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Lot 558

Sale 1192 - American Historical Ephemera & Photography
Lots 1-294
Jun 15, 2023 10:00AM ET
Lots 295-567
Jun 16, 2023 10:00AM ET
Live / Cincinnati
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Estimate
$4,000 - 6,000
Price Realized
$5,040
Sold prices are inclusive of Buyer’s Premium

Lot Description

[WESTERN AMERICANA]. LOCKE, H.R. (1856-1927), photographer. Calamity Jane, Gen. Crook's Scout. Large format photograph. 1895.


7 x 8 3/4 in. photograph on 8 x 10 in. cardstock mount (toning, staining, spotting, and wear and bits of loss to edges and corners of print; mount with heavy staning, soiling, several pinholes, and wear to edges and corners). Titled and copyrighted by Locke in the negative. Verso with several inscriptions and stamps, including handstamp for "A.A. Coburn, Agent, D[ea]dwoo[d], S.D., Fr[ank]lin Hot[e]l Corner."

Perhaps no other figure is more illustrative of the wild days in Deadwood in the 1870s than Martha Jane "Calamity" Cannary (1852-1903). Her history is shrouded in uncertainty and myth. As early as 1864 her family was living in Virginia City, Nevada, and by the late 1860s she was apparently a consort of various soldiers at Forts Jim Bridger and Steel in Montana Territory. She had a propensity for dressing in men's clothes, and may have been with Crook at the Battle of Slim Buttes in 1876, dressed as such. She apparently accompanied Wild Bill Hickok, Colorado Charlie Utter and Bloody Dick Seymour when they arrived in Deadwood in June or July of 1876, and was there when Bill was murdered. By all accounts, she was a profane alcoholic, but with many likeable qualities. While never married to Hickok, she was buried next to him in Deadwood.

City directories suggest that A.A. Coburn was an insurance agent in Deadwood in the early 20th century.

In our experience, a rare pose of Jane.

This lot is located in Cincinnati.

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