:Wild Bill Hickok
{{Short description|American folk hero and lawman (1837–1876)}}
{{for-multi|the American football player and industrialist|Bill Hickok (American football)|other uses of "Wild Bill"|Wild Bill (disambiguation)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2019}}
{{Infobox person
|name = Wild Bill Hickok
|image = Wild Bill Hickok sepia (cropped).png
|caption =
|alt = A slightly smiling man dressed in an overcoat and sporting a mustache and shoulder-length, curly hair stares ahead.
|birth_name = James Butler Hickok
|birth_date = {{Birth date|1837|5|27|mf=y}}
|birth_place = Homer, Illinois, U.S.
(now Troy Grove, Illinois, U.S.)
|death_date = {{death date and age|1876|8|2|1837|5|27|mf=y}}
|death_place = Deadwood, Dakota Territory, U.S.
|death_cause = Gunshot wound
|resting_place = Mount Moriah Cemetery, Deadwood, Dakota Territory
|other_names = James B. Hickok, J.B. Hickok, Shanghai Bill, William Hickok, William Haycock
|occupation = {{Flatlist|
}}
|spouse = {{marriage|Agnes Thatcher Lake|March 5, 1876}}
|parents = William Alonzo Hickok and Polly Butler
}}
James Butler Hickok (May 27, 1837{{snd}}August 2, 1876), better known as "Wild Bill" Hickok, was a folk hero of the American Old West known for his life on the frontier as a soldier, scout, lawman, cattle rustler, gunslinger, gambler, showman, and actor, and for his involvement in many famous gunfights. He earned a great deal of notoriety in his own time, much of it bolstered by the many outlandish and often fabricated tales he told about himself. Some contemporaneous reports of his exploits are known to be fictitious, but they remain the basis of much of his fame and reputation.
Hickok was born and raised on a farm in northern Illinois at a time when lawlessness and vigilante activity were rampant because of the influence of the "Banditti of the Prairie". Drawn to this criminal lifestyle, he headed west at age 18 as a fugitive from justice, working as a stagecoach driver and later as a lawman in the frontier territories of Kansas and Nebraska. He served in and spied for the Union army during the American Civil War and gained publicity after the war as a scout, marksman, actor, and professional gambler. He was involved in several notable shootouts during the course of his life.
In 1876, Hickok was shot and killed while playing poker in a saloon in Deadwood, Dakota Territory (present-day South Dakota) by Jack McCall, an unsuccessful gambler. The hand of cards that he supposedly held at the time of his death has become known as the dead man's hand: two pairs; black aces and eights.
Hickok remains a popular figure of frontier history. Many historic sites and monuments commemorate his life, and he has been depicted numerous times in literature, film, and television. He is chiefly portrayed as a protagonist, although historical accounts of his actions are often controversial, and much of his career is known to have been exaggerated both by himself and by contemporary mythmakers. Hickok claimed to have shot numerous gunmen in his lifetime, and he killed six or seven, all between 1861 and 1871 according to Joseph G. Rosa, Hickok's biographer and the foremost authority on him.{{cite web|url=https://truewestmagazine.com/how-many-men-did-wild-bill-hickok-actually-kill/|title=How many men did Wild Bill Hickok actually kill?|website=True West Magazine|author=Trimble, Marshall|date=April 2002|access-date=October 5, 2017|archive-date=April 10, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190410160137/https://truewestmagazine.com/how-many-men-did-wild-bill-hickok-actually-kill/|url-status=dead}}Rosa, Joseph G. Wild Bill Hickok, Gunfighter: An Account of Hickok's Gunfights. University of Oklahoma Press; (2003). p. 198. {{ISBN|978-0806135359}}
Early life
James Butler Hickok was born May 27, 1837, in Homer, Illinois, (present-day Troy Grove, Illinois) to William Alonzo Hickok (1801–1852), a farmer and abolitionist, and his wife, Pamelia Hickok (née Butler, 1804–1878). Hickok was of English ancestry.{{Cite web|date=2013-12-12|title=James Butler Hickok May 27 1837 – August 2 1876 Better known as "Wild Bill" Hickok|url=http://www.countryside-lavie.com/article/2013/12/12/james-butler-hickok-may-27-1837-august-2-1876-better-known-wild-bill-hickok|access-date=2022-02-14|website=www.countryside-lavie.com|archive-date=December 24, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211224173104/http://www.countryside-lavie.com/article/2013/12/12/james-butler-hickok-may-27-1837-august-2-1876-better-known-wild-bill-hickok|url-status=usurped}}They Called Him Wild Bill: The Life and Adventures of James Butler Hickok. pp. 4–5. James was the fourth of six children. His father was said to have used the family house, now demolished, as a station on the Underground Railroad.{{cite book |last=Ostrom |first=Gene F. |title=Vi's Secret: A Family's Story |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YpQwhk28YtIC&pg=PA9 |publisher=iUniverse |year=2008 |page=9 |isbn=9780595466252}} William Hickok died in 1852, when James was 15.Odrowaz-Sypniewska, Margaret. [https://www.angelfire.com/mi4/polcrt/WBHickok.html James Butler Hickok/"Wild Bill"].
Hickok was a good shot from a young age, and was recognized locally as an outstanding marksman with a pistol.{{cite web | title = James Butler 'Wild Bill' Hickok, Early Deadwood | work = Black Hills Visitor Magazine | url = http://www.blackhillsvisitor.com/all-articles-directory.html?pid=878&sid=918:James-Butler-Wild-Bill-Hickok-Early-Deadwood| access-date=February 20, 2013}} Photographs of Hickok appear to depict dark hair, but all contemporaneous descriptions affirm that he had red hair.{{efn|Red objects generally appear black in early photographs, as the photographic processes were insensitive to red light.}}Rosa, Joseph G. (1979). They Called Him Wild Bill. University Press of Oklahoma. p. 306. {{ISBN?}}
In 1855, at age 18, James Hickok fled Illinois following a fight with Charles Hudson, during which both fell into a canal; each thought, mistakenly, that he had killed the other. Hickok moved to Leavenworth in the Kansas Territory, where he joined Jim Lane's Free State Army (also known as the Jayhawkers), an antislavery vigilante group active in the new territory during the Bleeding Kansas era. While there he met 12-year-old William Cody (later known as "Buffalo Bill"), who, despite his youth, served as a scout just two years later for the U.S. Army during the Utah War.{{cite book | first=George| last=Martin| editor=James Garry |title=Guns of the Gunfighters| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Az1QAAAACAAJ| publisher=Peterson Publishing| isbn=0-8227-0095-6| year=1975| access-date=October 14, 2011}}
=Nicknames=
Hickok used his late father's name, William Hickok, from 1858, and the name William Haycock during the American Civil War. Most newspapers referred to him as William Haycock until 1869. He was arrested while using the name Haycock in 1865. He afterward resumed using his given name, James Hickok. Military records after 1865 list him as Hickok, but he was also known as Haycock.Miller, Nyle H. (200). Why the West Was Wild. University Press of Oklahoma. pp. 184–191. {{ISBN|0-8061-3530-1}}.Rosa, Joseph G. (2003). Wild Bill Hickok, Gunfighter: An Account of Hickok's Gunfights. University Press of Oklahoma. {{ISBN|0-8061-3535-2}}.{{page needed|date=July 2024}} In an 1867 article about his shootout with Davis Tutt, his surname was misspelled as Hitchcock.{{cite web|url=http://twain.lib.virginia.edu/roughingit/map/herhickok.html|title=Wild Bill in Harper's Magazine|publisher=Mark Twain in His Times|access-date=July 9, 2018}}
While in Nebraska, Hickok was derisively referred to by one man as "Duck Bill" for his long nose and protruding lips.{{cite web |last1=Weiser |first1=Kathy|title=Nebraska Legends: Rock Creek Station and the McCanles Massacre |url=http://www.legendsofamerica.com/ne-rockcreek.html|website=Legends of America |access-date=October 31, 2016|date=April 2012}}They Called Him Wild Bill: The Life and Adventures of James Butler Hickok. p. 51: the name was inspired by his "sweeping nose and protruding upper lip". He was also known before 1861 among Jayhawkers as "Shanghai Bill" because of his height and slim build. He grew a moustache following the McCanles incident, and in 1861 began calling himself "Wild Bill".{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20040620104044/http://nebraskahistory.org/lib-arch/research/treasures/wild_bill_hickok.htm "Wild Bill" Hickok Court Documents]}}. Nebraska State Historical Society. 1861 subpoena issued to Monroe McCanles to testify against Hickok.
