The South Riding RV Travels

73

June 9th - 10th - Cody WY - Buffalo Bill Museums

You can't get away in this town from William F Cody aka Buffalo Bill. It appears that he was a very busy man. He started killing buffalo, was a scout for the army, a showman of the first order, ran a wild west show, and helped found the town of Cody. He did intend to be buried here but ended up on a mountain-top near Denver.
There are numerous statues but this one stands outside the town's major attraction (and possibly only good reason to visit here). The centre actually houses five serious museums, the Draper Museum of Natural History, the Buffalo Bill Museum, the Plains Indian Museum, the Whitney Gallery of Western Art and the Cody Firearms Museum, the largest collection of guns anywhere, I should think, including Gatling guns! The museums are modern, well laid out and intended to be informative rather than just collections.
The Plains Indian Museum covers mainly articles from the Plains Indians who roamed this area. Some of the artifacts are quite beautiful. The workmanship (or should it be womanship) in this shirt belonging to Red Cloud (a Lakota Sioux) was remarkable and must have represented hours of loving care.
But part of the idea is to show that the traditions live on, so you have a traditional eagle feather headdress next to this baseball cap which has been skillfully beaded in the traditional style. Nowadays there is not the emphasis there was at one time to make the native peoples conform to the white man's way of life, but rather an acceptance that the traditional values and skills need to be preserved. The increasing number of histories written from the native perception also make interesting (and sometimes embarrassing) reading.
This was part of the inside of a log cabin; numbers of Indians were made to live in such homes when on the reservations. Although they may have resisted the style of living, the quality of the workmanship of the items inside would put many of us to shame.
The Plains Indian Museum had a huge life-size diorama as a backdrop for film clips on lifestyles at the time. The lighting here was well designed and enhanced the overall display.
The natural history museum was very well laid out with the displays rising in a spiral and showing the animals in settings proper to the elevations they commonly roamed. This is a pronghorn antelope..
The Buffalo Bill Museum has many artifacts from his era including wagons and the stagecoach (fresh off the movie set). This was probably the Deadwood Stage and there are exhibits that belonged toAnnie Oakley, who was part of his Wild West show.
Most art leaves me cold as did most of the contents of this part of the museum. This was just a sample but I found little I could get excited about.
The firearms museum was just amazing. I never realised there were so many different manufacturers and types. There must have been an example of every weapon ever made. This was just one case of five display cases for one manufacturer. There must have been two thousand different rifles, and I only looked at one floor. I missed one completely. The museum was full of fathers and sons extolling the virtues of each weapon. I'm afraid it did little for me but then I don't come from Wyoming.
This is a tourist town with little in the way of shops for anybody but tourists. And it has the usual collection of tourist traps, like the local Rodeo. Not really my scene. But I have always been interested in miniature modelling so this museum caught my eye, and for $3....

The central display held a series of dioramas of historical scenes from the West (including a couple of model railways that could be "driven" by the visitor!).

I liked this collection of buffalo massing on the plains depicting the way they impacted on life in earlier times.

Then we had the pioneer wagon train with the Indians circling around. Much beloved of the movies but I suspect not quite so accurate in fact.
Around the outside was a large collection of Indian and local history items such as you have in many museums of the West. I found it a little disappointing although I accept that a lot of thought and work had gone into it. I was left to contemplate the time and effort which had been expended on the moccasins in this collection in one case.

On an unrelated note, this being a flat part of the country, we did get the bikes down and rode into the town from the campsite. It only revealed how terribly unfit we still are. But I suppose it was good for us.