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Buffalo Bill Quotes


The first trip of the Pony Express was made in ten days - an average of two hundred miles a day. But we soon began stretching our riders and making better time.

The Free State men, myself among them, took it for granted that Missouri was a slave state.

The greatest of all the Sioux in my time, or in any time for that matter, was that wonderful old fighting man, Sitting Bull, whose life will some day be written by a historian who can really give him his due.

The Indians kept increasing in numbers until it was estimated that we were fighting from 800 to 1,000 of them.

The Indians were well mounted and felt proud and elated because they had been made United States soldiers.

The McCarthy boys, at the proper moment, gave orders to fire upon the advancing enemy.

Washington newspaper men know everything.

We got more provisions for our whiskey than the same money, which we paid for the liquor, would have bought; so after all it proved a very profitable investment.

We had avoided discovery by the Sioux scouts, and we were confident of giving them a complete surprise.

Wild Bill was a strange character. In person he was about six feet and one inch in height. He was a Plains-man in every sense of the word.

Wild Bill was anything but a quarrelsome man yet I have personal knowledge of at least half a dozen men whom he had at various times killed.

With the help of a friend I got father into a wagon, when the crowd had gone. I held his head in my lap during the ride home. I believed he was mortally wounded. He had been stabbed down through the kidneys, leaving an ugly wound.

You who live your lives in cities or among peaceful ways cannot always tell whether your friends are the kind who would go through fire for you. But on the Plains one's friends have an opportunity to prove their mettle.