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The Circle Dot Cowboys at Dodge City: History and Imagination in Andy Adams's The Log of a Cowboy
Robert R. Dykstra and Jo Ann Manfra
Andy Adams's famous 1903 novel, The Log of a Cowboy, includes a chapter set in Dodge City that is an especially interesting example of the mixed fact and fancy that has traditionally characterized western fiction. Remarkably, Adams appears to provide otherwise missing information on Dodge's 1882 experiment in "reform law-enforcement."
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In the third week of June 1882,
seven Texas cowboys from an outfit grazing cattle on Duck Creek
in southwest Kansas set out for nearby Dodge City. Like hundreds
of cowhands and cattlemen before them, these Circle Dot men intended
to "see the elephant." Originally referring to the main attraction
of any mid-nineteenth-century circus, the elephant reference was
strictly metaphorical, meaning a unique sight or spectacle.
1
Here it specifically alluded to the gaudy entertainments of one
of the most notorious towns in America. Famous from coast to coast
as a major western livestock market, Dodge City was equally celebrated
and widely condemned for its all-night bars, gaming tables, dance
halls, brothels, and general civic irregularity--all seasoned by
the town's highly overblown reputation for gun violence.
2
In the 1870s and 1880s, seemingly every cowboy ascending the Western
Trail felt obliged to stop and ogle the excitement, if not actually
participate in it.
3
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On the June day in question, the Circle
Dot cowboys rode into Dodge City at approximately 9:00 a.m. Some
fifteen hours later they galloped out again--six-shooters blazing
and hostile bullets whining about their ears. They had indeed seen
the elephant and congratulated themselves on having escaped unscathed. |
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Their story appeared in 1903 as chapter
thirteen of ex-trailhand Andy Adams's The Log of a Cowboy.
4
From the first, a surprising number of readers and reviewers assumed
it to be nonfiction.
5
As recently as the mid-1990s, nationally published authors continued
to refer to the book as a cowboy memoir.
6
Scholars, however, have long recognized that the work, which is
narrated not by Adams himself but by a Georgia-born cowboy named
Thomas Moore Quirk, is what its author intended: a novel.
7
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