Wild Bill Hickok Essays

  • Wild Bill Hickok

    3462 Words  | 7 Pages

    Wild Bill Hickok James Butler Hickok was born in Troy Grove, Illinois, on May 27, 1837. He is better known as Wild Bill Hickok. Wild Bill was most famous for his lethal gun skills, but he was also known for his professional gambling, being a town marshal and even trying his hand at show business. As a boy in rural Illinois, James became recognized as an outstanding marksman with the pistol. His parents, Abner and Eunice Hickok, were very religious people. They would make James wear a

  • Buffalo Bill

    1504 Words  | 4 Pages

    Buffalo Bill One of the most colorful figures of the Old West became the best known spokesman for the New West. He was born William Frederick Cody in Iowa in 1846. At 22, in Kansas, he was rechristened "Buffalo Bill". He had been a trapper, a bullwhacker, a Colorado "Fifty-Niner", Pony Express rider (1860), wagonmaster, stagecoach driver, Civil War soldier, and even hotel manager. He earned his nickname for his skill while supplying Kansas Pacific Railroad workers with buffalo meat. He was

  • Wild West

    1297 Words  | 3 Pages

    of the railroad and was later sold to settlers. The Native Americans suffered from this flow of people from the east and this would change their lives forever. There were many struggles and the quest to just stay alive is why today we call it the “Wild West”. Especially when a good number of them were dishonest scoundrels or just drifters and adventurers. Plus, most of them were armed. The first thing the settlers needed to get done was to dig a well. Well digging was very hard job and often had

  • Legendary Bill Pickett: Black Cowboy

    504 Words  | 2 Pages

    The true story of legendary Bill Pickett, a Black Cowboy who invented the technique of bulldogging and was featured in the Wild West Shows. BRIEF SYNOPSIS: VESTER PEGG, a white cowboy tells his story to a young writer about the legendary rodeo black cowboy BILL PICKETT, aka Dusky Demon. Bill invented the technique of bulldogging that became well celebrated. Famous for his ability to bring down and wrestle a bull with his hands and teeth, Bill, is featured in the 101 Wild West shows of the early 1900’s

  • Why the Towns in the West Were Often Lawless and Violent

    761 Words  | 2 Pages

    outlaw brothers, Frank and Jesse James, were examples of men who had been educated in guerilla warfare, by the confederate, (southern) army, throughout the American civil war. An additional example is that some men, such as the brutal murderer Bill Longely made no such excuses for themselves. Lonely just reveled in the lawless existence of the West. Vicious men such as the examples above were in the civil war and they drifted towards the frontier where they thought they could put their 'skills

  • Billy The Kid Research Paper

    3283 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Controversy About W. H. Bonney During the mid-1800’s, the Southwest was a land full of adventure and legends. Cowboys led cattle drives to towns like Dodge City, and brazen gunmen such as Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday and the Clantons walked the streets in Tombstone, Arizona. But no one ranked as one of the most notorious figures of the Western frontier as did William H. Bonney, alias Billy the Kid. Depending on whom you spoke with, the identity of Billy the Kid was sometimes questioned. Billy

  • William Buffalo Bill Cody

    682 Words  | 2 Pages

    William Buffalo Bill Cody Buffalo Bill was one of the most interesting figures of the old west, and the best known spokesman of the new west. Buffalo Bill was born in 1846 and his real name was William Frederick Cody. Cody was many things. He was a trapper, bullwhacker, Colorado 'Fifty-Niner';, Pony Express rider, Civil War soldier, wagonmaster, stagecoach driver, and even a manager of a hotel. He changed his name to Buffalo Bill sometime in his early twenties for his skill while supplying railroad

  • Abraham Lincoln and Calamity Jane

    914 Words  | 2 Pages

    the pioneering of his forefathers into the “west” by specifically pointing out hardships faced on the unfriendly trail. (They faced solitude, privation, and all the dangers and hardships that beset men who take up their homes where only beasts and wild men have had their homes before.) However, “they continued to press steadily forward” even though they lost most of what they had when they started their journey. The determined family continues on through the death of Abraham’s grandfather, till Abraham

