Buffalo Bill, 1846-1917
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Buffalo Bill, 1846-1917
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Buffalo Bill, 1846-1917
Bill, Buffalo
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Bill, Buffalo
Buffalo Bill
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Buffalo Bill
Cody, W.F. (William Frederick), 1846-1917
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Cody, W.F. (William Frederick), 1846-1917
Cody, Bill, 1846-1917
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Cody, Bill, 1846-1917
Cody, Bill
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Cody, Bill
Cody, Buffalo Bill, 1846-1917
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Cody, Buffalo Bill, 1846-1917
Bill, Buffalo 1846-1917
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Bill, Buffalo 1846-1917
Cody, William F. (William Frederick), 1846-1917
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Cody, William F. (William Frederick), 1846-1917
Cody, William Frederick
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Cody, William Frederick
Cody, W. F. 1846-1917 (William Frederick),
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Cody, W. F. 1846-1917 (William Frederick),
Cody, William 1846-1917
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Cody, William 1846-1917
Cody, William F. 1846-1917 (William Frederick),
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Cody, William F. 1846-1917 (William Frederick),
Cody, William Frederick, 1846-1917
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Cody, William Frederick, 1846-1917
Cody, William Frederic, 1846-1917
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Cody, William Frederic, 1846-1917
Cody, William F. 1846-1917
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Cody, William F. 1846-1917
Cody, William F.
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Cody, William F.
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Biographical History
Buffalo Bill was employed as a scout by the United States 5th Cavalry, 1868-1872. In 1869 he participated in the Battle of Summit Springs, Colorado, in which the 5th Cavalry defeated Cheyenne Indians.
American scout and showman. William Frederick Cody, known as Buffalo Bill, operated Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show and other business ventures from 1883 on. The Campo Bonito Mine, Oracle, Ariz. was owned by the Cody-Dyer Arizona Mining and Milling Company. Partners were Cody and Col. J.E. Dyer; Ernest J. Ewing was the manager.
American scout and showman. William Frederick Cody, known as Buffalo Bill, operated Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show and other business enterprises from 1883 on.
U.S. government scout and guide, and Nebraska legislator, born William Frederick Cody.
William F. Cody, known as Buffalo Bill, won reknown as an Indian scout in the West, later became a showman from 1883-1916.
Scout and showman.
William F. Cody, known as Buffalo Bill, was an Indian scout in the West, later a showman from 1883-1916.
Born in Scott County, Iowa; raised in Kansas; worked as cattle driver, Pony Express rider, stagecoach driver, scout, and buffalo hunter. Ned Buntline, a dime novelist, wrote more than 200 novels featuring heroic "Buffalo Bill;" in 1872, a play was produced in New York about his life. Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, managed by Nate Salsbury, toured the United States and Europe for three decades. Cody died in Denver, Colorado, and is buried atop Lookout Mountain.
William F. Cody, also known as Buffalo Bill. American frontiersman, scout for the U.S. Army, and showman largely responsible for romanticizing the American West.
William Frederick "Buffalo Bill" Cody was a scout for the Fifth U.S. Cavalry, an Indian fighter, a meat supplier for railroad construction crews, a frontier entrepreneur, and a showman. He operated a touring wild west show from 1883 to 1913.
George Washington Thornton Beck was a Wyoming sheep rancher, oil land developer and the last president of the Council of the Territory of Wyoming before it became a state in 1890. He homesteaded at the present site of Sheridan, Wyoming and was active in development of various business enterprises in Sheridan, Buffalo, Beckton, and Cody, Wyoming.
The Shoshone Irrigation Company was founded in 1895 and incorporated in 1896 for the purpose of building an irrigation canal to supply water to arid land around present day Cody, Wyoming. Cody was president and Beck was manager and secretary of the company. The town of Cody was established near the canal route in 1896.
