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Wild Bill Hickok Show
James Butler Hickok, the renowned "Wild Bill," remains perhaps one of the most famous of all Western
gunfighters. His exploits as a Civil War operative, frontiersman and peace officer have been
celebrated often in print, in movies, and on television. But, despite all this attention
through the years, we know very little about the man himself. Vintage photographs, haunting
and mysterious, span the mist of time. We wonder, who was Wild Bill Hickok?
The man who became marshal of Abilene, Kan., on April 15, 1871, was a frontier dandy. He
stood 6 foot 3 in his custom-made boots. His riveting gray eyes, set off by a drooping mustache,
seemed to look right through people. Beneath the black hat with the sweeping brim, blond hair
tumbled to his shoulders, and a Prince Albert frock coat showed off broad shoulders and a narrow
waist.
Phil Coe, co-owner of the Bull's Head Saloon, on the evening of October 5, 1871, along with some
other Texans went on a shooting spree. When ordered to disperse by Hickok, Coe made the mistake
of drawing against the marshall. Both men fired. Coe missed, but Hickok put
two bullets into the Texan. Mike Williams, Hickok's deputy and friend, came running to the marshall's
aid. Hickok's failing eyesight caused him to believe that this was a cohort of Coe's and
his guns blazed again before he realized it was his own deputy.
Wild Bill Hickok, the stone-cold killer, wept openly at the site of his deputy and friend as
he lay mortally wounded in the street. Hickok paid the funeral expenses for Williams, probably the last man he ever killed.
The Arizona Gunfighters recreate this famous confrontation with a professional costumed cast of over 30 gunfighters.
For more information on booking the historic re-enactment of Wild Bill Hickok, click here.

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