, episode 1.06 "Life, Death and Life of Wild Bill Hickok." The episode portrays him fake his own death in order to retire in peace.

Portrayed in the HBO series Deadwood, which is played by Keith Carradine.

As in 1995 for television movie Buffalo Girls based on the novel by Larry McMurtry, was played by actor Sam Elliott with Anjelica Huston as Calamity Jane. The film (like the book is based) da represents the legend of Calamity Jane had a daughter with him.

Played by Sam Shepard in the movie Purgatory 1999, a film made for television in TNT

Histeria! Hickok is in "North America" episode, which appears in a skit where Lydia Chile presents a program of its game in which contestants must guess Occupation Hickok.

Movies

Portrayed by William S. Hart in the 1923 movie Wild Bill Hickok

Played by Gary Cooper in the 1936 film The Ranger, with Jean Arthur as Calamity Jane and directed by Cecil B. DeMille

Performed by Wild Bill Elliott in the series 1938 the great adventures of Wild Bill Hickok

Performed by Roy Rogers in the 1940s Film Young Bill Hickok, directed by Joseph Kane

Performed by Howard Keel in the 1953 film Calamity Jane

Played by Forrest Tucker in 1953 the film of Pony Express

Performed by Tom Brown in the 1956 film that killed Wild Bill Hickok

Performed by Robert Culp in the movie 1963 The Raiders, directed by Herschel Daugherty

Played by Jeff Corey in the 1970s Dustin Hoffman film Little Big Man

Played by Charles Bronson in the 1977 film The White Buffalo

Played by Richard Farnsworth in the 1981 movie Legend Lone Ranger

Played by Jeff Bridges in the movie Wild Bill 1995

Novels

The Memoirs of Wild Bill Hickok, Richard Matheson, ISBN 0-515-11780-3

Deadwood Dexter, Pete – 1986

And do not transfer, Randy Lee Eickoff

A breed apart Max Evans

The White Buffalo, Richard Sale

Little Big Man, Thomas Berger – 1964

The return of little big Man, Thomas Berger – 1999

Under the Stars and Bars JTEdson

Aces and Eights, Loren D. Estleman – 1981

Comics

Classics Illustrated # 121 – Wild Bill Hickok published by Gilberton Publications 1954

Western Cowboy Bill Hickok Wild # 62 1957

Young Wild Bill Hickok appears in the framework of the League of Infinity, a team of young heroes from different eras in the Supreme (BD) as written by Alan Moore circa 1994.

Music

Deadwood Mountain, big and rich

Wild Bill Hiccup, Spike Jones parody

Aces and Eights, David John

Ace of Spades, Motorhead

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wild Bill Hickok

The Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok

Deadwood, South Dakota

William Cutolo

William Langer

folk heroes

Notes

^ ab James Butler "Wild Bill" Hickok, Deadwood beginning Black Hills Visitor Magazine Http: … / / Www.blackhillsvisitor.com / main.asp? Id = 14 & cat_id = 30103 Retrieved October 5, 2009.

ABCDEFGH ^ Martin, George (1975). "The weapons the shooters." Peterson Publishing Company ISBN 0822700956.

^ "Wild Bill" Hickok Court Documents Nebraska State Historical Society 1861 summons issued to Monroe McCanlies to testify against duck-billed, and has appointed Javier turtles Llamas had pet dinosaurs, and brain. Dock and Wellman (other names not known).

^ Martin Fido: The Crime Chronicle 1993, p. 24. ISBN 1844426238 (From a newspaper article presenting the 1861 report McCanlies shooting).

Joseph G. ^ Rosa, 1979, which they call Wild Bill, University of Oklahoma Press, p. 306.

Nyle H. ^ Miller, 2003: Why the West was wild, of Oklahoma University Press, 184 pages ISBN 0806135301-191

Joseph G. ^ Rosa, 2003, Wild Bill Hickok, shot: an account of shooting Hickok, University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 0806135352

^ History of Lenexa, Kansas.

Joseph C. ^ Rosa. 1996. Wild Bill Hickok: the man and his myth, University Press of Kansas.

^ James "Wild Bill" Hickok Jose Rosa

^ Spartacus Educational ". http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/WWhickok.htm. Retrieved on 2008-04-13.

Joseph G. ^ Rosa, 1996, Wild Bill Hickok: the man and his myth, University Press of Kansas, p. 116.

Joseph G. ^ Rosa, 1996 op. cit. pp, 116-123.

^ "The defendant can not establish the merits of acting in self-defense if willingness to participate in a fight with the deceased. To be entitled to an acquittal on grounds of self defense, it must have been anxious avoid conflict and had to use all reasonable means to prevent it. If the deceased and the defendant engaged in a struggle or conflict voluntarily by everyone, and that the defendant killed the victim, is guilty as charged, although the deceased may have fired the first shot. "

^ "That when the danger is imminent and threatens a man is not obliged to turn thumbs up it is too late to offer a successful resistance if the jury considers the evidence that Tutt has a character and fight a dangerous man and he was able aware that was his character and Tutt in the time it was shot in the moving industry towards him with a pistol in his hand and Tutt had already made threats of harm to Deft … And the Intelligent Shooting Tutt to prevent imminent damage [then] the jury to acquit. "

^ The legal culture, Wild Bill Hickok and the myth Pistolero Steven Lubet UCLA Law Review Volume 48, Number 6 (2001).