Buffalo Bill (William F. Cody), United States army scout, buffalo hunter, and entertainer. Organized his first Wild West exhibition in 1883. The show combined with Pawnee Bill's Great Far East in 1909. Cody invested earnings from the show into silver mines, ranches, and real estate in the West. Faced with financial uncertainty when the show went bankrupt in 1913, Cody continued performing in the United States and Europe with other touring groups, including the Sells-Floto Circus in 1912 and the Miller Brothers and Arlington 101 Ranch Real Wild West Tour. Cody died in Denver, Colorado in January 1917.
Clarene W. Rowley, Boston lawyer for entertainers and celebrities including William F. Cody. Rowley invested in several mining and oil ventures with Cody, including the High Jinks Gold Mining Company.
William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody participated in the westward expansion of the United States and helped shape the world's romantic image of the American frontier.
Born February 26, 1846 in LeClair, Iowa, he moved with his family to Kansas and later rode for the Pony Express (1860-1861). He served briefly in the American Civil War and was given the nickname "Buffalo Bill" when he supplied buffalo meat for workers on the Kansas Pacific Railroad in 1867-1868. As chief of scouts for the Fifth U.S. Cavalry he participated in several Indian fights between 1868 and 1872.
In 1869 his career took a new turn when he became the subject of a dime novel; he subsequently appeared in theatrical melodramas, touring successfully for 11 years. In 1883 he organized a Wild West show that staged Indian fights, roundups, stage robberies, and buffalo hunts and introduced such stars as Buck Taylor and Annie Oakley to the public. Cody maintained several business interests one of which was the Shoshone Irrigation Company, which began in 1895, in partnership with George Washington Thornton Beck. His Wild West Show toured Europe and the United States until 1913, after which Cody retired to the West until his death on Jan. 10, 1917.
George Washington Thornton Beck was a Wyoming sheep rancher, oil land developer and last president of the Council of the Territory of Wyoming before it became a State in 1890.
Born near Lexington, Kentucky he studied civil engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. In 1877, at age 21, Beck moved West and prospected in Colorado for several years. He then settled on a homestead on the present site of Sheridan, Wyoming. He acquired large herds of sheep and at the same time was engaged as a mining engineer. Beck established and operated the first flour mill in Wyoming at the town of Beckton, which he had established. He also built an electric light plant, water works, and flour mill in Buffalo, Wyoming, and an electric light and power plant in Cody, Wyoming. In addition to his other business interests he was manager of the Shoshone Irrigation Company, of which William F. Cody was president.
The Shoshone Irrigation Company was founded in 1895 for the purpose of bringing water into the arid region surrounding what is now the site of Cody, Wyoming. During the course of the project the town of Cody was established in 1896. The Bureau of Reclamation eventually took over the project to establish a dam on the Shoshone River.
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External Related CPF
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n80024458
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/10581202
https://viaf.org/viaf/100252467
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80024458
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n80024458
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q202285
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Bridles
Cattle
Cheyenne Indians
Commerce
Courts
Cowboys
Cowboys
Entertainers
Frontier and pioneer life
Indian captivities
Irrigation canals and flumes
Irrigation canals and flumes
Mines and mineral resources
Speculation
Summit Springs, Battle of, Colo., 1869
Water resources development
Water resources development
Wild west shows
Wild west shows
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Occupations
Entertainers
Entertainers
Lawyers
Scouts
Legal Statuses
Places
West (U.S.)
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Cody (Wyo.)
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United States
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Wyoming
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United States
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Park County (Wyo.)
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Cody (Wyo.)
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West (U.S.)
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Colorado
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West (U.S.)
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Wyoming--Park County
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West (U.S.)
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Wyoming
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Massachusetts--Boston
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West (U.S.)
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Colorado
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Oracle (Ariz.)
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Arizona--Pinal County
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United States
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Campo Bonito Mine (Oracle, Ariz.)
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West (U.S.)
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Park County (Wyo.)
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Fort Sedgwick (Colo.)
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Cody (Wyo.)
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Fort Sedgwick (Colo.)
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Wyoming
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United States
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Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>