History buffs will recall William F. Cody became known as Buffalo Bill Cody not because of his exploits as a carnival barker but because he and his horse Brigham had a knack for killing buffalo — which, not to put too fine of point on it, were actually bison.
In this capacity Buffalo Bill was not an outlaw but a Civil War soldier mustered out of the Army looking for a day's work for a day's pay.
Buffalo Bill's assignment was to procure one bison a day for crews laying track on behalf of the Kansas Pacific Railway, and along with his trusty .50 caliber Springfield trapdoor needle gun, and Brigham the horse, Buffalo Bill accommodated his employer. He skidded 4,282 animals to the ground before moving on to a gig that suited him even better, founding Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show on July 4, 1883.
This was in North Platte, Neb., a town that today claims the event — originally titled the Old Glory Blowout — as the nation's first rodeo.
Everyone loves a parade, but for my money, the best way to celebrate July 4th and the days approximate to it is horseback, either as rider or spectator.
After all, Buffalo Bill's selection of Independence Day for the nation's first rodeo wasn't random, and neither was the scheduling on July 4 the following year of the Pecos Rodeo in Texas, and a few years after that, also on July 4, the Frontier Rodeo in Prescott, Ariz. Even today on Independence Day you've got the Cody Stampede in Wyoming, the St. Paul Rodeo in Oregon, the Greeley Stampede in Colorado, the Ponoka Stampede in Alberta, and countless other rodeos also on July 4th or thereabouts — the big Hamel Rodeo and Bull Ridin' Bonanza, for example, is this weekend in suburban Minneapolis.
I was thinking about this last weekend while lying on a concave bed in a sort-of bunkhouse. The room was outfitted with what its website described as a "half bath,'' but prospective tenants were left to guess which half. Clearing matters up, the young woman at the front desk told me a shower was "outside the room behind an unmarked door down the way.''
In anticipation of the holiday weekend, I had hauled my horse to a cutting in a locale that charitably could be described as in the middle of nowhere. Plenty of others had done likewise and the grounds were scattered with trucks and trailers when I pulled in late Friday afternoon. Sorrel and bay horses, and chestnut and black, some with faces ablaze in snips, stars, and stripes, milled about in outdoor pens, some chewing hay, others gazing into the distance indifferently.