The Dead Man’s Hand


Vintage playing cards and a small box on a white surface.
On this day in 1876, Jack McCall murdered Wild Bill Hickok in Deadwood, South Dakota. The so-called ‘dead man’s hand” Hickok was holding isn’t entirely known. Two black aces and two black eights are accepted. The fifth card, if even dealt, is not.

First, something about Hickok: he was a folk hero known for his life on the frontier as a soldier, scout, lawman, cattle rustler, gunslinger, gambler, showman, and actor, and for his involvement in gunfights. Some fictionalized, some not. He was, though, a legend during his life.

Vintage sepia portrait of a woman in early 20th-century attire.

Back to the fateful hand dealt him. Even the black aces and eights have been called into question by a man claiming to have retrieved the cards. The man gave the cards to his son, who then told another person that the cards were the ace of diamonds, the ace of clubs, the two black eights, the clubs and spades, and the queen of hearts. But there was no evidence to support the claim.

Vintage Wild Bill Hickok and Texas Jack metal lunchbox with cowboy artwork.

Hickok’s biographer, Joseph Rosa, wrote about the hand in which the fifth card was the queen of clubs, along with the black aces and eights. The two pairs, black aces and eights, became known as the dead man’s hand, but they weren’t associated with Hickok until 50 years after his murder in yet another book.

The fifth card is open to speculation. The nine and the jack of diamonds come up often. The fifth card has been described as a bullet to the brain from behind because, for Hickok, it was.

Vintage German baby shoes with original box and certificate.

The story of Wild Bill has fascinated me since I was a child. I watched the television show in the 1950s featuring him and his fictional sidekick, Jingles, played by Guy Madison and Andy Devine. I had the lockbox from the show and a fringe coat like the one Jingles wore. My parents got me the Wild Bill outfit, including two six-guns and a holster. It came with a white shirt and pants with black fringe. That is another story in itself.

Vintage cowboy holding two pistols in a classic Western town.

Later, I followed the path of Wild Bill from Illinois to South Dakota, where he died at 39 years of age in Saloon No. 10, and read up on the trial of Jack McCall. McCall was found not guilty but tried a second time; the defense of double jeopardy failed on technical grounds. From trial and appeal, McCall was hanged in just under three months. That is speedy justice and interesting to read about.

Vintage sepia portrait of a woman in early 20th-century attire.

I played some poker at No. 10 and won a decent amount of money playing blackjack, enough to get my photo taken with the lovely lady dealing cards. I still have the photo.

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