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Celebrated accounts of lawless towns that relied on the extra-legal
justice of armed citizens and hired gunmen are part of the enduring
cultural legacy of the American West. This image of the frontier
has been fueled for more than a century by historians-both amateur
and academic-and by various popular images. In the twenty-first
century, Great Plains communities continue to perpetuate this image
with tourist attractions and events that pay homage to their
"lawless" past. But these romanticized depictions of the violent
frontier do not accurately portray the legal culture of most early
Great Plains communities. Law and Order in Buffalo Bill's Country
is a case study of law and legal culture in Lincoln County,
Nebraska, during the nineteenth century. Mark R. Ellis argues that
nascent nineteenth-century Great Plains communities shared an
understanding of the law that allowed for the immediate
implementation of legal institutions such as courts, jails, and law
enforcement. A common legal culture, imported from New England and
the Midwest, influenced frontier communities to uphold traditions
of law and order even in the "wild and wooly" frontier community of
North Platte, Nebraska. This study is one of the first to examine
legal institutions on the Great Plains. By setting aside the issue
of a violent frontier West and focusing instead on community
building and legal institutions, this study presents a very
different image of the frontier-era Great Plains.
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