|
Legends Home
Site
Map
What's New!!

American History
Ghost Towns
Ghostly Legends
Historic People
Native Americans
The Old West
Photo
Galleries
Roadside
Attractions
Rocky Mtn Store
Route 66
Travel
Destinations
Treasure Tales
Legends Blog
Free E-Newsletter
Facebook
Fanpage
Twittering

Contact Us
Please report
broken links, missing pictures, or other problems online by clicking
HERE or send us an
email. Thanks!
| |
|
|
|
Wild Bill - 1867 Harper's
Weekly Article |
|

|
|
<<Previous
1
2
3
4 5
Next >> |
|
In
February, 1867, an article entitled
Wild Bill
appeared in Harper's
New Monthly Magazine. Written by George Ward Nichols, the tale wildly
exaggerated Bill Hickok's deeds, defamed the people of Springfield,
Missouri, and included numerous downright inaccuracies.
Response to the Nichols article was heavily
attacked by the press, so much so, that Nichols soon turned away from this
type of journalism and concentrated
on writing about music.
Even though the article was inaccurate and
widely thought of as being little more than entertainment fodder for those
in the East, it was still widely read and largely perpetuated Bill
Hickok's already growing legend.
Listed below are some of the excerpts regarding the article:
|
 |
|
From the
Leavenworth Daily Conservative on January 30, 1867
The story of "Wild
Bill,"
as told in Harper's for February is not easily credited
hereabouts. To those of us who were engaged in the campaign it sounds
mythical; and whether Harry York, Buckskin Joe or Ben Nugget is meant
in the life sketches of Harper we are not prepared to say. The
scout services were so mixed that we are unable to give precedence to
any. "Wild
Bill's"
exploits at
Springfield
have not as yet been heard of here, and if under that cognomen such
brave deeds occurred we have not been given the relation. There are
many of the rough riders of the rebellion now in this city whose
record would compare very favorably with that of "Wild
Bill,"
and if another account is wanted we might refer to Walt Sinclair.
From the
Springfield
Patriot on January 31, 1867
Springfield
is excited. It has been so ever since the mail of the 25th brought
Harper's Monthly to its numerous subscribers here. The excitement,
curiously enough, manifests itself in very opposite effects upon our
citizens. Some are excessively indignant, but the great majority are
in convulsions of laughter, which seem interminable as yet. The cause
of both abnormal moods, in our usually placid and quiet city, is the
first article in Harper for February, which all agree, if
published at all, should have had its place in the "Editor's Drawer,"
with the other fabricated more or less funnyisms; and not where it is,
in the leading "illustrated" place. But, upon reflection, as Harper
has given the same prominence to "Heroic Deeds of Heroic Men," by Rev.
J. T. Headley, which, generally, are of about the same character as
its article "Wild
Bill,"
we will not question the good taste of its "make up."
We are importuned by the angry ones to review it.
"For," say they, "it slanders our city and citizens so outrageously by
its caricatures, that it will deter some from immigrating here, who
believe its representations of our people."
"Are there any so ignorant?" we asked.
"Plenty
of them in New England; and especially about the Hub, just as ready to
swallow it all as Gospel truth, as a Johnny Chinaman or Japanese would
be to believe that England, France and America are inhabited by
cannibals."
|
|
|
|