Early career
In 1857, Hickok claimed a {{Convert|160|acre|ha|adj=on}} tract in Johnson County, Kansas, near present-day Lenexa.{{cite web|url=http://www.ci.lenexa.ks.us/police/history.html |title=The Lenexa Police Department History |access-date=June 24, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090624023800/http://www.ci.lenexa.ks.us/police/history.html |archive-date=June 24, 2009}} On March 22, 1858, he was elected one of the first four constables of Monticello Township. In 1859, he joined the Russell, Majors and Waddell freight company, the parent company of the Pony Express.
In 1860, Hickok was badly injured by a bear, while driving a freight team from Independence, Missouri, to Santa Fe, New Mexico.{{Cite web |last=Richard |first=John P. |title=Chronology on Life of James Butler Hickok, Wild Bill Hickok, Old West Kansas |url=http://www.kansasheritage.org/abilene/gunfighters/JBH.html |access-date=2020-09-24 |website=www.kansasheritage.org}} According to Hickok's account, he found the road blocked by a cinnamon bear and its two cubs. Dismounting, he approached the bear and fired a shot into its head, but the bullet ricocheted off its skull, infuriating it. The bear attacked, crushing Hickok with its body. Hickok managed to fire another shot, wounding the bear's paw. The bear then grabbed his arm in its mouth, but Hickok was able to grab his knife and slash its throat, killing it.{{cite book |title=Wild Bill: The true story of the American frontier's first gunfighter | publisher=St. Martin's Press |first1=Tom |last1=Clavin |year=2019 | pages=37, 200–203}}
Hickok was severely injured, with a crushed chest, shoulder, and arm. He was bedridden for four months before being sent to Rock Creek Station in the Nebraska Territory to work as a stable hand while he recovered. There, the freight company had built a stagecoach stop along the Oregon Trail near Fairbury, Nebraska, on land purchased from David McCanles.
=McCanles shooting=
{{Main|McCanles Gang}}
{{Easy CSS image crop|image=David C McCanless.jpg|crop_left_perc=14|crop_right_perc=20|crop_top_perc=10|crop_bottom_perc=30|align=left|caption=David C. McCanles, alleged leader of the McCanles Gang, in 1860}}
On July 12, 1861, David McCanles went to the Rock Creek Station office to demand an overdue property payment from Horace Wellman, the station manager. McCanles reportedly threatened Wellman, and either Wellman or Hickok, who was hiding behind a curtain, killed McCanles.{{cite book |last1=Rosa|first1=Joseph G.|title=They Called Him Wild Bill: The Life and Adventures of James Butler Hickok |date=1987 |publisher=University of Oklahoma Press|location=Norman|isbn=978-0806115382|edition=2nd |pages= 45–51}}{{cite web|title=Rock Creek Station State Historical Park|url=http://www.fairbury.com/pages/history/rock_creek.html|publisher=Main Street Consulting Group|access-date=December 23, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151224000043/http://www.fairbury.com/pages/history/rock_creek.html|archive-date=December 24, 2015|url-status=dead}} Two men with McCanles (James Wood and James Gordon) were also killed. Hickok, Wellman, and another employee, J.W. Brink, were tried for killing McCanles, but were found to have acted in self-defense. McCanles may have been the first man Hickok killed. Hickok subsequently visited McCanles' widow, apologized for the killing, and offered her $35 [${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|35|1861}}}} in {{Inflation-year|US}} dollars] in restitution, all the money he had with him at the time.{{Cite web|url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/mss/wpalh1/16/1608/16082611/16082611.pdf|title=Wild Bill Hickok & McCanles Affair|last=Elliott|first=F. G.|date=November 26, 1938|website=Library of Congress|access-date=July 31, 2019}}{{efn|group="notes"|Personal account of the foreman of the Overland Stage Company stations, as given to The DeWitt Times News:
At the time of this affair I was at a station farther west and reached this station just as Wild Bill was getting ready to go to Beatrice for his trial. He wanted me to go with him, and as we started on our way, imagine my surprise and uncomfortable feeling when he announced his intention of stopping at the McCanles home. I would have rather been somewhere else, but Bill stopped. He told Mrs. McCanles he was sorry he had to kill her man then took out $35 and gave it to her saying: "This is all I have, sorry I do not have more to give you." We drove on to Beatrice and at the trial, his plea was self-defense; no one appeared against him, and he was cleared. The trial did not last more than fifteen minutes.}}
=Civil War service=
After the Civil War broke out in April 1861, Hickok became a teamster for the Union army in Sedalia, Missouri. By the end of 1861, he was a wagon master, but in September 1862, he was discharged for unknown reasons. He then joined Brigadier General Jim Lane's Kansas Brigade, and while serving with the brigade met his friend Buffalo Bill Cody, who was serving in it as a scout.{{cite book |last1=Cody |first1=William F. |title=The Life of Hon. William F. Cody Known as Buffalo Bill, the Famous Hunter, Scout and Guide. An Autobiography |date=1879 |publisher=Frank E. Bliss |pages=135–141 |url=http://buffalobill.unl.edu/items/show/69 |access-date=October 1, 2019 |archive-date=October 1, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191001002259/http://buffalobill.unl.edu/items/show/69 |url-status=dead }}
In late 1863, Hickok worked for the provost marshal of southwest Missouri as a member of the Springfield detective police. His work included identifying and counting the number of Union troops who were drinking while on duty, verifying hotel liquor licenses, and tracking down individuals who owed money to the cash-strapped Union army.{{citation needed|date=July 2019}}
Buffalo Bill claimed that he encountered Hickok disguised as a Confederate States Army officer in Missouri in 1864.Rosa, Joseph G. [http://www.ozarkscivilwar.org/archives/585 James 'Wild Bill' Hickok].The Life of Hon. William F. Cody, Known as Buffalo Bill, the Famous Hunter, Scout and Guide: An Autobiography. Hartford, Connecticut: F. E. Bliss, 1879.{{rp|136}} Hickok had not been paid for some time, and was hired as a scout by General John B. Sanborn by early 1865. In June, Hickok mustered out and went to Springfield, where he gambled. The 1883 History of Greene County, Missouri described him as "by nature a ruffian ... a drunken, swaggering fellow, who delighted when 'on a spree' to frighten nervous men and timid women."
