
~JAMES BUTLER HICKOK~
To
describe the life of one Western town marshal, himself the best and most
picturesque of them all, is to cover all this field sufficiently. There is but
one man who can thus be chosen, and that is Wild Bill Hickok, better known for a
generation as "Wild Bill," and properly accorded an honorable place in American
history.
The
real name of Wild Bill was James Butler Hickok, and he was born in May, 1837, in
La Salle county,
After
many experiences with the pro-slavery folk from the border, Bill, or "Shanghai
Bill," as he was then known—a nickname which clung for years—went stage driving
for the Overland, and incidentally did some effective Indian fighting for his
employers, finally, in the year 1861, settling down as station agent for the
Overland at Rock Creek station, about fifty miles west of Topeka. He was really
there as guard for the horse band, for all that region was full of horse thieves
and cutthroats, and robberies and killings were common enough. It was here that
there occurred his greatest fight, the greatest fight of one man against odds at
close range that is mentioned in any history of any part of the world. There was
never a battle like it known, nor is the West apt again to produce one matching
it.
The
borderland of Kansas was at that time, as may be remembered, ground debated by
the anti-slavery and pro-slavery factions, who still waged bitter war against
one another, killing, burning, and pillaging without mercy. The civil war was
then raging, and Confederates from Missouri were frequent visitors in eastern
Kansas under one pretext or another, of which horse lifting was the one most
common, it being held legitimate to prey upon the enemy as opportunity offered.
Two border outlaws by the name of the McCandlas boys led a gang of hard men in
enterprises of this nature, and these intended to run off the stage company's
horses when they found they could not seduce Bill to join their number. He told
them to come and take the horses if they could; and on the afternoon of December
16, 1861, ten of them, led by the McCandlas brothers, rode up to his dugout to
do so. Bill was alone, his stableman being away hunting. He retreated to the
dark interior of his dugout and got ready his weapons, a rifle, two
six-shooters, and a knife.
The
assailants proceeded to batter in the door with a log, and as it fell in, Jim
McCandlas, who must have been a brave man to undertake so foolhardy a thing
against a man already known as a killer, sprang in at the opening. He, of
course, was killed at once. This exhausted the rifle, and Bill picked up the
six-shooters from the table and in three quick shots killed three more of the
gang as they rushed in at the door. Four men were dead in less than that many
seconds; but there were still six others left, all inside the dugout now, and
all firing at him at a range of three feet. It was almost a miracle that, under
such surroundings, the man was not killed. Bill now was crowded too much to use
his firearms, and took to the
Then
Jack McCandlas swung his rifle barrel and struck Bill over the head, springing
upon him with his knife as well. Bill got his hand on a six-shooter and killed
him just as he would have struck. After that no one knows what happened, not
even Bill himself, who got his name then and there. "I just got sort of wild,"
he said, describing it. "I thought my heart was on fire. I went out to the pump
then to get a drink, and I was all cut and shot to pieces." They called him Wild
Bill after that, and he had earned the name. There were six dead men on the
floor of the dugout. He had fairly whipped the ten of them, and the four
remaining had enough and fled from that awful hole in the ground. Two of these
were badly wounded. Bill followed them to the door. His own weapons were
exhausted or not at hand by this time, but his stableman came up just then with
a rifle in his hands. Bill caught it from him, and, cut up as he was, fired and
killed one of the wounded desperadoes as he tried to mount his horse. The other
wounded man later died of his wounds. Eight men were killed by the one.
The two
who got to their horses and escaped were perhaps never in the dugout at all, for
it was hardly large enough to hold another man had any wanted to get in. There
is no record of any fighting man to equal this. It took Bill a year to recover
from his wounds. The life of the open air and hard work brought many Western men
through injuries which would be fatal in the States. The pure air of the plains
had much to do with this. Bill now took service as wagon-master under General
Fremont and managed to get attacked by a force of Confederates while on his way
to
Not yet
enlisting, Bill went in as a spy for General Curtis, and took the dangerous work
of going into "Pap" Price's lines, among the touch-and-go Missourians and
Arkansans, in search of information useful to the Union forces. Bill enlisted
for business purposes in a company of Price's mounted rangers, got the knowledge
desired, and fled, killing a Confederate sergeant by name of Lawson in his
escape. Curtis sent him back again, this time into the forces of Kirby Smith,
then in
A third
time Curtis sent Bill back into the Confederate lines, this time into another
part of Price's army. Here he was detected and arrested as a spy. Bound hand and
foot in his death watch, he killed his captor after he had torn his hands free
and once more escaped. After that, he dared not go back again, for he was too
well known and too difficult to disguise. He could not keep out of the fighting,
however, and went as a scout and free lance with General Davis, during Price's
second invasion of
Curtis
now sent Bill out into
After
the war, Bill lived from hand to mouth, like most frontier dwellers. It was at
Bill
now went to trapping in the less settled parts of Nebraska, and for a while he
lived in peace, until he fell into a saloon row over some trivial matter and
invited four of his opponents outside to fight him with pistols; the four were
to fire at the word, and Bill to do the same—his pistol against their four. In
this fight he killed one man at first fire, but he himself was shot through the
shoulder and disabled in his right arm. He killed two more with his left hand
and badly wounded the other. This was a fair fight also, and the only wonder is
he was not killed; but he seemed never to consider odds, and literally he knew
nothing but fight.
