Search for PodcastsRegister | Sign In
 

 

James Butler "Wild Bill" Hickok Letter Episode | Kansas Memory Podcast

PodcastDirectory / Education / Unknown
PodcastDirectory / Regions / NA / USA



Kansas Memory Podcast

Listen to stories of Kansans -- some famous, some infamous and some just average folks -- that are contained in documents preserved by the Kansas Historical Society Library and Archives. The letters, diaries, and other documents featured in the biweekly "A Kansas Memory" podcasts provide fascinating glimpses into the past by sharing the words of the people who lived through these events. The documents used in our first series of podcasts are part of Territorial Kansas Online, a virtual repository of primary sources from the Bleeding Kansas era, 1854-1861. The URL for the web site is www.territorialkansasonline.org. Visit www.kshs.org to learn more about the programs and services of the Kansas Historical Society.

Primary Format:
Unknown

Also Listed as:

User Tags:

RSS Feed
Website

Visit Methings.com for the most recent listings of:

James Butler "Wild Bill" Hickok Letter


James Butler "Wild Bill" Hickok Letter

Play Now -->

DATE : Wed, 03 Feb 2010 10:00:00 CST
Entered in Database : 2010-02-03 16:00:00
length : 8552930
Link to the Show / Show Notes

Before he became the "Wild Bill" of legend, James Butler Hickok was one of hundreds of immigrants who streamed into Territorial Kansas hoping to acquire a piece of the Indian reservation lands that were coming onto the market. After the Kansas/Nebraska Act passed in 1854, Northeast Kansas was no longer Indian Territory and it turned into a battleground between the pro-slavery and free-state settlers. James grew up in Troy Grove, Illinois, where his father, William Alonzo Hickok, was an abolitionist who helped slaves escape to the North. James was 19 when he journeyed to Johnson County, Kansas, in June 1856. Records show James tried to pre-empt a claim for 160 acres of Shawnee land in February 1858. It turned out, that land had already been claimed for Wyandotte Float Land. After that, James tried to acquire some Delaware Reservation land, but was again unsuccessful. The violence along the Missouri/Kansas border was at its peak when Hickok arrived and he mentions his involvement in the Battle of Hickory Point in this letter that he wrote to his brother Horace from Kansas on November 24 and 27th, 1856.

Roku + Netflix = Instant Movies on your TV


Add a Podcast
Remove a Podcast
Search for Podcasts
Podcast Directory
by Country
by Language
by Buzz
by Popularity
by Category
by Tags
by Region
by City
on a Google Map