Nat Love (1854-1921)

November 17, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Matt Helm

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Nat Love

Public domain image

Born the son of slaves in Davidson County Tennessee in 1854, Nat Love grew up during the turbulent Civil War and Reconstruction era.  Rare for African Americans born enslaved in that era, Love learned to read and write as a child.  In 1869 he left Tennessee and moved west to Texas.  For the next 20 years Love worked as a drover, moving cattle and horses in various locales including the Texas Panhandle, Kansas, Arizona Territory and Dakota Territory.

In 1889, Love married a woman named Alice and the couple had one child.  In 1890 he began work as a porter for the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, a job he held for the next fifteen years.  As Love recounted his stories of his earlier life as a drover to both passengers and other railroad workers, he was encouraged to write his life history.  He did so in 1907 in an autobiography titled The Life and Adventures of Nat Love Better Known in the Cattle Country as “Deadwood Dick.”

Love bragged about his exploits as a superior cowboy and rodeo performer and recounted how he earned the name “Deadwood Dick” along with the love and respect of the citizens of Deadwood, Dakota Territory.  Love’s account describes his meeting legendary westerners such as “Buffalo Bill” Cody.

In the 1890s Edward L. Wheeler, a dime novelist, wrote more than thirty books about a hero named “Deadwood Dick.”  Love claimed that these novels were about him, placing his accounts similarly with those of the protagonist of the “Deadwood Dick” series.

Though Love’s autobiography contains numerous hyperboles and exaggerative claims, it does offer an insight into life of one man in the 19th century American west.

Nat Love died in Los Angeles, California at the age of 67.

About the Author

Author Profile

Matthew D. Helm grew up in the small town of Redfield, South Dakota. After graduating from Redfield Public High School he joined the U.S. Marines. After serving in Washington State he met his fiancée, Veronica and were afterwards married. He was assigned to 3rd Battalion 7th Marines in Twenty-Nine Palms, California. From there his unit was deployed to Kuwait, then Iraq.

After serving a tour in Iraq, he was honorably discharged from the Marines and began furthering his education at the University of Washington. He is in his final year of his undergraduate studies and is presently applying for graduate school with the hopes of continuing his study in American history with a focus on the 19th century west.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Helm, M. (2007, November 17). Nat Love (1854-1921). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/love-nat-1854-1921/

Source of the Author's Information:

Nat Love, The Life and Adventures of Nat Love: Better Known in the Cattle Country as “Deadwood Dick” (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1995); Robert M. Utley, editor. Encyclopedia of the American West (New York: Random House, 1997); American National Biography, http://www.anb.org.offcampus.lib.washington.edu/articles/home.html (login required).

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