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  1. Oct 5, 2021 · The Wild West lost a legendary figure after Wild Bill Hickok died — even if his background was mostly based on legend. Thanks to his own tall tales, Hickok’s earlier life as a soft-spoken peace-keeper was nearly lost to history.

  2. May 9, 2018 · Wild Bill was ignominiously denied the opportunity to prove whether he was still the top pistoleer in the West. And now he was dead at age 39. Wild Bill’s niece Ethel Hickok, who was born in June 1886, almost 10 years after he was murdered, was raised on family lore that emphasized his tender side.

    • Joseph G. Rosa
  3. Hickok may have saved Cody’s life—an act that would be reciprocated a decade later. When the Civil War broke out, the anti-slavery Hickok signed up with the Union Army. His activities included scouting and being a member of a unit of sharpshooters.

  4. Now That's Interesting. Wild Bill Hickok was buried in Deadwood, where his grave — now a tourist attraction in the South Dakota town of about 1,300 people — lies mere feet away from that of Calamity Jane, who died in 1903 and falsely claimed, in her autobiography, to have been married to Wild Bill.

    • One of Hickok’s first jobs was as a bodyguard. The man who would become Wild Bill was born James Butler Hickok in 1837 in Homer (now Troy Grove), Illinois.
    • He saved a young Buffalo Bill Cody from a beating. Around this time, young James Hickok began using his father’s name of William – the ‘Wild’ part came later – and he also met Buffalo Bill Cody, then just a messenger boy on a wagon train.
    • He is said to have wrestled a bear. One of the best-known stories about Hickok is his encounter with a bear. After serving as a constable in Monticello, Kansas, he worked as a teamster driving freight across the country.
    • The McCanles Massacre made his name. Still convalescing, Hickok moved to work at the Rock Creek Pony Express station in Nebraska. One day in July 1861, David McCanles, the man who had sold the station to the Pony Express on credit, showed up demanding back payments.
  5. Apr 4, 2020 · Wild Bill Hickok likely killed at least six or seven men in his capacity as an affronted gambler and lawman. In August of 1876, Hickok beat a drunkard named Jack McCall badly at cards at the Nuttal and Mann’s Saloon Number 10 in Deadwood, Dakota Territory.

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  7. Jan 13, 2015 · If Wild Bill Hickok was buried in Deadwood, South Dakota, in 1876, why was the bullet that killed him buried in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1910? You already know the answer if you know about Bill Massie, and if you don’t, you need to. Massie was a Missouri River steamboat pilot who went in search of riches when gold was discovered in the Black ...

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