The real-life Django: The legendary African-American Wild West marshal who arrested 3,000 outlaws and killed 14 men
Bass Reeves, one of the first African
Americans to become a Deputy U.S. Marshal west of the Mississippi
River, could have been an inspiration for Quentin Tarantino’s fictional
character Django.
Reeves, who was born a slave, arrested 3,000 felons, killed 14 men and was never shot throughout his 32-year career as a federal lawman.
The
fearless solider was born into slavery in 1838 in Crawford County,
Arkansas, and eventually broke from his owner, George Reeves, to live
among the Creek and Seminole Indians.
Reeves, who was born a slave, arrested 3,000 felons, killed 14 men and was never shot throughout his 32-year career as a federal lawman.
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Appointment: Reeves became a Deputy U.S. Marshal in 1875 at the age of 38, after 'Hanging Judge' Isaac C. Parker was made the federal judge of Indian Territory |
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Real-life Django: Bass Reeves, born a slave, later became a Deputy U.S. Marshal and arrested 3,000 felons and killed 14 men |
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