Lawman and scout
=Duel with Davis Tutt=
{{Main|Wild Bill Hickok – Davis Tutt shootout}}
File:Wild-bill-harpers-3.png, in an 1867 illustration accompanying the article by Nichols in Harper's magazine]]
While in Springfield, Hickok and a local gambler named Davis Tutt had several disagreements over unpaid gambling debts and their common affection for the same women. Hickok lost a gold watch to Tutt in a poker game. The watch had great sentimental value to Hickok, so he asked Tutt not to wear it in public. They initially agreed not to fight over the watch, but Hickok saw Tutt wearing it and warned him to stay away. On July 21, 1865, the two men faced off in Springfield's town square, standing sideways before drawing and firing their weapons. Their quick-draw duel was recorded as the first of its kind.{{cite web|url=https://spartacus-educational.com/WWhickok.htm|title=Wild Bill Hickok|publisher=Spartacus Educational|access-date=February 27, 2019|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080412092615/http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/WWhickok.htm|archive-date=April 12, 2008}} Tutt's shot missed, but Hickok's struck Tutt through the heart from about {{convert|75|yd|m}} away. Tutt called out, "Boys, I'm killed" before he collapsed and died.{{cite magazine |first1=George Ward |last1=Nichols|magazine=Harper's New Monthly Magazine |title=Wild Bill|volume=34 |number=201 |date=February 1867|language=en|hdl=2027/uc1.b000541577}}
Hickok was arrested for murder two days later, but the charge was reduced to manslaughter. He was released on $2,000 bail and stood trial on August 3, 1865. At the end of the trial, Judge Sempronius H. Boyd told the jury that they could not find that Hickok acted in self-defense if he could have reasonably avoided the fight.{{efn|group="notes"|Judge Boyd told the jury, "The defendant cannot set up justification that he acted in self-defense if he was willing to engage in a fight with the deceased. To be entitled to acquittal on the ground of self-defense, he must have been anxious to avoid a conflict, and must have used all reasonable means to avoid it. If the deceased and defendant engaged in a fight or conflict willingly on the part of each, and the defendant killed the deceased, he is guilty of the offense charged, although the deceased may have fired the first shot."}} However, if they felt that the threat of danger was real and imminent, he instructed that they could apply the unwritten law of the "fair fight" and acquit.{{efn|group="notes"|Judge Boyd said, "That when danger is threatened and impending a man is not compelled to stand with his arms folded until it is too late to offer successful resistance, and if the jury believe from the evidence that Tutt was a fighting character and a dangerous man and that [Defendant] was aware such was his character and that Tutt at the time he was shot by the Deft. was advancing on him with a drawn pistol and that Tutt had previously made threats of personal injury to Deft.... and that Deft. shot Tutt to prevent the threatened impending injury the jury will acquit."}} The jury voted to clear Hickok, resulting in public backlash and criticism of the verdict.
Several weeks later, Harper's New Monthly Magazine published an interview that Hickok gave to Colonel George Ward Nichols, a journalist who became known as the creator of the Hickok legend, under the name "Wild Bill Hitchcock". The article recounted the "hundreds" of men whom Hickok had personally killed and other exaggerated exploits. It was controversial wherever Hickok was known, and several frontier newspapers wrote rebuttals.{{Cite book |last=McLaird |first=James D. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xCK4vhYIywoC |title=Wild Bill Hickok & Calamity Jane: Deadwood Legends |date=2008 |publisher=SDSHS Press |isbn=978-0-9777955-9-8 |page=1849 |language=en |quote=“The story of ‘Wild Bill,’ as told in Harper’s for February is not easily credited hereabouts,” commented the Leavenworth Daily Conservative when the magazine appeared in late January 1867.}}
=Deputy U.S. marshal in Kansas=
In September 1865, Hickok came in second in the election for city marshal of Springfield, but he was recommended for the position of deputy federal marshal at Fort Riley, Kansas. This was during the Indian Wars, in which Hickok sometimes served as a scout for General George A. Custer's 7th Cavalry.
Henry M. Stanley of the Weekly Missouri Democrat reported Hickok to be "an inveterate hater of Indian People", perhaps to enhance his reputation as a scout and American fighter. But separating fact from fiction is difficult considering his recruitment of Indians to cross the nation to appear in his own Wild West show.{{cite book |last1=Rosa |first1=Joseph G. |title=They Called Him Wild Bill: The Life and Adventures of James Butler Hickok |date=2012 |publisher=University of Oklahoma Press |location=Norman|isbn=978-0806115382 |pages=Chapter 6 |edition=2nd., rev. & enl. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UatE9Vib6VYC&q=an+inveterate+hater+of+Indians&pg=PT104}} Witnesses confirm that Hickok was attacked by a large group of Indians on May 11, 1867 while working as a scout at Fort Harker, Kansas. The Indians fled after he shot and killed two. In July, Hickok told a newspaper reporter that he had led several soldiers in pursuit of Indians who had killed four men near the fort on July 2. He reported returning with five prisoners after killing 10. Witnesses confirm that the story was true to the extent that the party had set out to find whoever had killed the four men,{{efn|group=notes|For details, see [http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1867-07-01/ed-1/seq-1/# Evening Star], July 1, 1867, which contains a garbled report of 11 men killed by Indians at Fort Harker. It also reports the death of one railroad man and the wounding of a second by Indians near Fort Harker (the two casualties are confirmed). The report of the larger number of deaths may confuse this incident with another fight with Indians at Fort Wallace, Kansas, in which a number of soldiers were killed and wounded. For the Fort Wallace fight and casualties, see [http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1867-07-15/ed-1/seq-1/# The Sun], July 15, 1867.}} but the group returned to the fort "without nary a dead Indian" and without "even seeing a live one".Miller, Nyle H. (2003). Why the West was Wild. University Press of Oklahoma. p. 185. {{ISBN|0-8061-3530-1}}.
In December 1867, newspapers reported that Hickok had come to stay in Hays City, Kansas. He became a deputy U.S. marshal, and he picked up 11 Union deserters on March 28, 1868 who had been charged with stealing government property. Hickok was assigned to bring the men to Topeka for trial, and he requested a military escort from Fort Hays. He was assigned Buffalo Bill Cody, a sergeant, and five privates. They arrived in Topeka on April 2. Hickok remained in Hays through August 1868, when he brought 200 Cheyenne Indians to Hays to be viewed by "excursionists" as a tourist attraction.Miller, Nyle H. (2003). Why the West Was Wild. University Press of Oklahoma. pp. 186–189. {{ISBN|0-8061-3530-1}}.
On September 1, 1868, Hickok was in Lincoln County, Kansas where he was hired as a scout by the 10th Cavalry Regiment, a segregated black unit. On September 4, Hickok was wounded in the foot while rescuing several cattlemen in the Bijou Creek basin who had been surrounded by Indians. The 10th Regiment arrived at Fort Lyon in Colorado in October and remained there for the rest of 1868.
