The Lone Ranger was Really a Black Man

Mr Uncle Leroy

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"Who was that masked man--I wanted to thank him. " I remember those sentiments well, expressed by countless western settlers of the Hollywood variety, from halcyon days of my youth spent roaming the video prairies. The Lone Ranger was but one of my many trail companions back then, which included Hoppy, Gene and Roy (and countless others who were quick of draw and noble of character.) They also had one other characteristic in common: they were all lily white of complexion. The tales of How The West Was Won that were fed to me as a young man featured no people of color other than stoic Jay Silverheels as the faithful Indian companion of you-know-who.
But it turns out that the real life inspiration for the Masked Avenger of the Western Plains may have been an amazing giant of a man who really was the fastest-drawin', toughest, smartest lawman ever seen in the Indian Territory--and he had been born a slave.

Bass Reeves was the name of this American hero, a name that has somehow been omitted from the pantheon of Wild West legends. But author Art T. Burton has sought to correct that oversight in the well-researched book, "Black Gun, Silver Star", published by the University of Nebraska Press.

Reeves was a Deputy U.S. Marshall working out of Fort Smith, Arkansas in the years just after the Civil War, when the Indian Territory in what would later become Oklahoma was a no man's land of desperados, horse thieves, murderers, and outlaws. Reeves' career thus occupied the same time and space as that of the fictional Rooster Cogburn of True Grit fame. But Bass Reeves did in real life what John Wayne only play-acted at, and he did it in a way that combined elements of a number of fictional characters that would later loom large in our imaginations.

Like the Lone Ranger, Bass Reeves would sometimes employ clever disguises as he sought the wanted men who haunted the Indian Territory. He learned from the Indians how to make himself look smaller in the saddle (he was 6'2" at a time when the average man was considerably smaller) and would adopt the clothing and mannerisms of the outlaws themselves to take them by surprise.

According to Burton, Reeves also sometimes gave out silver dollars as calling cards (as opposed to the silver bullets of a certain masked man) and often rode a powerful white or grey horse. He was also often accompanied by an Indian posseman as he made his way through the dangerous wilderness that was this lawman's "beat". Burton also points out that many of those arrested by Reeves served their time in the Detroit federal penitentiary. And it was in Detroit that the Lone Ranger was first created, as a local radio show. So was Reeves at least partially an inspiration for the Lone Ranger? Burton suggests it might be so.

What cannot be doubted is that Reeves was, in reality, the kind of larger-than-life hero that we tend to think of as only being possible in fiction. He was famous for being the greatest crack shot in the Territory, both with rifle and pistols (he wore his pistols with the handles facing out, by the way--Reeves swore that the cross-handed draw was the fastest way to get your pistols out and into action.) Reeves was such a good shot that he was routinely barred from participating in turkey shoots. For us city types who have heard the phrase but don't know the history, those were contests where a live turkey was hung by a leg, and participants would try to shoot its head off while riding at full gallop.

Reeves skills were not just for show, though. In his thirty-two years as a Marshall, Reeves brought in some of the most desperate criminals of his time (some 3,000 in all) and had to kill fourteen of them. Reeves established a reputation as a straight-arrow lawman who never wavered in his duty, including the time when he had to arrest his own son for murder. In a time when not all lawmen in the Indian Territories were viewed as exemplars of personal fortitude, Reeves stood out as the best of the best.

He was a tough man in a tough world, but he could also exhibit an amazing ability to calm and soothe animals--a sort of "horse whisperer" of the frontier.

Burton takes an historian's approach to his subject, providing substantial documentation from source documents to establish that Reeves' exploits were more than just tall tales. In a part of the West that was far tougher, dirtier, but also fairer and less race and class conscious than we would think, Reeves flourished as a fair, clever, and honest lawman. Not bad for a man who had begun life as a slave, and who had been dragged off to the Civil War as the servant of his Confederate master. (During the course of the war, Reeves took abrupt leave of his "master" and never looked back.)

"Black Gun, Silver Star" paints a detailed picture of the life and times of this overlooked American hero, and reveals much about our history--both then and in more recent times. When Oklahoma became a state in 1907, this amazing lawman was forced to leave the Marshall's service, as Jim Crow laws were enthusiastically enacted by the new state. And in the years and decades that followed, while the names of lesser men were dramatized in ways great and small, this dedicated and heroic figure was neglected and ignored.

Only now has some limited recognition of the life and achievements of Bass Reeves begun to be made. "Black Gun, Silver Star" is an excellent way to start making amends for all these years when we've been cheering for make believe heroes instead of the real thing..

.http://voices.yahoo.com/the-lone-ranger-was-really-black-man-8370807.html?cat=38
 

Mr Uncle Leroy

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(CNN) -- More than a century before Johnny Depp wore a terrifying crow headpiece in new Disney film "The Lone Ranger," another hero of the Wild West was carefully arranging his own remarkable disguise.

