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Buffalo
Bill
As
a young man Cody drove a stagecoach between In
1882 Cody established what would grow into his famous Wild West Show in Born
February 26, 1846 in Scott County, Iowa, Cody seemed destined for a life
of adventure from an early age. When he was seven years old the family
moved to the
Schooling
was never important to the young adventurer and he had very little
formal education. There was always something more interesting and
exciting to do. In 1859 he was in While
too young to enlist in the army during the early years of the Civil War,
Cody served the Union forces as a contract ranger, dispatch rider, and
scout in On
March 6, 1866 Cody married Louisa Frederici and ran a hotel in In
1867-68 Cody was employed as a buffalo hunter, providing meat for the
workers on the Kansas Pacific Railroad. His pay was $500 a month, and he
was credited with killing 4,280 buffalo in just eight months. Cody won
the nickname Buffalo Bill in a buffalo hunting contest near Sheridan,
Kansas against another well known hunter named Bill Comstock. Cody shot
69 animals, compared to Comstock’s 46. Serving
as a government scout at Fort Larned, Kansas, Cody performed remarkable
endurance rides, including riding 355 miles in 58 hours. From 1868 to
1872 he served as a scout with the 5th Calvary in several
expeditions against the plains Indian tribes who were resisting white
encroachment onto their tribal lands. In
1872, at age 26, Cody resigned his position as an Army scout and guided
the Grand Duke Alexis of Russia on a hunting trip, which drew a lot of
media attention and added to his already huge reputation. That same year
he was elected to the Nebraska Legislature on the Democratic ticket.
Later that year Cody’s daughter Orra was born, and soon after he went
east to appear in Ned Buntline’s stage play about life in the Wild
West. It was Cody’s first exposure to show business, and he was
immediately captivated by it. By
1876 he was back in the west serving as a scout for the army as they
chased down warring Indians in the wake of George Armstrong Custer’s
defeat at the Battle of Little Bighorn. It was during this time period
that Cody had his duel to the death with Chief Yellow Hair near Hat
Creek. The incident has been told, retold and exaggerated in several
western movies over the years. Always on the move, a few months after
his fight with Yellow Hair Cody was back on stage in the east, where he
toured until 1878 portraying scenes from the Indian wars. At
this point in his life, Buffalo Bill Cody was at the peak of his
popularity and a hero of dime novelists and newspaper reporters. When
the townspeople of North Platte, Nebraska pleaded with Cody to come up
with a gala event for their Fourth of July Celebration in 1882, he
organized his Old Glory Blowout, which has been credited as the first
rodeo in the United States. The next year he took his show on the road,
opening in Omaha as the Wild West Combination. The extravaganza of
cowboys, Indians, horses, and pyrotechnics was an immediate hit. From
1883 to 1886 Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show delighted eastern audiences
as they toured the country. In 1887 Cody took the show to England, where
it was just as popular. He returned to America for another year of
touring, before again crossing the Atlantic to enthrall audiences across
Europe in 1889.
Buffalo
Bill Cody was rich and famous, and applause and accolades rained down
upon him. He was appointed a colonel in the Nebraska National Guard, and
forever after used the title in front of his name. His Wild West Show
was in Chicago for the World’s Fair in 1893, and in 1896 he founded
the town of Cody, Wyoming. In 1900 Cody went into partnership with James
A. Bailey of Barnum & Bailey fame, and the duo produced an even more
extravagant show for a European tour. Though
Buffalo Bill Cody was a first class Indian scout, prolific buffalo
hunter, and a premier promoter, as a businessman his lack of education
and his misguided trust in others would lead to financial ruin. He
invested fortunes in projects ranging from mining operations and ranches
to irrigation projects, and financed friends and relatives who came to
him with all sorts of business proposals and plans. Cody just did not
know how to say no. Most of these schemes failed, or his partners
cheated him out of his investments, and by 1910 the old buffalo hunter
was deep in debt and in terrible financial trouble. He
tried another run at show business, but this attempt failed, and in 1911
he was forced to sell his North Platte home, Scout’s Rest, to his
one-time partner Pawnee Bill Lillie. Most of the $100,000 Cody received
from the sale of the ranch went to pay off debts. Moving to Cody,
Wyoming, his financial troubles only grew worse. Ever the optimist, Cody
shrugged off the misdeeds of his “friends” who had taken financial
advantage of him and continued to plan for another comeback that would
never happen. He died broke at the home of his sister, May Cody Decker,
in Denver, Colorado on January 10, 1917. He was laid to rest on Lookout
Mountain near Denver on his 71st birthday. The
old Indian fighter may be gone, but his fame has never died. Buffalo
Bill’s life has been told and retold in magazines and newspapers,
books and in movies. He was a true larger than life American hero.
Cody
raised cattle and horses at Scout’s Rest, bringing thoroughbred horses
and high grade Visitors
to Scout’s Rest can tour the home and barn, viewing a large collection
of artifacts and items owned by Buffalo Bill. Included are a unique
chair made entirely of deer antlers, the desk from which Cody conducted
most of his business affairs, his bed, firearms, costumes from the Wild
West Show, and souvenirs of his career. The home has been carefully
restored and preserved to provide future generations an opportunity to
get to know
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