Life and marvelous adventures of Wild Bill, the Scout / being a true an exact history of all the sanguinary combats and hair-breadth escapes of the most famous scout and spy America ever produced.
Wild Bill.
BEING A TRUE AND EXACT HISTORY OF ALL THE SANGUINARY COMBATS AND HAIR-BREADTH ESCAPES OF THE MOST FAMOUS SCOUT AND SPY AMERICA EVER PRODUCED.
BY J. W. BUEL, OF THE ST. LOUIS PRESS.
ILLUSTRATED.
CHICAGO: BELFORD, CLARKE & CO. 1880.
Copyrighted 1879, by W. S. BRYAN.
Wild Bill, as a frontier character of the daring, cunning and honorable class, stands alone, without a prototype; his originality is as conspicuous as his remarkable escapades. He was desperate without being a desperado; a fighter without that disposition which invites danger or craves the excitement of an encounter. He killed many men, but in every instance it was either in self-defense or in the prosecution of a duty which he deemed justifiable. Wild Bill was a necessary character in the Far West during the period which marked his career. He was essentially a civilizer, in the sense of a vigilance posse. The law and order class found in him an effective agent for the correction of the lawless; it was fighting the desperate with one of their kind, and Bill had the cunning to remain on the side of society and to always flank his enemies.
It would require a volume to moralize upon the deeds of this remarkable man as they deserve, for his desperate encounters find a parallel only in the atmospheric changes which abate an epidemic. When Bill drew his pistol there was always one less desperado to harass the law-abiding, and his presence served to allay the hunger of cut-throats and rapacious plunderers. As a fighter, he had no equal; as a pistol shot, none could excel him; as a scout in the service of his country, there were none more faithful, daring and serviceable; with a disposition as gentle as a zephyr, but a determination stronger than the hurricane. Never a boaster; always deferential to those who might differ from him in opinion; a man of strong friendships and little enmity. Such were the marked characteristics of him whose memory is deserving of perpetuation, and whose wonderful exploits it is the purpose of the writer to describe. The half cannot be told, because of the subject’s secretive disposition, and extreme dislike to reciting his own adventures. That which is herewith given is absolutely true in every particular, without a single shading of fiction or extravagance, and may confidently be accepted as truthful history.
James W. Buel
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CONTENTS.
PECULIARITIES OF WILD BILL’S NATURE.
LIFE OF WILD BILL.
WILD BILL’S EARLY LIFE.
FIRST EVIDENCE OF PLUCK.
BILL’S DESPERATE FIGHT AT ROCK CREEK
A RUNNING FIGHT WITH CONFEDERATES.
ENTERS THE UNION ARMY AS A SPY.
A RIDE WITH DEATH.
CAPTURED AND CONDEMNED TO DEATH.
A FIGHT WITH THREE BUSHWHACKERS.
BILL’S BOWIE-KNIFE DUEL WITH AN INDIAN CHIEF.
INDIAN AND BUFFALO SPECULATION.
BILL’S DUEL AT SPRINGFIELD.
A QUADRANGULAR DUEL IN NEBRASKA.
WILD BILL’S OPINION OF YANKEES.
HOW BILL KILLED JACK STRAWHAN.
BILL MULVEY’S LAST ROW.
A FIGHT WITH FIFTEEN SOLDIERS.
A DEATH FIGHT WITH TEXAS GAMBLERS.
A REWARD OF $5,000 IN GOLD OFFERED FOR BILL’S HEART.
BILL THOMPSON’S FATAL SURPRISE.
MAKES TWENTY MEN ASK AN APOLOGY.
BILL’S FIGHT WITH PHIL COLE’S COUSIN.
HE REMOVES TO KANSAS CITY.
A PRIZE FIGHT IN A CHICAGO BILLIARD ROOM.
BILL’S MARRIAGE TO MRS. LAKE.
MAKES HIS DEBUT ON THE STAGE.
BILL’S LAST TRIP TO THE BLACK HILLS.
ASSASSINATION OF WILD BILL.
JACK McCALL PAYS THE PENALTY.
WILD BILL’S REMAINS EXHUMED AND FOUND TO BE PETRIFIED.
IDIOSYNCRACIES OF BILL—HIS BELIEF IN SPIRITS.
BILL’S WONDERFUL ACCURACY OF AIM.
BLACK NELL, THE WONDERFUL MARE.
CONCLUSION—DOES BILL DESERVE A MONUMENT?