Juti Winchester, curator of the Buffalo Bill Museum in Cody, Wyoming speaks during a news conference
GWEN OUTEN: I’m Gwen Outen. 
 
DOUG JOHNSON: And I’m Doug Johnson with PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA  Special English. Today, we tell the story of a man called “Buffalo  Bill.” His real name was William F. Cody. He created “Wild West” shows  that people around the world enjoyed for more than thirty years.
 
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GWEN OUTEN: William Frederick Cody was born in eighteen-forty-six in  the state of Iowa. He died in Colorado in nineteen-seventeen.  Researchers disagree about other incidents in his life. That is because  some stories about “Buffalo Bill” are a combination of factual events  and make-believe. However, there is general agreement about the  influence of “Buffalo Bill” Cody. People say he represented the spirit  and tradition of the American West.
 
DOUG JOHNSON: William F. Cody grew up in the center of the United  States. William’s family moved from Iowa to the territory of Kansas when  he was still a child. His father died in eighteen-fifty-seven. A short  time later, William started working at different jobs to help his  family. He worked as a driver for a team of oxen. He guided the powerful  animals as they moved goods from place to place. He also carried  messages for a local company. 
 
Later, William joined a group of men seeking gold in the mountains of  Colorado. They were not very successful. Then he got a job as a Pony  Express rider. The Pony Express used teams of men and horses to  transport mail across the country. William was a skilled rider. Once he  rode five-hundred-fifteen kilometers in a single trip. This was one of  the longest rides for the Pony Express. At the time, he was just fifteen  years old.
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GWEN OUTEN: Kansas became a state in eighteen-sixty-one. A few weeks  later, the Civil War between the states started. Southern states fought  to protect the rights of individual states. Northern states fought to  keep the country united. During the war, Kansas joined with the North  and provided men for the Union army. 
William was too young to fight when the Civil War started. At first, he served the Union forces as a scout, or explorer.
In eighteen-sixty-four, he joined the United States Army. Cody became a  member of the Seventh Kansas Cavalry. His force was sent to nearby  southern states during the Civil War. Cody drove a team of horses.  He  remained there until the war ended. 
 
DOUG JOHNSON: After the war, William Cody married Louisa Frederici in  Saint Louis, Missouri. They were married for more than fifty years and  had four children. When they were first married, Cody had many different  jobs. For example, he operated a hotel in Kansas. Then he began hunting  buffalo for work crews building the Kansas Pacific Railroad. The  workers used the wild animals for meat. Cody got the name “Buffalo Bill”  by winning a buffalo hunting competition. Reports say he shot and  killed more than four-thousand buffalo in just eighteen months.
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GWEN OUTEN: Cody re-joined the Army in eighteen-sixty-eight. He served  as a civilian scout for military forces fighting Indians in the West.  His experience and skills made him an able fighter and guide for the  Army. 
Cody helped the Fifth Cavalry defeat a group of Cheyenne warriors. He  also served as a guide for individuals who wanted to hunt buffalo. Some  hunters came from big cities in the eastern United States and from other  countries. Once he guided a member of Russia’s ruling family, the Grand  Duke Alexis, on a hunting trip. American newspapers reported on their  activities.
 
DOUG JOHNSON: Cody’s exciting life provided the details for many  stories. A number of writers began producing stories about famous people  of the western United States. These stories became known as dime  novels. Dime novels helped make heroes of people like Davy Crockett and  Kit Carson.
 
A writer named Ned Buntline decided to write a book about Buffalo Bill.  Buntline’s book and newspaper reports helped make Cody famous. The book  became popular and was later made into a play called “Scouts of the  Prairie.” Buffalo Bill even appeared in the show. Critics said Cody was a  bad actor, but the show was very successful. 
The play led Cody to form his own traveling show. The group included another hero of the American West, Wild Bill Hickok. 
 
GWEN OUTEN: During this period, Cody often returned to the West to find  other work. He assisted the Army in its operations against Indian  tribes. In eighteen-seventy-six, Indian warriors defeated General George  Custer and his forces in the Battle of Little Big Horn in Montana. A  few weeks later, Cody and other soldiers clashed with a group of  Cheyenne Indians. During the fighting, Cody reportedly killed a Cheyenne  warrior named Yellow Hair. This event added yet another incident to  Buffalo Bill’s collection of stories.
Cody liked the idea of being a showman and telling people about the  American West. In eighteen-seventy-nine, he wrote his own life story and  began publishing his own dime novels.  He also continued to produce  plays.
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DOUG JOHNSON: Cody organized his first Wild West show in  eighteen-eighty-two in the state of Nebraska. The show was performed  outside. It was designed to entertain and educate crowds of people.  There were cowboys, Indians, buffalo and other kinds of animals. People  were not sure exactly what the show was, but they liked it.
The following year, Cody and his business partners formed a traveling  show called “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West.”  It brought cowboys and Indians  to people in parts of the United States who might never have seen them.  The show was a major success for the next thirty years.  People liked it  for many reasons. One was a desire to return to earlier, simpler times.  The American West of the dime novels was fast disappearing. The area  was starting to develop. 
 
GWEN OUTEN: “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West” show included cowboys hunting  buffalo.  It had riders for the Pony Express. It re-created an Indian  attack on a carriage transporting goods. The show also re-created the  attack against General Custer and his forces. It included Indians who  were involved in the real attack. It also included the famous Sioux  chief Sitting Bull, who had killed General Custer. Sitting Bull traveled  with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show for several months.
In later years, a cowgirl named Annie Oakley performed with the show.  She was one of the best gun shooters in the country. Annie Oakley could  ride a horse standing up while shooting at a target. She could shoot a  piece of money out of someone’s hand. Once, she became famous for  shooting a cigarette held in the mouth of German Crown Prince Wilhelm.
“Buffalo Bill’s Wild West” performed in cities and towns across the  United States and in Europe. In eighteen-eighty-seven, the show  performed in England in honor of Queen Victoria’s fiftieth anniversary  in power. Six years later, the show was popular at the World’s Fair in  Chicago, Illinois.
 
DOUG JOHNSON: Buffalo Bill Cody was said to be the most famous American  in the world by the beginning of the twentieth century. American  presidents met with him to discuss issues important to the West. He had  many modern ideas. For example, he supported fair treatment for American  Indians. And he supported equal pay and equal voting rights for women.  He was also a businessman who looked toward the future. He invested in  projects that he hoped would bring economic growth to the West.                                                  
Cody made a lot of money from his show business success. However, he  lost his wealth because of bad investments and failure to watch how the  money was used.
 
In nineteen-oh-eight, “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West” combined with another  traveling show. But this show failed. A short time later, Cody got a  loan from a Colorado company to keep his show operating. But his  financial situation got worse over the next few years. 
 
GWEN OUTEN: Buffalo Bill Cody died in nineteen-seventeen while visiting  his sister in Denver, Colorado. He was buried near the city, at the top  of Lookout Mountain. His funeral was a major event. Twenty-thousand  people traveled there to attend the ceremony.
Today, thousands of people visit Lookout Mountain every year. They see  Cody’s burial place and a museum built in his honor. And, they hear  stories about people who experienced the excitement of Buffalo Bill’s  Wild West show.
 
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DOUG JOHNSON: This program was written by George Grow. Lawan Davis was our producer. I’m Doug Johnson.
 
GWEN OUTEN:
And I’m Gwen Outen. Join us again next week for PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English.