  • Fred Bear Research Paper

    1382 Words  | 3 Pages

    Fred Bear was born March fifth, 1902 in Waynesboro Pennsylvania. Growing up, he enjoyed fishing, hunting, and trapping with his father, who is the reason why he became interested in these activities in the first place. He began hunting with his dad at six years old. At the age of fourteen, Fred shot his absolute favorite animal to hunt, deer. While hunting, Fred would usually wear a flannel shirt and his signature hat, which looked like a round, black safari hat with a brown band wrapping around

  • Western Frontier

    1054 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Western Frontier The western frontier is full of many experiences that changed the frontier. Each significant event has an important role on the shaping of society and way it influenced a new nation. Each author brought a new perspective and thought process to the western experience which either contradicted Turner or supported his theories. The frontier ideas that interested me include topics such as trading frontier, farming frontier, nationality and government, and the neglecting of women

  • Buffalo Bill

    1171 Words  | 3 Pages

    Buffalo Bill William Frederick Cody, also known as Buffalo Bill, was born into an anti-slavery family. He had a rough childhood, but despite this hardship he grew up to be an adventurous wild west showman, and achieve many historical goals. On February 26, 1846, near the small town of LeClair, Iowa, William F. Cody was born to Isacc and Marry Ann Cody. At the time William had two sisters, Martha and Julia, and a brother, Samuel. But he ended up with three more sisters, Eliza, Helen, and May, and

  • John Butler Hickok Essay

    673 Words  | 2 Pages

    On May 27, 1837 born in Troy Grove, Illinois John Butler Hickok was the child of William Alonzo Hickok and Polly Butler Hickok. Hickok had a total of four brothers and two sisters. His parents were strict and had high expectations for him. When his parents operated a part of the underground railroad, Hickok found a passion for guns. His passion for guns originated when he and his father were chased by police officers because the police assumed that they were carrying people in their wagon and not

  • American Exceptionalism In The Wild West

    1251 Words  | 3 Pages

    Another interesting element in relation to the content of the show is that, as Ann Fabian describes, ‘Buffalo Bill’s Wild West’ “presented audiences with imaginative solutions to real problems” (The West 131). Because the show opened before the official closing of the frontier, the audience could relate to or had at least heard of similar problems as those presented by Buffalo Bill. The majority of show’s solutions drew on the rhetoric of ‘American Exceptionalism’ and ‘Manifest Destiny’ and illustrated

  • Cattle Town History

    692 Words  | 2 Pages

    not yet been innovated) accounted for few deaths. John Wesley Hardin killed a man snoring too loudly in an adjoining hotel room; Wyatt Earp (or another policemen) killed a carousing cowboy; Bat Masterson dispatched the murderer of his brother; Wild Bill Hickok killed two men, one a security guard, by mistake. In large part, the low cattle town body count resulted from businessmen's fear of violence, which not only could escalate into property damage but could also deter the in-migration of substantial

  • History Of Basketball

    2323 Words  | 5 Pages

    The game of basketball has evolved a great deal throughout the years. Basketball was invented on December 21, 1891. The inventor of the game was a Canadian clergyman, James Naismith (Joseph Morse, 1973). The game of basketball was fashioned from fragments of other games, seeking to eliminate flaws of indoor rugby, soccer and lacrosse. Naismith also borrowed aspects from the children’s game “Duck-on-a-Rock,” in which children tried to knock off a rock from a boulder by tossing smaller rocks from

  • indian history

    1215 Words  | 3 Pages

    Chapter 6 Indian Removal Policy -- White settlers believed that Indians stood in the way of their progress -- 1820's Isaac McCoy, Baptist minister, believed that Indians would like to live in Kansas present idea to Sec. Of War Calhoun -- William Clark, Superintendent of Indian Affairs negotiated treaties (agreements) with the Kansa and Osage Indians n     to insure move of Indians Congress passes the Indian Removal Act of 1830 n     promised the land in Oklahoma for “as long as the grass grows

  • Biography of Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp

    4050 Words  | 9 Pages

    see if their draw was a split second quicker or if they could find a weak spot. Wyatt put many of their doubts to rest. When the history of the western lawmen is placed in view, Earp’s name leads the parade of Hickok, Masterson, Garrett, Tilghman and all the rest. Bibliography The Wild West. 12 Mar. 2000. 30 Apr 2001 http://www.thewildwest.org/ The O.K. Coral. 5 Jan. 2001. 30 Apr. 2001 http://www.tombstone-epitaph.com/ Tombtown. 2 May 2001. 2 May 2001 http://www.tombtown.com/bios/wyatt.htm