Sometimes he dressed as a preacher, at other times a tramp, and occasionally even a woman.

But beneath the elaborate costumes was always Bass Reeves -- a 19th-century Arkansas slave who became a legendary deputy U.S. marshal, capturing more than 3,000 criminals with his flamboyant detective skills, super strength and supreme horsemanship.

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Sound familiar? As one historian argues, Reeves could have been the real-life inspiration behind one of America's most beloved fictional characters -- the Lone Ranger.

"Many of Reeves' personal attributes and techniques in catching desperadoes were similar to the Lone Ranger," says Art Burton, author of "Black Gun, Silver Star: The Life and Legend of Frontier Marshal Bass Reeves."

"He was bigger than the Lone Ranger -- he was a combination of the Lone Ranger, Sherlock Holmes and Superman," Burton told CNN. "But because he was a black man his story has been buried. He never got the recognition he deserved."

Legendary Lone Ranger

It's a world apart from the fictional Lone Ranger, who remains one of most the iconic Wild West heroes of the 20th century.

First appearing on a Detroit radio station in 1933, the masked man on a white stallion who brought bad guys to justice was hugely successful, with the series running for over two decades. It spawned novels, comic books and an eight-year TV show starring the most iconic Lone Ranger of all -- actor Clayton Moore.

Indeed, Disney's new film -- featuring Armie Hammer as the Lone Ranger and Johnny Depp as his trusty native American Indian sidekick Tonto -- is just the latest in a long line of films depicting the legendary lawman.

So what's that got to do with Bass Reeves -- one of the country's first African American marshals, who was born almost 100 years before the Lone Ranger made his radio debut?

Hi-Ho Silver!

Quite a lot, argues Burton, pointing to similarities such as their gray horses, penchant for disguises, use of American Indian trackers, and unusual calling cards -- Reeves gave folks a silver dollar to remember him by, while the Lone Ranger left silver bullets.

As for the iconic black mask, the link is more symbolic. "Blacks at that time wore an invisible mask in a world that largely ignored them -- so in that societal sense, Reeves also wore a mask," said Burton, a lecturer at South Suburban College in Illinois.

"When the Lone Ranger first started appearing in comic books he wore a black mask that covered his entire face. Why would they do that? There was deep physiological connection going on."

Then there's the Detroit link. Many of the thousands of criminals captured by Reeves were sent to the House of Corrections in Detroit -- the same city where the Lone Ranger character was created by George Trendle and Fran Striker.

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"It's not beyond belief that all those felons were talking about a black man who had these attributes and the stories got out," said Burton. "I haven't been able to prove conclusively that Reeves was the inspiration for the Lone Ranger, but he was the closest person in real life who had these characteristics."

Real life superhero

In fact, if the newspaper clippings, federal documents, and handed-down stories are anything to go by, Reeves wasn't just a lawman -- he was a 6 foot 2 inch moustachioed muscleman who was so honorable he even arrested his own son.

Born a slave in Arkansas in 1838, Reeves headed to the Civil War front line in the 1860s, working as a servant for his master in the Confederate Army.

While there, he managed to escape to the Indian Territory -- now the state of Oklahoma -- living with native American Indians and learning their languages and tracking skills.

He was a combination of the Lone Ranger, Sherlock Holmes and Superman
Art Burton, historian
So renowned were the father-of-10's shooting skills and horsemanship, that in 1875 he was appointed deputy U.S. marshal.

"He was a big guy for his time," said Burton. "If you got in a fight with Reeves it was the worst decision you could make in your life -- it accounted to suicide.

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"He was also an excellent horseman -- the Indians taught him how to make himself appear smaller in the saddle, helping him with disguises."

Such was the skilled rider's love of horses, he even bred them on his farm. Indeed, many of the first U.S. jockeys were African American slaves who had originally worked in their master's stables.

Lost legacy?

In his 32-year career, Reeves became a Wild West celebrity, with folk songs springing up about the marshal with almost mythical strength.

He died in 1910, at the impressive age of 71, just as segregation laws were starting to take effect in his home state.

Last year, a 23-foot (7-meter) bronze statue of Reeves, in all his gun-slinging glory atop a horse, was unveiled in Fort Smith, Arkansas.

"He's one of America's most important heroes and it's sad his story isn't known more than it is," said Burton. "But unfortunately, the majority of black history has been buried.

"Even today, nobody knows where Reeves is buried -- I like to tell people he's still in disguise."

http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/06/sport/lone-ranger-african-american-reeves/?hpt=us_t2
 

jamalg

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ch15x

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I think the History Channel had a piece on him in their story on Texas Rangers. :ehh:
 
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