
Accurate Facts shown in HBOs Deadwood:
-When gambling, Wild Bill always sat with his back to the wall and his face to the door, lest any friends or relatives of those he'd killed sneak up behind him. (They did show Bill playing poker sitting against a wall)
-The bullet passed through Wild Bill's skull and exited his right cheek before lodging in the wrist of another poker player. (We did see a poker player holding his injured hand).
Accurate Facts NOT shown in HBOs Deadwood:
-        Hickok always poured his drinks with his left hand, which kept his best gun hand ready for any eventuality. (HBO had him pouring with his right hand).
-        Crime bosses estimated that local businessmen would soon ask Wild Bill to take on a job as a peace officer. Knowing he was cold-blooded, the bad guys also figured it was only a matter of time before he challenged them. What they didn't know was that his eyesight was rapidly failing; at that point in his life, Wild Bill stood a good chance of losing a stand-up gunfight. But cowed by his reputation, they decided to encourage somebody outside their circle to "do the job" for them. (This was not emphasized much )
-        Hickok noticed if he took the game's lone open seat, his back would be to the front door. When one of the gamblers near the wall, a gunman called Charles Rich, declined to switch seats with the better-known Hickok, Bill gave up and took the empty chair. It was a fatal mistake. (In HBOs Deadwood, Bill never asked to change seats.)
-        As Hickok fell away from the table, he spilled his hand -- pairs of black aces and eights known forever after as the "deadman's hand." (This is such a famous hand, its a shame they didnt show the cards).
-        Charlie Utter rushed to the saloon and claimed the body of his friend, and put the following notice in the newspaper: Died in Deadwood, Black Hills, August 2, 1876, from the effects of a pistol shot, J. B. Hickock [sic] (Wild Bill) formerly of Cheyenne, Wyoming. Funeral services will be held at Charlie Utter's Camp, on Thursday afternoon, August 3, 1876, at 3 o'clock, P. M. All are respectfully invited to attend. (This may happen next week, but for now they show Bullock and Jane in the saloon).

RIP
COMING SOON (hopefully):
The death of Wild Bill Hickok in August of 1876 triggered a growing demand for law and order in Deadwood, resulting in Bullock's appointment as the first Sheriff of Deadwood as few months thereafter. He quickly appointed several able, fearless deputies and before long order had settled upon Deadwood with little fanfare or gun smoke.