=Marshal of Hays, Kansas=
In July 1869, Hickok returned to Hays and was elected city marshal of Hays and sheriff of Ellis County, Kansas, in a special election held on August 23, 1869.{{cite web | url=http://www.droversmercantile.com/history.cfm |title=Ellsworth, Kansas History |publisher=Droversmercantile.com |access-date=August 2, 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120506230707/http://www.droversmercantile.com/history.cfm |archive-date=May 6, 2012}} Three sheriffs had quit during the previous 18 months. Hickok may have been acting sheriff before he was elected; a newspaper reported that he arrested offenders on August 18, and the commander of Fort Hays wrote a letter to the assistant adjutant general on August 21 in which he praised Hickok for his work in apprehending deserters.{{efn|group="notes"|The "special election" may not have been legal, as a letter dated September 17 to the governor of Kansas noted that Hickok had presented a warrant for an arrest which was rejected by the Fort Hays commander, because, when asked to produce his commission, Hickok admitted that he had never received one.}}
The regular county election was held on November 2, 1869. Hickok ran as an Independent; but lost to his deputy, Peter Lanihan, who ran as a Democrat. Hickok and Lanihan, however, remained sheriff and deputy, respectively. Hickok accused a J.V. Macintosh of irregularities and misconduct during the election. On December 9, Hickok and Lanihan both served legal papers on Macintosh, and local newspapers acknowledged that Hickok had guardianship of Hays City.{{cite book | last1=Miller| first1=Nyle H.| last2=Rosa| first2=Joseph W. |title=Why the West Was Wild: A Contemporary Look at the Antics of Some Highly Publicized Kansas Cowtown Personalities| year=1963| publisher=University of Oklahoma Press| location=Norman| isbn=0-8061-3530-1}}{{rp|196}}
=Killings as sheriff=
Hickok killed two men in September 1869 during his first month as sheriff. The first was Bill Mulvey, who was galloping through town on a rampage, drunk, shooting out mirrors and whisky bottles behind bars. Citizens warned Mulvey to behave because Hickok was sheriff, but Mulvey angrily declared that he had come to town to kill Hickok. When he saw Hickok, he leveled his cocked rifle at him. Hickok waved his hand past Mulvey at some supposed onlookers and yelled, "Don't shoot him in the back; he is drunk." Mulvey wheeled his horse around to face those who might shoot him from behind, and Hickok shot him through the temple before he realized that he had been fooled.{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2RiZknWJqjAC&pg=PA16 |title=My Life on the Frontier, 1864–1882 |year=1936 |publisher=Sunstone Press |first1= Miguel Antonio |last1=Otero |page=16 |isbn=978-0865345546}}
The second man killed by Hickok was Samuel Strawhun, a cowboy who was causing a disturbance in a saloon at 1:00 a.m. on September 27 when Hickok and Lanihan went to the scene. Strawhun "made remarks against Hickok", and Hickok killed him with a shot through the head. Hickok said that he had "tried to restore order". A jury at the coroner's inquest found the shooting justifiable, despite "very contradictory" evidence from witnesses.{{rp|192}}
On July 17, 1870, Hickok was attacked in a saloon by two troopers from the 7th U.S. Cavalry named Jeremiah Lonergan and John Kyle (sometimes spelled Kile). Lonergan pinned Hickok to the ground, and Kyle put his gun to Hickok's ear. Kyle's weapon misfired and Hickok shot Lonergan, wounding him in the knee, and then shot Kyle twice, killing him. Hickok again lost his re-election bid to his deputy.{{cite journal |last1=Eisfield |first1=Rainer |title=Myths and Realities of Frontier Violence: A Look at the Gunfighter Saga |journal=Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture |date=October 15, 1995 |volume=3 |issue=5 |page=110 |url=https://www.albany.edu/scj/jcjpc/text/vol3is5.txt |access-date=September 30, 2019 |archive-date=August 2, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190802151120/https://www.albany.edu/scj/jcjpc/text/vol3is5.txt |url-status=dead }}
=Marshal of Abilene, Kansas=
File:John Wesley Hardin.gif, a well-known gunfighter, claimed to have killed at least 27 men. In his autobiography, Hardin made the unlikely claim that he had once disarmed Town Marshal "Wild Bill" Hickok with the use of the "road agent's spin" while surrendering his guns to the lawman due to a local ordinance.]]
On April 15, 1871, Hickok became marshal of Abilene, Kansas after being hired by mayor Joseph McCoy, who had won the mayoral election that same month.{{Cite web |title=Joseph G. McCoy – Kansas Cattle Baron – Legends of America |url=https://www.legendsofamerica.com/we-josephmccoy/ |access-date=2025-04-16 |website=www.legendsofamerica.com}} He replaced Tom "Bear River" Smith, who had been killed while serving an arrest warrant on November 2, 1870.
Outlaw John Wesley Hardin arrived in Abilene at the end of a cattle drive in early 1871. Hardin was a well-known gunfighter, and is known to have killed more than 27 men.[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85032573/1877-08-30/ed-1/seq-2/ "Hardin Credited with 27 Killings"]. The Wichita City Eagle, August 30, 1877, p. 2, col. 6 (report of his arrest). Hardin claimed in his 1895 autobiography that he was befriended by Hickok, the newly elected town marshal, after he had disarmed the marshal using the road agent's spin, but Hardin was known to exaggerate. In any case, Hardin appeared to have thought highly of Hickok.
Hickok later said that he did not know that "Wesley Clemmons" was Hardin's alias, nor that he was a wanted outlaw. He told Hardin to stay out of trouble in Abilene and asked him to hand over his guns, and Hardin complied. Hardin alleged that his cousin Mannen Clements was jailed for the killing of cowhands Joe and Dolph Shadden in July 1871, and Hickok arranged for his escape at Hardin's request.{{cite book | first = John Wesley |last = Hardin | author-link=John Wesley Hardin | title = The Life of John Wesley Hardin: As Written by Himself | isbn = 978-0-8061-1051-6 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=jLM-AAAAYAAJ&q=john+wesley+hardin | publisher = Smith & Moore | location=Seguin, Texas | page=44 | year = 1896 |access-date=March 30, 2011}}{{rp|54–56}}[http://www.thewittliffcollections.txstate.edu/research/a-z/hardin.html John Wesley Hardin Collection] Texas State University.
In August 1871, Hickok sought to arrest Hardin for killing Charles Couger in an Abilene hotel "for snoring too loud", but Hardin left Kansas before Hickok could arrest him.{{rp|45–58}}{{cite web |url=http://api.ning.com/files/IHhFP4EFbq02p4VTfzON1GB-tFQGBGaksisrzXoeABYfphA-K2nQKOKAmzvOV0oq-bngooNpfu1rfm85O4t0-VVMnOh0MOu0/Image26.jpg |title= Article |date=August 9, 1871 |publisher=Kansas Daily Commonwealth}} A newspaper reported, "A man was killed in his bed at a hotel in Abilene, Monday night, by a desperado called {{'}}Arkansas{{'}}. The murderer escaped. This was his sixth murder."{{cite web | url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84027670/1871-08-10/ed-1/seq-3/ |title= Article |date=August 10, 1871|publisher= Saline County Journal |page= 3}}
=Shootout with Phil Coe=
Hickok had a dispute with saloon owner Phil Coe that resulted in a shootout. Coe had established the Bull's Head Saloon in Abilene in partnership with gambler Ben Thompson.{{cite journal |last=Keys |first=Jim |title=Wild Bill Hickok |url=https://www.thehistoryherald.com/Articles/American-History/Civil-War-American-Indian-Wars-Pioneers-1801-1900/wild-bill-hickok/Page-2 |date=January 28, 2013 |access-date=December 27, 2017 |journal=The History Herald |page=2 |archive-date=December 27, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171227180436/https://www.thehistoryherald.com/Articles/American-History/Civil-War-American-Indian-Wars-Pioneers-1801-1900/wild-bill-hickok/Page-2 |url-status=dead }} The two men had painted a picture of a bull with a large erect penis on the side of their establishment as an advertisement. Citizens of the town complained to Hickok, who requested that Thompson and Coe remove the image. They refused, so Hickok altered it himself. Infuriated, Thompson tried to incite John Wesley Hardin to kill Hickok by exclaiming to Hardin that "he's a damn Yankee. Picks on rebels, especially Texans, to kill." Hardin was in town under his assumed name Wesley Clemmons, but was better known to the townspeople by the alias "Little Arkansas". He seemed to have respect for Hickok's abilities and replied, "If Bill needs killing, why don't you kill him yourself?" Hoping to intimidate Hickok, Coe allegedly stated that he could "kill a crow on the wing".
