| Bill Tighman |
Bill Tilghman got his start as a buffalo hunter in the early 1870s. Along with his partner, George Rust, Tilghman signed on with the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad in 1872—promising to bring in 50 buffalo a week to feed their construction crews. By the time Tilghman left the line in 1875, the two men had taken down close to 12,000 buffalo.
After
that, Tilghman tried his luck at a string of jobs—ranching, running a saloon in
Dodge City, Kansas, and serving as a deputy for Bat Masterson in Ford County,
Kansas. Not too long after that, there
was some talk that Bill took part in a train robbery and stole some horses—but
none of it stuck. From 1883 to 1886, Tilghman served as a deputy for Pat
Sughrue in Dodge City.
In
1889, at the start of the Oklahoma land boom,
he staked a claim near Guthrie, Oklahoma, and took up ranching. A few years
later, in 1893, Tilghman was appointed city marshal of Perry, Oklahoma. Heck
Thomas was his assistant marshal. Together, they cleaned up the town.
The
Wichita Daily Eagle ran a story about
Tilghman that year, describing him as “tall and slim, straight as an arrow, and
is not afraid of anything living. He never gets excited, talks but little, and
in the performance of his duties does not seem to know the meaning of the word
failure.” The implication was, once he started
a case, Tilghman would not give up until he got his man.
His wife, Zoe Tilghman, published an
article in Life Magazine on May 18,
1959. She said the movie gave a false
impression of western lawmen. They “hated to kill and never boasted about it.”
It was just something they needed to do to clean up the frontier to make it
safe for families to move in.


