Buffalo Bill's
Wild West Show
"I am Coming"
Courier Lithograph Co., Buffalo, N.Y., 1900
Color lithograph
Prints & Photographs
Division (207.6)
Merritt & Wagner
Wild West on Voyage from
New York to London, 1887
Albumen print mounted on cardstock
Prints & Photographs
Division (209.4)
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William Frederick Cody (1846-1917), known as Buffalo Bill, served
as U.S. army scout, a buffalo hunter for the railroad, and as a
renowned prairie scouts. He is probably best know as the man who
gave the "Wild West" its name. In 1883, Cody created the Wild West
show, a vehicle that propelled him to fortune and worldwide fame
and helped create a lasting image of the American West.
The four hour show, which ran from 1883 until 1913, included legendary
figures such as Sitting Bull, Calamity Jane and Annie Oakley. It
comprised such acts as Indian war dances, an "attack" on a stagecoach,
trick riders, ropers, and shooters as well as many different wild
American animals. The show was so popular that Cody took it on the
road to England in 1887 where it was such a success that Queen Victoria
saw it three times. This poster announces the return of Cody to
the United States from a highly successful French theatrical tour
in 1889.
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