His
score was now seventy-two men, not counting Indians. He himself never reported
how many Indians he and Buffalo Bill killed as scouts in the Black Kettle
campaign under Carr and Primrose, but the killing of Black Kettle himself was
sometimes attributed to Wild Bill. The latter was badly wounded in the thigh
with a lance, and it took a long time for this wound to heal. To give this hurt
and others better opportunity for mending, Bill now took a trip back East to his
home in
At that
time
Bill
now tried his hand at Wild West theatricals, seeing that already many Easterners
were "daffy," as he called it, about the West; but he failed at this, and went
back once more to the plains where he belonged. He was chosen marshal of
The
wild men from the lower plains, fighting men, mad from whiskey and contact with
the settlements' possibilities of long-denied indulgence, swarmed in the streets
and dives, mingling with desperadoes and toughs from all parts of the frontier.
Those who have never lived in such a community will never be able by any
description to understand its phenomena. It seems almost unbelievable that
sober, steady going
Two
days after Bill was elected marshal of
He was
generous, too, as he was deadly, for even yet he was supporting a McCandlas
widow, and he always furnished funerals for his corpses. He had one more to
furnish soon. Enemies down the range among the cow men made up a purse of five
thousand dollars, and hired eight men to kill the town marshal and bring his
heart back South. Bill heard of it, and literally made all of them jump off the
railroad train where he met them. One was killed in the jump. His list of
homicides was now eighty-one. He had never yet been arrested for murder, and his
killing was in fair open fight, his life usually against large odds. He was a
strange favorite of fortune, who seemed certainly to shield him roundabout.
Bill
now went East for another try at theatricals, in which, happily, he was
unsuccessful, and for which he felt a strong distaste. He was scared—on the
stage; and when he saw what was expected of him he quit and went back once more
to the West. He appeared at
But the
life of turbulence ends in turbulence. He who lives by the sword dies by the
sword. Deadwood was as bad a place as any that could be found in the mining
regions, and Bill was not an officer here, as he had been in
Ready
for anything but treachery! He himself had always fought fair and in the open.
His men were shot in front. Not such was to be his fate. On the day of August 2,
1876, while he was sitting at a game of cards in a saloon, a hard citizen by
name of Jack McCall slipped up behind him, placed a pistol to the back of his
head, and shot him dead before he knew he had an enemy near. The ball passed
through Bill's head and out at the cheek, lodging in the arm of a man across the
table.
Bill
had won a little money from McCall earlier in the day, and won it fairly, but
the latter had a grudge, and was no doubt one of those disgruntled souls who
"had it in" for all the rest of the world. He got away with the killing at the
time, for a miners' court let him go. A few days later, he began to boast about
his act, seeing what fame was his for ending so famous a life; but at Yankton
they arrested him, tried him before a real court, convicted him, and hanged him
promptly.
Wild
Bill's body was buried at Deadwood, and his grave, surrounded by a neat railing
and marked by a monument, long remained one of the features of Deadwood. The
monument and fence were disfigured by vandals who sought some memento of the
greatest bad man ever in all likelihood seen upon the earth. His tally of
eighty-five men seems large, but in fair probability it is not large enough. His
main encounters are known historically. He killed a great many Indians at
different times, but of these no accurate estimate can be claimed. Nor is his
list of victims as a sharpshooter in the army legitimately to be added to his
record. Cutting out all doubtful instances, however, there remains no doubt that
he killed between twenty and thirty men in personal combat in the open, and that
never once was he tried in any court on a charge even of manslaughter.
This
record is not approached by that of any other known bad man. Many of them are
credited with twenty men, a dozen men, and so forth; but when the records are
sifted the list dwindles. It is doubted whether any other bad man in
Hickok
was about thirty-nine years old when killed, and he had averaged a little more
than two men for each year of his entire life. He was well-known among army
officers, and esteemed as a scout and a man; never regarded as a tough in any
sense. He was a man of singular personal beauty. Of him General Custer, soon
thereafter to fall a victim himself upon the plains, said: "He was a plainsman
in every sense of the word, yet unlike any other of his class. Whether on foot
or on horseback, he was one of the most perfect types of physical manhood I ever
saw. His manner was entirely free from all bluster and bravado. He never spoke
of himself unless requested to do so. His influence among the frontiersmen was
unbounded; his word was law. Wild Bill was anything but a quarrelsome man, yet
none but himself could enumerate the many conflicts in which he had been
engaged."
These
are the words of one fighting man about another, and both men are entitled to
good rank in the annals of the West. The praise of an army general for a man of
no rank or wealth leaves us feeling that, after all, it was a possible thing for
a bad man to be a good man, and worthy of respect and admiration, utterly
unmingled with maudlin sentiment or weak love for the melodramatic.
[Source: The story of the outlaw: By Emerson Hough; Publ. 1907; Transcribed and
submitted to Genealogy Trails by Andrea Stawski Pack.]