It is
rare that we look at photos here at The
Jade Sphinx, but this photo has always touched me; so much so that a copy
hangs on the wall over my desk. It is of
frontiersman, scout, Pony Express Rider and showman William Frederick “Buffalo Bill” Cody (1846-1917) in a tent on the
grounds of his Wild West Show, telling yarns to his little pards.
By all
reports, Cody was a lovely man. He never
refused an old friend, a hard luck story, or a child. Cody was extremely open-handed, friendly and
willing to take care of others (except, perhaps, his wife, Louisa).
You may
remember that we have previously covered the story of cowboy artist Daniel Cody Muller (1889-1976), who was
born in Choteau, Montana. Muller’s
father was killed by a horse when the artist was nine years old, and he was soon
after adopted by Buffalo Bill. In his
memoir, Muller writes of the 18 years he spent with Cody and of his time on
both the Cody ranch and working the Wild West shows. The Cody in Muller’s memoir is a warm-hearted
man of deep compassion and sympathy.
Muller would not be Cody’s only unofficially-adopted child: he also
raised Johnny Baker (1869-1931), a
sharpshooter with the Wild West, as his own son, and his love for children was
nearly legendary. Indeed, in a tumultuous
life of adventure, fame and cowboy-high-spirits, the sole tragedy of Cody’s
life seems to be the loss of his son, Kit
Carson Cody (1870-1876) to scarlet fever.
To get a
flavor of the real man, there is a story that during the 1915 season, when Cody
no longer owned the Wild West and was working for the Sells-Floto circus, the
show was menaced by a flash flood in Fort Madison, Iowa. Most of the show’s four hundred crew fled the
scene, leaving the aged and infirm Buffalo Bill to rescue women and children
with the help of five crewmembers. Also
while working for Sells-Floto, he would later grow enraged when he learned that
executives had advertised a twenty-five cent admission fee and charged fifty
cents at the door. Not long after, Cody
pulled his gun on the owners and demanded out of his contract.
In more
than 15 years of reading obsessively about the Old West, there are only two
figures who I desperately wished to have met: cowboy artist Charlie Russell (1864-1926) and
Cody. And when I picture him in my mind’s
eye, it is more often in photos like the above rather than imagining him in his
more perilous endeavors.
Though today’s
photo was obviously staged, look at the avuncular Cody in full Wild West
regalia, head slightly bowed so the sun catches his oversized Stetson and
glistening white beard. The camera
catches him mid-story, holding what appears to be a piece of Native American
embroidery. Though the little girls are
dressed in white and organdy pinafores, things are rough in the back area of
the Wild West Show. This is a place for play
and fun and myth. As usual, Bill is
making time for everyone.
I cannot
help but think of later photos of other Western Icons surrounded by
children. A quick search on the Internet
would yield photos of Tom Mix, Gene Autry, Roy Rogers and Hopalong
Cassidy surrounded by children – but, as usual, Cody got there first. I believe that it was he that created and fostered the myth of the Western Hero as the friend of childhood, a trope that
has been with us for over 100 years.
Take a
moment and imagine ourselves back there.
We’ve seen the Wild West (or are about to), and sneak behind to the
performer’s tents. There is the great
man himself, impossibly tall and romantic in his colorful western clothes. He beckons us over and we sit, while he
unfolds a tale of Western Adventure, of days gone by and pioneer adventure. We listen as he talks, his aged voice rich
and dramatic, and the whole pageantry of the West opens before us. And we know that once that great voice and
great heart are stilled, the West will really be gone forever.
3 comments:
Great photo, great post!
Amazing Photograph. My interest is in the Artist Daniel Cody Muller as I have a painting of his & would like more information about it before I appear on the Antiques Roadshow with the painting. If you would please send me an email so I can send you a few pictures of the painting. It is of a cowboy standing next to his horse rolling a cigarette. Thank you in advance for any help you can spare & I know there is a special, very special place in heaven for cowboys & cowgirls & all of us who would have loved parts of that lifestyle. much gratitude for your blog, Enola Talbert
How am I to get in touch with you?
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