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"Wild Bill" Hickok kills a soldier
Thu Jul 17, 2008 08:05
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July 17, 1870

"Wild Bill" Hickok kills a soldier
A drunken brawl turns deadly when "Wild Bill" Hickok shoots two soldiers in self-defense, mortally wounding one of them.

William Hickok had earned his reputation as a gunslinger a decade earlier after shooting three men in a gunfight in Nebraska. He parlayed his standing as a sure-shooting gunman into a haphazard career in law enforcement. In 1869, he was elected interim sheriff of Ellis County, Kansas. Hays City, the county seat, was a rough-and-tumble frontier town, and the citizens hoped Hickok could bring order to the chaos. Unfortunately, after Hickok had killed two men in the line of duty after just five weeks, they concluded that he was too wild for their tastes and they elected his deputy to replace him in November.

Unemployed, Hickok passed his time gambling, drinking, and occasionally working as a hunting guide. He quickly became bored and was considering taking work at the nearby Fort Hays as an army scout. On this day in 1870, Hickok had been drinking hard at Drum's Saloon in Hays City. Five soldiers from the 7th Cavalry stationed at Fort Hays were also at the bar. They were drunk and began to exchange words with the notoriously prickly "Wild Bill." A brawl broke out, and the soldiers threw Hickok to the floor. One trooper tried to shoot Hickok, but the gun misfired. Hickok quickly pulled his own pistols and opened fire. He wounded one private in the knee and wrist, and another in the torso. The three remaining soldiers backed off, and Hickok exited the saloon and immediately left town

A clear case of self-defense, Hickok was cleared of any wrongdoing. Yet, one of the soldiers, Private John Kile, later died of his wound and Hickok's chances of becoming an army scout evaporated. He spent the next six years working in law enforcement, gambling, and appearing in Wild West shows. He was murdered in a Deadwood, South Dakota, saloon in 1876.

Posted by Dr. Tim Lopp on his discussion board

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The Canadian Press

As American Old West disappears, so do bits of its history
The Canadian Press,  Utah - 20 hours ago
When it was built in 1916, Dewey Bridge was the second-largest suspension bridge west of the Mississippi, stretching more than 152 metres across the roiling ...

 

Soldiers Hole, Old West pit stop          Building stands test of time in former Old West town

Cactus Needles
East Valley Tribune, AZ - Jun 28, 2008
True, frontier architecture of the real Old West (roughly 1870-90) wasn’t that appealing, leading Hollywood to create an image — one Old Town Scottsdale ...

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New Historical Fiction Revisits the Plains of Kansas during the Late 19th Century  

 

New Book Release...............

by:

Dr. Dennis J. McLelland (Author)

ISBN: 0-7414-4527-1 ©2008
Price: $16.95
Book Size: 5.5'' x 8.5'' , 277 pages
Category/Subject: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Historical

The true life of bizarre mountain man John “Liver-Eating” Johnston has finally been exposed! Did he eat human livers? Did he boil human heads? This fascinating biography tells all.

The Avenging Fury of the Plains presents the truth about the often brutal frontier exploits of mountain man and Indian fighter, John “Liver-Eating” Johnston. What’s so special about this long dead frontier character? He purportedly ate the livers of Indians he’d slain in battle. His story was so compelling that Hollywood produced a movie (Jeremiah Johnson) about his wilderness experiences, starring Robert Redford. The Avenging Fury of the Plains is the first book to dismantle all the myths that surround the life of “Liver-Eating” Johnston. 

 Superb Biography! , 03/06/2008

Reviewer: Tressa McGreggor

History buffs have waited years for a true account of John ‘Liver Eatin’ Johnston. McLelland has done a superb job at bringing ‘Liver Eatin’ to life by separating fiction from fact about this fascinating character from the Wild West. Tressa McGregor Carbon County Historical Society Red Lodge, Montana

Link to Dr. Dennis John McLelland's The Avenging Fury of the Plains: John "Liver Eating" Johnston

    

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