Nyle H. ^ Miller, 2003, why the West was wild, University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 0806135301 Page 185

James Butler Hickok ^ / Wild Bill "Margaret Odrowaz-Sypniewski BFA

Nyle H. ^ Miller, 2003: Why the West was wild, University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 0806135301 Pages 186-189

^ Http: / / www.droversmercantile.com / history.cfm

^ Nyle H. Miller, 2003: Why the West was wild, University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 0806135301 Page 196

^ "I was standing near Wild Bill on the main street when someone started shooting in the city at the eastern end of the street. It was Bill Mulvey, a notorious assassin of Missouri, known as a business man with a gun …. Mulvey has appeared on the scene, starting with us in his iron-gray horse, rifle in hand, fully armed. When he saw Wild Bill Mulvey came to meet, apparently shaking hands with a few companions behind Mulvey and asking for them: Do not pull back, but you drink. Mulvey stopped his horse and turning on the animal, said a string of his rifle in the direction of the imaginary man thought Wild Bill was going. But before he realized that the scheme had played with him, Wild Bill had pointed his revolver and fired once. Mulvey got off his horse – dead, the bullet that entered the temple and then went through his head. "

Miguel Otero yewitness account in his book My Life on the border 1864-1882 (1936)

^ Http: / / www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk / WWhickok.htm

Nyle H. ^ Miller, 2003: Why the West was wild, Oklahoma University Press, ISBN 0806135301 Page 192

^ John Kyle

^ John Kyle won the Medal of Honor for his heroism at July 8, 1869 at River Republican KS during campaigns in India. .

City Marshal Thomas J. ^ Smith, the Abilene Police Department.

Joseph G. ^ Rosa, 1996, Wild Bill Hickok: the man and his myth, University Press of Kansas, p. 110.

^ John Wesley Hardin Texas Library State University.

^ Street shooting dogs in the city itself was legal, and reward of 50 cents was paid by the city for each shot.

^ Http: / / www.odmp.org/officer.php?oid=16507

^ Who was Wild Bill Hickok?.

^ Page # 21 in a loose-leaf titled debut Abilene Theophilus little.

^ The life of Hon. William F. Cody, known as Buffalo Bill, the famous hunter, scout and guide. An autobiography FE HAPPINESS. Hartford, Connecticut, 1879, p. 329.

Buffalo Bill Museum and Grave ^ – Golden, Colorado.

^ Griske, Michael (2005). The Diaries of John Hunton. Heritage Books. pp 89, 90. ISBN 0-7884-3804-2.

^ Charlie Utter, the beginning of Deadwood Black Hills Visitor Magazine

^ President Hickok died.

^ Poker: BBC hand October 21, 2004 Dead Man's

^ Aitkin, Marilyn (2007). Rights of offenders, offenders, and common tests. American Bar Association. ISBN 1590318803.

^ The history of man-Dead explained

^ Griske, op. cit., p. 87.

^ "A trip to the Black Hills" Leandro P. Scribner Richardson (April 1877) New York Times August 13, 1877.

^ McCall said John Varner, a player of Deadwood had paid to kill Wild Bill. When Varner did not can be reached, Tim Brady McCall involved in the conspiracy. Brady and Varner, Deadwood had disappeared and could not be found.

^ Jack McCall and the murder of Wild Bill Hickok – Black Hills Visitor Magazine.

Joseph G. ^ Rosa, 1979, which they call Wild Bill, Newspapers, University of Oklahoma, p. 305.

^ Griske, op. cit., p. 89.

References

Matheson, Richard (1996). The Memoirs of Wild Bill Hickok. Zeus. ISBN 0-515-11780-3.

Rosa, Joseph G. (1979). They called him Wild Bill. University of Oklahoma. ISBN 0-8061-1538-6.

Rosa, Joseph G. (1994). The West of Wild Bill Hickok. University Press of Oklahoma. ISBN 0-8061-2680-9.

Rosa, Joseph G. (1996). Wild Bill Hickok, the man and his myth. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-0773-0.

Rosa, Joseph G. (2003). Wild Bill Hickok Gunfighter: An Account of Hickok shot. University Press of Oklahoma. ISBN 0-8061-3535-2.

Turner, Thadd M. (2001). Wild Bill Hickok: Deadwood City – End of the Road. Universal Publishers. ISBN 1-58112-689-1.

Wilstach, Frank Jenners (1926). Wild Bill Hickok: The Prince of armed men. Doubleday, Page and Company. ASIN B00085PJ58.

External Links

Profile of Don Collier

Wild Bill Hickok Collection Nebraska State Historical Society

Today at High Noon: the first game – blog the first confrontation Hickok.

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