Carved Bull Head from Ben Thompson's Bulls Head Saloon

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Hand-carved wooden bull head with real horns and Wild West history. 40" horn spread, 30" tall, 21" deep. An important piece of frontier history, this head hung in the Abilene, Kansas Bulls Head Saloon, which belonged to notable Old West personality "Shotgun Ben Thompson."

Provenance: Includes notarized letter attesting to its history from noted collector Jack Glover.

FROM KANSAS HISTORICAL SOCIETY: When he was pardoned from prison after two years, Thompson moved to Abilene, Kansas, on the Chisholm Trail. He opened the Bulls Head Saloon there with a partner, Phillip H. Coe, and prospered as the town grew due to the cattle trade. Coe was later killed in a shootout with the town’s marshal, James Butler “Wild Bill” Hickok.

Lot 102, Sold $12,980
Brian Lebel's Cody Old West Auction - June 26th, 2021, Santa Fe, NM.

Cabinet Card of Ben Thompson, Inscribed to King Fisher

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7 3/4" x 3 3/4", mounted to 8 1/8" x 4". H.R. Marks, Austin, Texas. photographer's imprint on front of card. Written in ink on verso "To my friend King Fisher / Ben Thompson / Austin, Texas March 11, 1884".

Inscribed by Thompson to Fisher on the day they were both gunned down. Taken from Fisher’s pocket, the back is stained with Fisher’s blood.

Robert McCubbin: "One of the highlights of the collection"

A Blood-Stained Memento

By Robert McCubbin for True West Magazine, April 1, 2006 (excerpted)

“They met that March 11, 1884, in Austin, Texas, by chance or plan… we don’t know for sure. But their meeting was to be an historic and a tragic one.

Ben Thompson and John King Fisher were two of the most notorious gunfighters of the Old West… It isn’t clear how well the two knew each other before that day which was to be their last on earth. In any case, they would have had much in common to bring them together. They both were flamboyant, worked both sides of the law and liked to drink, gamble and party. On March 11, 1884, they were drinking buddies out having a good time, first in Austin, Texas, and later in San Antonio.

After meeting up in Austin, Thompson gave Fisher a cabinet photograph of himself taken a few days earlier by Austin photographer H.R. Marks. He boldly inscribed it on the back, “To my friend King Fisher, Ben Thompson, Austin, Texas, March 11, 1884.” Fisher slipped it in his coat pocket, and the friends proceeded on their rounds. Later that evening in San Antonio, Fisher and Thompson were gunned down in the Vaudeville Theatre.

The San Antonio Daily Express was quick to pick up on the memento when it reported on March 13: “While in Austin, King Fisher had been given a picture of Ben Thompson by Ben, and had the photograph in his pocket when killed.” Although the photo was not penetrated by any of the numerous bullets that entered King Fisher’s body, it had been stained by his blood.

As a collector of historical photographs, I must admit that this cabinet card is quite a find. There are three major areas of collecting Old West Antiques: Original photographs, autographs and relics (such as guns, knives, hats, chaps, spurs, etc.). Among the most sought-after and valuable are original photographs and autographs of the gunfighters, outlaws and lawmen, and relics that can be documented as having belonged to them. It is indeed rare when something falls into all three categories, as does this Ben Thompson photograph. It is even more exciting to a collector because it relates not just to one, but two of the most notorious Old West gunfighters … inscribed by one … and with the blood of the other.

This historical treasure was apparently returned to Fisher’s family in Uvalde, Texas, following his death. The photograph resurfaced about 15 years ago when an elderly lady from the Uvalde area presented it to a lawyer in San Antonio.

When I first learned of the photograph, needless to say, I was excited, anxious … and nervous. It seemed too good to be true. But it was! It’s also rare to find a photograph that has been documented by a newspaper of the time.”

Lot 248, Brian Lebel's Old West Auction - January 25-26, 2019. Mesa, AZ.
Sold $94,400.