On October 5, 1871, Hickok was standing off a crowd during a street brawl when Coe fired two shots. Hickok ordered him to be arrested for firing a pistol within the city limits. Coe claimed that he was shooting at a stray dog,{{efn|At the time, shooting stray dogs within city limits was legal, and a 50-cent bounty was paid by the city for each one shot.}} and then suddenly turned his gun on Hickok. Hickok fired first and killed Coe. Theophilus Little, the mayor of Abilene and owner of the town's lumber yard, recorded his time in Abilene in a notebook in 1911. He detailed his admiration for Hickok and included a paragraph on the shooting that differs considerably from the reported account:
{{blockquote|"Phil" Coe was from Texas, ran the "Bull's Head" a saloon and gambling den, sold whiskey and men's souls. As vile a character as I ever met for some cause Wild Bill incurred Coe's hatred and he vowed to secure the death of the marshal. Not having the courage to do it himself, he one day filled about 200 cowboys with whiskey intending to get them into trouble with Wild Bill, hoping that they would get to shooting and in the melee shoot the marshal. But Coe "reckoned without his host". Wild Bill had learned of the scheme and cornered Coe, had his two pistols drawn on Coe. Just as he pulled the trigger, one of the policemen rushed around the corner between Coe and the pistols and both balls entered his body, killing him instantly. In an instant, he pulled the triggers again sending two bullets into Coe's abdomen (Coe lived a day or two) and whirling with his two guns drawn on the drunken crowd of cowboys, "and now do any of you fellows want the rest of these bullets?" Not a word was uttered.}}
After shooting Coe, Hickok caught a glimpse of someone running toward him and quickly fired two more shots in reaction, accidentally killing Abilene Special Deputy Marshal Mike Williams, who was coming to his aid. This was the last time that Hickok was ever involved in a gunfight; the accidental death of Deputy Williams was an event that haunted him for the remainder of his life.{{cite web |url=http://nj.essortment.com/whowildbillhi_rgvu.htm |title=Who Was Wild Bill Hickok? |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060902172148/http://nj.essortment.com/whowildbillhi_rgvu.htm |archive-date=September 2, 2006 |year=2002 |first=Darrell |last=Baizley |access-date=August 28, 2018 |publisher=Pagewise |work=Essortment}}
Hickok was relieved of his duties as marshal less than two months after the accidental shooting, this incident being only one of a series of questionable shootings and claims of misconduct during his career.
Later life
File:Wild Bill Hickok and Texas Jack Omohundro and Buffalo Bill 1873.png, and Buffalo Bill Cody as the "Scouts of the Plains" in 1873]]
In 1872, Hickok recruited six Native Americans and three cowboys to accompany him to Niagara Falls, where he put on an outdoor demonstration called The Daring Buffalo Chase of the Plains. Since the event was outdoors, he could not compel people to pay, and the venture was a financial failure.{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/lifemarvelousadv00buel |title=Life and Marvelous Adventures of Wild Bill, the Scout | publisher=Belford, Clarke & Company |first1=James William |last1=Buel |year=1880|page=34}} The show featured six buffalo, a bear, and a monkey, and one show ended in disaster when a buffalo refused to act, prompting Hickok to fire a bullet into the sky. This angered the buffalo and panicked audience members, causing the animals to break free of their wire fencing and chase audience members, some of whom were trampled. The incident helped contribute to the overall failure of the show.
In 1873, Buffalo Bill Cody and Texas Jack Omohundro invited Hickok to join their troupe after their earlier success.{{rp|329}} Hickok did not enjoy acting, and often hid behind scenery. In one show, he shot the spotlight when it focused on him. He was released from the group after a few months.{{cite news |last1=Burns |first1=Walter Noble |title=Frontier Hero – Reminiscences of Wild Bill Hickok by his old Friend Buffalo Bill|url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86091195/1911-11-02/ed-1/seq-2/ |access-date=May 14, 2017 |publisher=The Blackfoot Optimist. (Blackfoot, Idaho)|date=November 2, 1911}}
=Eye trouble=
From 1871 until his death in 1876, Hickok had vision problems. A former cavalryman, J.W. "Doc" Howard, who had known Hickok, stated that Hickok had left Buffalo Bill's Scouts of the Plains exhibition "because the lights affected his eyes, so he had to give it up".Rosa (1979) p. 266{{cite book |title=Wild Bill: The true story of the American frontier's first gunfighter | publisher=St. Martin's Press |first1=Tom |last1=Clavin |year=2019 | page=218}}
Charles Snyder, the Lucien Howe Librarian of Ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School, said "Granular conjunctivitis, ophthalmia, trachoma—call it what you will—was common on the Western Frontier. Jesse James suffered from it."Rosa (1979) p. 269
In 1876, Hickok sought treatment from an eye specialist in Kansas City, Missouri. No definitive diagnosis has survived, but speculation ranges from secondary syphilis to glaucoma.{{cite book |title=Wild Bill: The true story of the American frontier's first gunfighter | publisher=St. Martin's Press |first1=Tom |last1=Clavin |year=2019 | pages=199–200}} Although he was just 39, his marksmanship and health were apparently in decline, and he had been arrested several times for vagrancy,{{cite web|url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87052128/1876-08-18/ed-1/seq-3/#date1=1869&index=0&date2=1922&searchType=advanced&language=&sequence=0&words=Hickok+William&proxdistance=5&state=&rows=20&ortext=&proxtext=William+Hickok&phrasetext=&andtext=&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=1|title=The State Journal (Jefferson City, Mo.), 1872–1886. August 18, 1876, image 3|work=loc.gov|date=August 18, 1876}} despite earning a good income from gambling and displays of showmanship only a few years earlier.{{citation needed|date=July 2019}}
=Marriage=
Hickok met Agnes Thatcher Lake, at the time 45 years old, on July 31, 1871. Lake, a widow and the proprietor of Lake's Hippo-Olympiad circus, arrived in Abilene and went to the office of the town marshal to pay the performance fee. She and the circus departed the next day, but Lake and Hickok continued to correspond.{{cite book|title=Agnes Lake Hickok: Queen of the Circus, Wife of a Legend|isbn=978-0-8061-6544-8|last1=Fisher |first1=Linda|last2=Bowers |first2=Carrie |year=2020|publisher=University of Oklahoma Press|page=180 }} On March 5, 1876, Hickok married Lake in Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory. Hickok left his new bride a few months later, joining Charlie Utter's wagon train to seek his fortune in the gold fields of South Dakota.
File:Wild Bill Hickok tintype.png of Hickok {{circa|1870}}. It was found with the last letter he wrote to his wife, Agnes Thatcher Lake.]]
