- Jack McCall
-
Jack McCall Born 1852 or 1853
Jefferson County, KentuckyDied March 1, 1877 (aged 24)
Yankton, South DakotaCause of death Execution by hanging Other names "Crooked Nose" Jack Known for Murder of Wild Bill Hickok, Deadwood, South Dakota John "Jack" McCall (born in 1852 or 1853 in Jefferson County, Kentucky – died March 1, 1877 in Yankton, Dakota Territory), known by the nickname "Crooked Nose Jack or Broken Nose Jack, was the killer of James "Wild Bill" Hickok, shooting him from behind, an act that among admirers of Hickok and students of Hickok's history has given rise to the phrase "the coward Jack McCall."
Contents
Life and murder of Hickok
Many of the details of McCall's life are lost. He was raised in Kentucky with three sisters but drifted west and became a buffalo hunter [[1]]. By 1876, he was living in a gold mining camp called Deadwood, under the alias of Bill Sutherland.
On August 2, 1876, in the Nuttal & Mann's #10 Saloon in Deadwood, McCall shot Hickok in the back of the head with a single-action .45-caliber revolver, shouting "Take that!" Hickok, in contrast to his normal habit of sitting in a corner to protect his back, on that day sat with his back to the door while engaged in a game of poker. The killing was rumored to have been over McCall's drunken resentment of an act of generosity by Hickok, Hickok having offered McCall money to buy breakfast after McCall had lost it all playing poker the previous day. McCall claimed, however, that the killing was retribution for Hickok having previously killed McCall's brother in Abilene, Kansas. McCall was found innocent after two hours deliberation by an impromptu court in McDaniel's Theatre made up of local miners and businessmen, causing the Black Hills Pioneer to editorialize:
"Should it ever be our misfortune to kill a man ... we would simply ask that our trial may take place in some of the mining camps of these hills."
Escape and retrial
McCall then fled town to Wyoming, where he bragged, at length, about the details of how he had killed Hickock in a fair gunfight. Unfortunately for McCall, however, the Wyoming authorities refused to recognize the result of McCall's first trial on the grounds of Deadwood having been in Indian Territory at the time and contended that McCall could legally be tried again. Because Deadwood was an illegal settlement, with no legally constituted law enforcement or court system, the federal court in Yankton, D.T. declared that double jeopardy did not apply.
He was retried in Yankton, Dakota Territory, for Hickok's murder, and was hanged on March 1, 1877 at the age of 24. McCall was the first person to be executed by United States officials in Dakota Territory.
In popular culture
- Jack McCall was portrayed by David Arquette in the 1995 Western Film, Wild Bill. He was also portrayed by Garret Dillahunt in the 2004 HBO television series Deadwood.
- Mentioned in the song Ringo by Lorne Greene[1]
References
- ^ "RINGO by LORNE GREENE", Retrieved on 2010-10-06.
External links
- South Dakota State Historical Society, "The 15 Killed in SD" Execution List.
- Executions in the U.S. 1608-1987: The Espy File (by state) (PDF)
Categories:- 1850s births
- 1877 deaths
- 1876 crimes
- Outlaws of the American Old West
- American people convicted of murder
- American people convicted of murdering police officers
- Gunmen of the American Old West
- People executed for murdering police officers
- People executed by hanging
- 19th-century executions by the United States
- People executed by the United States federal government
- Executed American people
- People convicted of murder by the United States federal government
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.