Calamity Jane |
Her
reputation as a rowdy woman of the Wild West has helped grow her reputation as
folk hero. She was known as Calamity Jane, a professional Indian scout who dressed
like a man, shot like a man, swore like a man, and drank like a man, but she could
still make time to care for the sick and injured.
Gold Rush |
She
was born Martha Jane Canary on May 1, 1852 in Princeton, Missouri. She was the
oldest of the six children that Robert W. and Charlotte (Burch) Canary had.
When Martha Jane was 13, her father packed up the family and moved out west to
Virginia City, Montana for the Gold Rush. Jane’s mother died in
1866 and her father died one year. As the eldest child, Martha Jane took on the
responsibility of caring for the family: In 1867, she loaded up the wagon and
moved them to Piedmont, Wyoming.
Martha Jane |
General George Custer |
Once
settled, Jane worked at any job she could find including as a dishwasher,
cook, waitress, dance-hall girl, nurse, miner, and an ox team driver. In 1874,
she was hired by General George Custer as an Indian scout for Fort Russell;
her duties included protecting Union Pacific Railroad workers from military
conflicts, and driving the Native Americans onto reservations.
"Calamity" Jane |
She
claimed to have been christened Calamity Jane by Captain Egan because she saved him
from being trampled by his horse after Indians shot him. Egan supposedly said, “I name you Calamity Jane, the heroine of the
plains.” But many said she exaggerated her stories. A more popular version
said that men were “courting calamity”
if they offended her.
Mining in the Black Hills |
It
was 1875 when Calamity accompanied the Newton-Jenny Party into the Black Hills
of South Dakota. Their expedition was sponsored by the U.S. Geological Survey
in order to map out the Black Hills and confirm claims that gold was located
there.
Madame DuFran |
Wild Bill Hickok |
One
year later she settled in the Deadwood area of South Dakota where she became
friends with the leading madam of the Black Hills, Dora DuFran. (It was said
that DuFran coined the word “cathouse” after Charlie Utter brought her a
wagonload of cats for her brothel.) It
was also during this time that Jane met and became infatuated with Wild Bill
Hickok.
Agnes Lake Thatcher |
Hickok
was known throughout the Wild West as a lawman, a gunfighter and a gambler.
Calamity claimed that she and Hickok had been married in 1873, but she had divorced
him so that he could marry Agnes Lake Thatcher, a circus owner.
There are no records to support Jane’s story.
Dead Man's Hand |
Shortly
before his death, Hickok had a premonition that he would die in Deadwood. He
was gunned down as he sat with his back to the door, playing five-card draw.
The hand he held – two aces and two eights, became known as the “dead man’s hand.”
"Black" Jack McCall |
Original Hickok Grave |
In
later years, Calamity claimed to have led a posse after Hickok’s murderer, Jack
McCall, but at the time of his death Jane was in jail, being held by military
authorities. Hickok was buried in Mount Moriah Cemetery in Deadwood.
Deadwood, SD |
After
Hickok’s death, Calamity Jane remained in Deadwood. She worked as a nurse
during the smallpox epidemic of the late 1870’s before purchasing a ranch and
moving to Miles City, Montana where she ran a lodging house.
She
married Clinton Burke in August 1885, and two years later, gave birth to a
daughter whom she named Jane and gave to foster parents to raise.
By
1893, Jane was traveling with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, demonstrating her
riding and shooting skills, and telling her version of stories about life in the
Wild West. By the summer of 1903, Jane had returned to Deadwood, an alcoholic.
Calamity Jane |
Calamity
Jane died on August 1, 1903 at the age of 51 in Terry, South Dakota. She was
buried next to Wild Bill in Mount Moriah Cemetery, some say in accordance with her
dying wishes. Others say she was buried there as a final insult to Wild Bill
who had “absolutely no use” for her.
Her
funeral was the largest ever held for a woman in Deadwood.
Calamity Jane's Grave |
Calamity Jane’s grave was
marked with a stone topped with a lawn urn. Four faces decorate the monument,
but few knew whom they represent?
I
queried Michael Runge, the City Archivist of Deadwood. According to Michael, “The faces on the pedestal represent Pan, the
Greek mythology god. Beginning in the late 18th and early 19th
century, there was a Greek and Roman revival. As part of this revival,
Pan’s image became popular again. Locally, stone mason, Lars Shostrom sold
these bases and the urns.”
Deserted Western Town |
Calamity Jane |
Calamity
Jane has gone down in history as one of the roughest, toughest women of the
Wild West - although knowing where the truth ends and fiction begins is a trail
that’s been lost in history …
~
Joy