Shortly before his death, Hickok wrote a letter to his new wife, which read in part, "Agnes Darling, if such should be we never meet again, while firing my last shot, I will gently breathe the name of my wife—Agnes—and with wishes even for my enemies I will make the plunge and try to swim to the other shore."{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bpYWQPAGmPUC&pg=PA182|title=Famous Last Words|isbn=978-1856487085|last1=Ward|first1=Laura|year=2004|publisher=Sterling Publishing Company }}
Martha Jane Cannary, known popularly as Calamity Jane, claimed in her autobiography that she was married to Hickok and had divorced him so he could be free to marry Agnes Lake, but no records that support her account have been found. The two possibly met for the first time after Jane was released from the guardhouse in Fort Laramie and joined the wagon train in which Hickok was traveling. The wagon train arrived in Deadwood in July 1876.[http://www.blackhillsvisitor.com/main.asp?id=14&cat_id=30243 "Charlie Utter, Early Deadwood"]. Black Hills Visitor Magazine. Jane confirmed this account in an 1896 newspaper interview, although she claimed she had been hospitalized with illness rather than in the guardhouse.{{citation needed|date=July 2019}}
Death
On August 1, 1876, Hickok was playing poker at Nuttal & Mann's Saloon No. 10 in Deadwood, Dakota Territory. A seat opened up at the table and a drunk man named Jack McCall sat down to play. McCall lost heavily. Hickok encouraged him to quit the game until he could cover his losses, and offered to give him money for breakfast. McCall accepted the money, but he was apparently insulted.{{cite web |url=http://www.legendsofamerica.com/we-jackmccall.html |title=Jack McCall – Cowardly Killer of Wild Bill Hickok |website=Legends of America |date=November 2014 |access-date=May 9, 2019}}
The next day, Hickok was playing poker again. He usually sat with his back to a wall so that he could see the entrance, but the only seat available when he joined the game was a chair facing away from the door. He twice asked Charles Rich to change seats with him, but Rich refused.{{cite web | title=Wild Bill's Death Chair | url=http://www.icatweb.com/ropaweb/photos/southdakota/deadwood/deadwood18.html | work=Deadwood photos | access-date=July 31, 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120313061938/http://www.icatweb.com/ropaweb/photos/southdakota/deadwood/deadwood18.html | archive-date=March 13, 2012}} McCall then entered the saloon, walked up behind Hickok, drew his Colt Single Action Army .45-caliber revolver, and shouted, "Take that!" as he shot Hickok in the back of the head at point-blank range.{{cite web | last=Campagna | first=Jeff | title=American Wonder Wild Bill Hickok Shot and Killed from Behind on This Day in History | url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/american-wonder-wild-bill-hickok-shot-and-killed-from-behind-on-this-day-in-history-40211221/ | publisher=Smithsonian Institution | website=Smithsonian Magazine | access-date=June 6, 2012}}
Hickok died instantly. The bullet emerged through his right cheek and struck Captain William Massie in the left wrist.[http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84038123/1876-12-22/ed-1/seq-1/#date1=1836&index=5&date2=1922&searchType=advanced&language=&sequence=0&words=Bill+dead+Wild&proxdistance=5&state=&rows=20&ortext=&proxtext=Wild+Bill+dead&phrasetext=&andtext=&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=1 Bozeman Avant Courier, December 22, 1876, image 1, testimony of George M. Shingle].{{cite news | title=Riverboat captain 'carried' bullet that killed Hickok |newspaper= The Bismarck Tribune |first=Curt |last=Eriksmoen |date=September 2, 2012 |access-date=August 18, 2016 |url=http://bismarcktribune.com/news/columnists/curt-eriksmoen/riverboat-captain-carried-bullet-that-killed-hickok/article_61a2ed8a-f393-11e1-9c83-001a4bcf887a.html}} Hickok had told his friend Charlie Utter that he thought that he would be killed while in Deadwood.McClintock, John S. Pioneer Days in the Black Hills.
Hickok was playing five-card stud or five-card draw when he was shot. He was holding two pairs: black aces and black eights as his "up cards", which has since become widely known as the "dead man's hand". The identity of the fifth card is the subject of debate.
=Jack McCall's two trials=
File:Jack McCall.jpg shot Hickok in the back of the head; the photo has been claimed to be of McCall, but is unsubstantiated.]]
McCall's motive for killing Hickok is the subject of speculation, largely concerning McCall's anger at Hickok's giving him money for breakfast the day before after McCall had lost heavily.{{cite book|last=McManus|first=James|title=Cowboys Full: The Story of Poker|year=2009|publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux|isbn=978-0374299248|page=[https://archive.org/details/cowboysfullstory00mcma/page/134 134]|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/cowboysfullstory00mcma/page/134}}
McCall was summoned before an informal "miners' jury", an ad hoc local group of miners and businessmen. He claimed that he was avenging Hickok's slaying of his brother, which may have been true; a man named Lew McCall had indeed been killed by an unknown lawman in Abilene, Kansas, but whether or not the two McCall men were related is unknown. McCall was acquitted of the murder, which prompted editorializing in the Black Hills Pioneer: "Should it ever be our misfortune to kill a man ... we would simply ask that our trial may take place in some of the mining camps of these hills." Calamity Jane is reputed to have led a mob that threatened McCall with lynching, but she was actually being held by military authorities at the time.
McCall was rearrested after bragging about Hickok's death. The second trial was not considered double jeopardy because of the irregular jury in the first trial, and because Deadwood was in unorganized Indian country at the time. The new trial was held in Yankton, the capital of the Dakota Territory. McCall was found guilty and sentenced to death.
Leander Richardson interviewed McCall shortly before his execution and wrote an article about him for the April 1877 issue of Scribner's Monthly. Lorenzo Butler Hickok spoke with McCall after the trial, and said that McCall showed no remorse.{{cite journal|title =A Trip to the Black Hills |first1=Leander P. |last1=Richardson |journal =Scribner's |date=April 1877}}
{{blockquote|As I write the closing lines of this brief sketch, word reaches me that the slayer of Wild Bill has been rearrested by the United States authorities, and after trial has been sentenced to death for willful murder. He is now at Yankton, D.T. awaiting execution. At the trial it was suggested that he was hired to do his work by gamblers who feared the time when better citizens should appoint Bill the champion of law and order – a post which he formerly sustained in Kansas border life, with credit to his manhood and his courage.{{efn|group="notes"|McCall alleged that gambler John Varnes had paid him to murder Wild Bill. Varnes could not be found, so McCall then implicated Tim Brady in the plot. Brady had also disappeared from Deadwood and could not be found.}}}}
Jack McCall was hanged on March 1, 1877 and buried in a Roman Catholic cemetery. The cemetery was moved in 1881, and the noose was still around McCall's neck when his body was exhumed.{{cite web|url=http://www.blackhillsvisitor.com/main.asp?id=14&cat_id=30247 |title=Jack McCall and the Murder of Wild Bill Hickok |access-date=August 4, 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120313061946/http://www.blackhillsvisitor.com/main.asp?id=14&cat_id=30247 |archive-date=March 13, 2012}}. Black Hills Visitor.
