Buffalo Bill from Prairie to Palace

William Frederick "Buffalo Bill" Cody is one of the legends of the American western frontier. As a teen he rode for the pony expressed and then drove for the Union Army during the U.S. Civil War. He later rejoined the army as a scout and was awarded the medal of honor for his valor during the Indian Wars. His fame became worldwide, however, through his flamboyant Wild West shows which toured not only across the American West but through England and Europe.


By : John M. Burke (1842 - 1917)

00 - Compiler's Preface



01 - Introductory



02 - The Scout



03 - What Is a Cowboy?



04 - The Riders of the World



05 - Indian Home Life



06 - Expert Shooting



07 - A Most Famous Ride



08 - Letters of Commendation from Prominent Military Men



09 - Buffalo Bills Boyhood



10 - Bill Kills His First Indian



11 - The Boy Miner



12 - Story of the Pony Express



13 - A Ride for Life



14 - Held up by Road Agents



15 - A Year of Adventures



16 - A Soldier of the Civil War



17 - A Champion Buffalo Hunter



18 - Scout Guide and Indian Fighter



19 - Buffalo Bills Pards of the Plains



20 - Border Poetry



21 - From Prairie to Palace



22 - The Wild West at Sea



23 - A Royal Welcome



24 - A Visit from Queen Victoria



25 - The Home Trail



26 - Swinging around Europe



27 - The Last Indian War



28 - Back to Europe



29 - Appendix



30 - An Episode Since the Return from Europe


An association of some thirty years with the subject of these pages, a familiarity with his history gained by opportune meetings and conversations with comrades now living, and those since dead—who were witnesses of the events that assisted to make the individual prominent—makes me feel it a public duty to accede to the publisher’s request to compile a short, sharp, and veracious account of the unique history of this picturesque character.

Born at a time, and reared in an atmosphere, the most romantic and adventurous known in the history of our American frontier, when the tidal wave of human progress, sweeping westward, was making history faster than the historians could record it—it was his fate to be in the field, and his fortune to grasp the opportunities to meet the situation’s requirements, and, in the beaten path of what seemed ordinary daily duty, to rise, by reason of his sterling qualities, his daring, and his courage, to the distinction of a leader.

So quickly was the history of the central West recorded, as to make the Great American Desert of our childhood seem almost a geographical mirage, a tale of the romancer. It would seem to be a fairy story were it not for the fact of its settlement, and the evidences of its now almost ancient civilization.

The busy, hustling citizen of to-day scarcely has time to think, and does not realize that the youths of the time of12 Benton, Beal, Fremont, Bridger, and Carson are the relicts of the perfected history and work that they inaugurated.

One of the most picturesque characters that evoluted from the peculiar circumstances of the times is “Buffalo Bill,” Gen. W. F. Cody, N. G. S. N. The romance, the fiction, woven around his personality is dispelled in the white light of stern and veritable facts, just as the golden rays of the morning sun drive the mist from the mountain-tops.

The compiler of the accompanying pages has attempted to present to the reader, in a terse, compact compendium of facts, the story of a career that, if given in a detailed biography, would absorb volumes, believing that owing to his prominence at home and abroad the public desire some authentic knowledge of the notable events in his career. In fact, here are presented a few plain truths, unadorned, for the benefit of those too occupied to have heretofore learned the story and triumphs of the frontier lad of nine years, from the wild Western scenes of Kansas and Nebraska, from the prairies of the Platte to the parlors of the East and the palaces of Europe.

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