James Butler
"Wild Bill" Hickok in the year the
article was published, 1867.
This
image available for photographic prints
HERE!
|
"Don't touch
it," cries the hilarious party, "don't spoil a richer morceaux than ever
was printed in Gulliver's Travels, or Baron Munchausen! If it prevents
any
consummate fools from coming to Southwest Missouri,
that's no loss."
So we
compromise between the two demands, and give the article but brief and
inadequate criticism. Indeed, we do not imagine that we could do it
justice, if we made ever so serious and studied an attempt to do so.
A good many
of our people - those especially who frequent the bar rooms and lager-beer
saloons,
will remember the author of the article, when we mention one "Colonel" G.
W. Nichols, who was here for a few days in the summer of 1865, splurging
around among our "strange, half-civilized people," seriously endangering
the supply of lager and corn whisky, and putting on more airs than a
spotted stud-horse in the ring of a county fair. He's the author!
|
|
And if the illustrious holder of one of the "Brevet"
commissions which Fremont issued to his wagon-masters, will come back to
Springfield,
two-thirds of all the people he meets will invite him "to pis'n hisself
with suth'n" for the fun he unwittingly furnished them in his article -
the remaining one-third will kick him wherever met, for lying like a dog
upon the city and people of
Springfield.
James B
Hickok, (not "William Hitchcock," as the "Colonel" mis-names his
hero,) is a remarkable man, and is as well known here as Horace Greeley in
New York, or Henry Wilson in "the Hub." The portrait of him on the first
page of Harper for February, is a most faithful and striking
likeness - features, shape, posture and dress - in all it is a faithful
reproduction of one of Charley Scholten's photographs of "Wild
Bill,"
as he is generally called. No finer physique, no greater strength, no more
personal courage, no steadier nerves, no superior skill with the pistol,
no better horsemanship than his, could any man of the million Federal
soldiers of the war, boast of; and few did better or more loyal service as
a soldier throughout the war. But Nichols "cuts it very fat" when he
describes
Bill's
teats in arms. We think his hero only claims to have sent a few dozen rebs
to the farther side of Jordan; and we never, before reading the
"Colonel's" article, suspected he had dispatched "several hundreds with
his own hands." But it must be so, for the "Colonel" asserts it with a
parenthesis of genuine flavorous Bostonian piety, to assure us of his
incapacity to utter an untruth.
From the
Atchinson Daily
Champion on February 5, 1867
'Wild
Bill"
is, as stated in the Magazine, a splendid specimen of physical manhood,
and is a dead shot with a pistol. He is a very quiet man, rarely talking
to any one, and not of a quarrelsome disposition, although reckless and
desperate when once involved in a fight. There are a number of citizens of
this city who know him well.
Nichols' sketch of 'Wild
Bill'
is a very readable paper, but the fine descriptive powers of the writer
have been drawn upon as largely as facts, in producing it. There are
dozens of men on the Overland Line who are probably more desperate
characters than
Hickok,
and are the heroes of quite as many and as desperate adventures. The
Wild West
is fertile in 'Wild
Bill's.'
Charley Slade, formerly one of the division Superintendents on the O. S.
Line, was probably a more desperate, as well as a cooler man than the hero
of Harper's, and his fight at his own ranch was a much more
terrible encounter than that of 'Wild
Bill'
with the McKandles gang.
From the Kansas Daily Commonwealth on May 11, 1873
It is disgusting to see the eastern papers crowding in everything they
can get hold of about "Wild
Bill."
If they only knew the real character of the men they so want to worship,
we doubt if their names would ever appear again. "Wild
Bill,"
or
Bill Hickok,
is nothing more than a drunken, reckless, murderous coward, who is treated
with contempt by true border men, and who should have been hung years ago
for the murder of innocent men. The shooting of the "old teamster" in the
back for a small provocation, while crossing the plains in 1859, is one
fact that Harpers correspondent failed to mention, and being booted
out of a
Leavenworth
saloon
by a boy bar tender is another; and we might name many other similar
examples of his bravery. In one or two instances he did the U. S.
government good service, but his shameful and cowardly conduct more than
overbalances the good.
Added
September, 2006 |
|
|
Also See:
Article
Criticisms
Bill Hickok Photo Gallery & Timeline
McCanles Massacre - A WPA Interview
Rock Creek
Station & the McCanles Massacre
Wild Bill
Hickok & the Deadman's Hand
|
|
<<Previous
1
2
3
4 5
Next >> |
|
From the Rocky Mountain General Store
| |