=Burial=
{{multiple image
| align = right
| direction = vertical
| width = 200
| image1 = Steve and Charlie Utter.jpg
| alt1 =
| caption1 = Arapaho Joe and Colorado Charlie Utter at Hickok's grave, photograph date unknown (sometime before 1915)
| image2 = "Wild Bill's Monument." James B. Hickoc (i.e. Hickok), alias "Wild Bill," born May 27, 1837 at Homer, Ill. Killed by Jack McCall at Deadwood, S.D., Aug. 2, 1876, where his body now lies LCCN99613969.jpg
| alt2 =
| caption2 = Hickok monument in 1891
| image3 = Wild Bill Monument Deadwood South Dakota.jpg
| alt3 =
| caption3 = Hickok monument in 2008
}}
Charlie Utter claimed Hickok's body and placed a notice in the Black Hills Pioneer:
{{blockquote|Died in Deadwood, Black Hills, August 2, 1876, from the effects of a pistol shot, J. B. Hickock (Wild Bill) formerly of Cheyenne, Wyoming. Funeral services will be held at Charlie Utter's Camp, on Thursday afternoon, August 3, 1876, at 3 o'clock P. M. All are respectfully invited to attend.}}
Almost the entire town attended the funeral {{Citation needed|date=March 2025|reason=Unable to find source for this claim}}, and Utter had Hickok buried with a wooden grave marker reading:
{{blockquote|Wild Bill, J. B. Hickock killed by the assassin Jack McCall in Deadwood, Black Hills, August 2, 1876. Pard, we will meet again in the happy hunting ground to part no more. Good bye, Colorado Charlie, C. H. Utter.}}
Hickok is known to have fatally shot six men and is suspected of having killed a seventh. Despite his reputation, Hickok was buried in the Ingleside Cemetery, Deadwood's original graveyard. This cemetery filled quickly, and Utter paid to move Hickok's remains to the new Mount Moriah Cemetery in 1879, on the third anniversary of Hickok's burial.{{efn|group="notes"|The old cemetery was in an area that was better suited for the constant influx of new settlers to live on, so the remaining bodies there were eventually also moved up the hill to the Mount Moriah Cemetery (in the 1880s).}} Utter supervised the move and noted that Hickok had been imperfectly embalmed. As a result, calcium carbonate from the surrounding soil had replaced the flesh, leading to petrifaction. Joseph McLintock wrote a detailed description of the reinterment. McLintock used a cane to tap the body, face, and head, finding no soft tissue anywhere. He noted that the sound was similar to tapping a brick wall and believed that the remains weighed more than {{convert|400|lb|kg|abbr=on}}. Cemetery caretaker William Austin estimated {{convert|500|lb|kg|abbr=on}}. This made it difficult for the men to carry the remains to the new site. The original wooden grave marker was moved to the new site; it was destroyed by 1891 from souvenir hunters whittling pieces from it, and it was replaced with a statue. This, in turn, was destroyed by souvenir hunters and replaced in 1902 by a life-sized sandstone sculpture of Hickok. This, too, was badly defaced, and was then enclosed in a cage for protection. The enclosure was cut open by souvenir hunters in the 1950s, and the statue was removed.
Hickok is currently interred in a {{Convert|10|ft|m|0|abbr=on}} square plot at the Mount Moriah Cemetery, surrounded by a cast-iron fence, with a U.S. flag flying nearby.{{cite book|last=Straub|first=Patrick|title=It Happened in South Dakota: Remarkable Events That Shaped History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=msu8wbtt2J4C&pg=PA33 |date=2009 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-7627-6171-5|page=33}} The flag never goes down on Mt. Moriah Cemetery, as Deadwood was granted permission by the U.S. Congress during World War I to fly the flag 24 hours a day to honor all veterans who have served their country.
Calamity Jane was reported to have been buried next to Hickok according to her dying wish. Albert Malter, Frank Ankeney, Jim Carson, and Anson Higby were on Calamity Jane's burial committee, and they later stated that Hickok had "absolutely no use" for Jane in this life, so they decided to play a posthumous joke on him by laying her to rest by his side.
=Pistols known to have been carried by Hickok=
Hickok's favorite guns were a pair of Colt 1851 Navy Model (.36 caliber) cap-and-ball revolvers. They had ivory grips and nickel plating, and were ornately engraved with "J.B. Hickok–1869" on the backstrap. He wore his revolvers butt-forward in a belt or sash (when wearing city clothes or buckskins, respectively), and seldom used holsters; he drew the pistols using a "reverse", "twist", or cavalry draw, as would a cavalryman. As Marshal of Hays, Hickok had an Adams and Deane percussion .44-caliber pistol.Elman "Fired in Anger" p. 273
At the time of his death, Hickok was wearing a Smith & Wesson Model No. 2 Army revolver, a five-shot, single-action, .32-caliber weapon, innovative as one of the first metallic cartridge firearms and favored by many Union officers during the Civil War. Bonhams auction company offered this pistol at auction on November 18, 2013, in San Francisco, California,{{Cite web |date=18 November 2013 |title=Wild Bill Hickok's Smith & Wesson no. 2 revolver on offer at Bonhams this Fall |url=https://www.bonhams.com/press_release/14277/ |access-date=2025-02-26 |website=Bonhams}} described as Hickok's Smith & Wesson No. 2, serial number 29963, a .32 rimfire with a six-inch barrel, blued finish, and varnished rosewood grips. The gun did not sell because the highest bid of $220,000 was less than the reserve set by the gun's owners. A second pistol Hickok had at his death was a Sharps Model 1859 .32-caliber four-barreled rim-fire derringer.Elman "Fired in Anger" pp. 275–276
In popular culture
{{main|List of cultural depictions of Wild Bill Hickok}}
Hickok has remained one of the most popular and iconic figures of the American Old West, and is still frequently depicted in popular culture, including literature, film, and television.
Paramount Pictures' Western silent film Wild Bill Hickok (released on November 18, 1923) was directed by Clifford Smith and stars William S. Hart as Hickok.{{cite web|url=http://www.afi.com/members/catalog/DetailView.aspx?s=&Movie=13321|title=Wild Bill Hickok |work=afi.com |access-date=February 2, 2015}} A print of the film is maintained in the Museum of Modern Art film archive.{{cite web|url=http://www.silentera.com/PSFL/data/W/WildBillHickok1923.html|title=Wild Bill Hickok|work=silentera.com|access-date=February 2, 2015}}
The movie The Plainsman (1936), starring Gary Cooper as Hickok, features the alleged romance between Calamity Jane and him as its main plot line. It is a loose adaptation of Hickok's life, ending with his famous aces-and-eights card hand. A later film (1953) and subsequent stage musical, both titled Calamity Jane, also portray a romance between Calamity Jane and Hickok. In the film version, Howard Keel co-stars as Hickok to Doris Day's Calamity Jane.
Prairie Schooners is a 1940 American Western film directed by Sam Nelson, which stars Wild Bill Elliott as Hickok.
In 1954, an episode of Gunsmoke on CBS radio featured John Dehner as Hickok. Hickok was sent from Abilene to arrest Matt Dillon (James Arness) for the murder of a man he had thrown out of Dodge earlier that month. In the episode Dillon and Hickok are old friends.
The Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok was a 1950s TV series starring Guy Madison and Andy Devine.
The White Buffalo (1977), starring Charles Bronson as Hickok, tells a tale of Hickok's hunt for a murderous white buffalo that follows him in his nightmares.
A highly fictional film account of Hickok's later years and death, titled Wild Bill (1995), stars Jeff Bridges as Hickok and David Arquette as Jack McCall, and was written and directed by Walter Hill.
An episode of the 1963-1964 TV series The Great Adventure featured Lloyd Bridges (Jeff's father) as Hickok.
Also in 1995, he's depicted as a character in an episode of Legend (TV series) by William Russ. The episode correctly relates Hickok's vision problems late in his life, and also includes his murderer, Jack McCall, in a highly fictionalized role. It ends with Hickok surviving the murder attempt due to wearing body armor when shot in the back, then secretly leaving for a ranch in California. Since he was actually shot in the back of the head, that plot element is a complete artifice of the episode writers.
