Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Monday, January 16, 2017
Gravesite legend survives century since western icon's death
A headstone-free, non-descript plot
of land atop 7,890-foot Cedar Mountain may be the peaceful, mostly
ignored resting place fulfilling the wishes of the honorable William F.
Cody. Or it may be the focal point of one of the Old West's greatest myths. Larger than life Master
showman, Congressional Medal of Honor winner, scout, Indian fighter,
founder of the City of Cody, and full-time legend, Buffalo Bill Cody was
a man of many roles, hats, beards and white horses. No
one disputes he died 100 years ago at his sister's home in Denver,
reported the Cody Enterprise. The story instantly flashed by telegraph -
the social media of the time - around the world. Word
spread so quickly this newspaper, then-called the Park County
Enterprise, announced Cody's death in a story that ran under a headline
reading, "Death Summons Col. W.F. Cody." It was on the front page, just
beneath the phrase reminding readers Buffalo Bill actually founded the
newspaper in 1899, three years after lending his name to the community. The first line of the story included the comment, "better known perhaps than any other man in private life."There
was no perhaps about it. Cody was the most famous and most photographed
man in the world during his lifetime, from 1846 to 1917. He hobnobbed
with presidents and royalty, yet still related to everyday citizens,
especially children, who called him Old Scout. Burial mystery Still,
the question of where beloved Buffalo Bill, the most iconic figure of
the American frontier, has been since his passing, lingers. It's a
question that has fascinated generations, intrigued many, and even
angered some with a stake in the mystery.
He
is either buried in Golden, Colo., at a specially constructed
gravesite, lying under 20 tons of concrete to protect against body
snatching, or he really is on Cedar Mountain after a group of Cody
residents secretly absconded with the body and buried him here. Oh yes, as in all capers of such nature, there is more than one will. There is the 1906 version, and there is a second...more
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