A semifictionalized version of Hickok's time as marshal of Abilene, Kansas, titled Hickok (2017), stars Luke Hemsworth as Hickok, Trace Adkins as the Bull's Head Saloon keeper Phil Coe, Kris Kristofferson as Abilene mayor George Knox, and Kaiwi Lyman-Mersereau as John Wesley Hardin. It was written by Michael Lanahan and directed by Timothy Woodward Jr.
In the early 1990s ABC television series Young Riders, a fictional account of Pony Express riders, Hickok is portrayed by Josh Brolin.
In the HBO series Deadwood (2004–2006), Wild Bill is played by Keith Carradine.
Hickok is a playable character in the 2018 board game Deadwood 1876 by Façade Games.{{Cite web |title=Deadwood 1876 |url=https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0028/2964/7961/files/Deadwood_1876_Rules_English.pdf?4346553514003986582 |access-date=5 October 2023 |website=cdn.shopify.com}}
In The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, Scruggs refuses to play the dead man's hand upon entering a game of poker.{{Cite web |last=Hibberd |first=James |date=November 27, 2018 |title=14 things you might have missed in 'The Ballad of Buster Scruggs' |url=https://ew.com/movies/2018/11/27/ballad-of-buster-scruggs-endings/ |access-date=2024-02-12 |website=Entertainment Weekly |language=en}}
=Memorials and honorable distinctions=
Hickok's birthplace is now the Wild Bill Hickok Memorial and is a listed historic site under the supervision of the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. The town of Deadwood, South Dakota, re-enacts Hickok's murder and McCall's capture every summer evening. In 1979, Hickok was inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame.{{cite web | title=Poker Hall of Fame| url=http://www.wsop.com/pokerhalloffame/default.aspx| website=WSOP.com| publisher=Caesars Interactive Entertainment, Inc.| access-date=November 1, 2016}}
Abilene, KS hosts the Wild Bill Hickok rodeo every summer during the Central Kansas Free Fair.
Notes
{{notelist|33em}}
References
{{reflist|refs=
Rosa, Joseph G. (1996). pp. 116–123.
{{cite journal |last=Lubet |first=Steven |author-link=Steven Lubet |year=2001 |url=http://tarlton.law.utexas.edu/lpop/etext/ucla/lubet48.htm |title=Legal Culture, Wild Bill Hickok and the Gunslinger Myth |journal=UCLA Law Review |volume=48 |issue=6 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070213073825/http://tarlton.law.utexas.edu/lpop/etext/ucla/lubet48.htm |archive-date=February 13, 2007 |publisher=The University of Texas}}
{{cite web |quote=John Kyle was awarded the Medal of Honor on July 8, 1869, at Republican River, Kansas, during the Indian campaigns |url=http://www.homeofheroes.com/gravesites/states/pages_go/kyle_john.html |title=Kyle John |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081014051615/http://www.homeofheroes.com/gravesites/states/pages_go/kyle_john.html |archive-date=October 14, 2008 |year=1999 |work=HomeOfHeroes |access-date=November 9, 2018}}
Rosa, Joseph G. (1996). Wild Bill Hickok: The Man and His Myth. University Press of Kansas. p. 110.
Rosa, Joseph G. (1979). They Called Him Wild Bill. University Press of Oklahoma. p. 305.
{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/117012/Wild-Bill-Hickok/overview|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150202225637/http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/117012/Wild-Bill-Hickok/overview|url-status=dead|archive-date=February 2, 2015|date=2015|department=Movies & TV Dept.|work=The New York Times|title=Wild-Bill-Hickok - Trailer - Cast - Showtimes |access-date=February 2, 2015}}
{{cite web |url=https://www.angelfire.com/tv2/theyoungriders1/WHOSWHO/jimmy.html |title=Josh Brolin as James Butler Hickok (aka Wild Bill) |year=1997 |access-date=July 20, 2018 |work=Angelfire |publisher=Rider Web Productions}}
}}
=Works cited=
- Bird, Roy (1979). "The Custer-Hickok Shootout in Hays City." Real West, May 1979.
- Buel, James Wilson (1881). Heroes of the Plains, or Lives and Adventures of Wild Bill, Buffalo Bill and Other Celebrated Indian Fighters. St. Louis: Historical Publishing.
- Clavin, Tom, (2019). Wild Bill: the true story of the American frontier's first gunfighter. St. Martin's Press, New York. {{ISBN|978-1-250-17379-9}}.
- DeMattos, Jack (1980). "Gunfighters of the Real West: Wild Bill Hickok." Real West, June 1980.
- Fisher, Linda A. and Carrie Bowers (2020). Agnes Lake Thatcher: Queen of the Circus, Wife of a Legend. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman. {{ISBN|978-0-8061-6544-8}}.
- Hermon, Gregory (1987). "Wild Bill's Sweetheart: The Life of Mary Jane Owens." Real West, February 1987.
- Matheson, Richard (1996). The Memoirs of Wild Bill Hickok. Jove. {{ISBN|0-515-11780-3}}.
- Nichols, George Ward (1867). "Wild Bill." Harper's New Monthly Magazine, February 1867.
- O'Connor, Richard (1959). Wild Bill Hickok. Garden City, New York: Doubleday.
- Rosa, Joseph G. (1964, 1974). They Called Him Wild Bill: The Life and Adventures of James Butler Hickok. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. {{ISBN|0-8061-1538-6}}.
- Rosa, Joseph G. (1977). "George Ward Nichols and the Legend of Wild Bill Hickok." Arizona and the West, Summer 1977.
- Rosa, Joseph G. (1979). They called Him Wild Bill, The Life and Adventures of James Butler Hickok, University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-1538-2.
- Rosa, Joseph G. (1979). "J.B. Hickok, Deputy U.S. Marshal." Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains, Winter 1979.
- Rosa, Joseph G. (1982, 1994). The West of Wild Bill Hickok. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. {{ISBN|0-8061-2680-9}}.
- Rosa, Joseph G. (1982). "Wild Bill and the Timber Thieves." Real West, April 1982.
- Rosa, Joseph G. (1984). "The Girl and the Gunfighter: A Newly Discovered Photograph of Wild Bill Hickok." Real West, December 1984.
- Rosa, Joseph G. (1996). Wild Bill Hickok: The Man and His Myth. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. {{ISBN|0-7006-0773-0}}.
- Rosa, Joseph G. (2003). Wild Bill Hickok Gunfighter: An Account of Hickok's Gunfights. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. {{ISBN|0-8061-3535-2}}.
- Turner, Thadd M. Wild Bill Hickok: Deadwood City – End of Trail. Universal Publishers, 2001. {{ISBN|1-58112-689-1}}
- Wilstach, Frank Jenners (1926). Wild Bill Hickok: The Prince of Pistoleers. Garden City, New York: Doubleday, Page.
External links
{{commons}}
- [https://history.nebraska.gov/collection_section/james-butler-wild-bill-hickok-1837-1876-rg2603-am/ Wild Bill Hickok collection] at Nebraska State Historical Society
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{{succession box| before=Isaac "Doc" Thayer| title=sheriff of Ellis County, Kansas| years=August 23, 1869 – December 31, 1869 | after=Peter R. "Rattlesnake Pete" Lanahan}}
{{succession box| before=Thomas J. "Bear River" Smith| title=city marshal of Abilene, Kansas| years=April 15, 1871 – December 13, 1871 | after=James A. Gauthie}}
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