Nat Love Also Deadwood Dick. Love Was Born A Slave On The Plantation Of Robert Love In Davidson County, Tennessee, In June, 1854.
Despite slavery era statutes that outlawed black literacy he learned to read and write as a child with the help of his father, Sampson Love. When slavery ended, Sampson attempted to start a family farm to raise tobacco and corn, but he died shortly after the second crop was planted. Nat then took a second job working on a local farm to help make ends meet. After a few years of working odd jobs, he won a horse in a raffle. He sold the horse for one hundred dollars and gave half to his mother, and he used the othhalf to leave town. He went west to Dodge City, Kansas, to find work as a Cowboy. In Dodge City, he joined the cowboys from the Duval Ranch which was stationed in Texas. Because of his excellent horse riding skills, the Duval Ranch cowboys gave Nat the nickname "Red River Dick." Once he joined the Duval cowboys he left Dodge City and returned with them to the home ranch in the Texas Panhandle. Nat Love's autobiography tells of many adventures fighting against cattle rustlers and inclement weather. His many years of experience made him an expert marksman and cowboy. He entered a rodeo in Deadwood, South Dakota on the 4th of July in 1876.
Eventually Nat Love’s family was freed from bondage because of Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation. As he got off on his own, some of his associates were Billy the Kid, Bat Masterson, the James Brothers. He also was adopted by more than one Indian tribe. As a young man he wanted to get into the west and start living on his own, and he knew he could find work as a cowhand. He started working in Dodge City, Kansas, but it was then when he started to become a really good cowboy- he could catch cattle and rope them very easily. Then, he was offered more money at the Pete Gallinger company, so he started to work there. When he was 22, Love entered in a Roping contest on the 4th of July in Deadwood, South Dakota. He impressed the crowd so much that he received the nickname, “Deadwood Dick.” He won many contests, and published two autobiographies- The Life and Adventures of Nat Love and Better Known in the Cattle Country. Nat rode through hailstorms so hard that "only men could withstand them." Nat fought off attacks by Indians a lot, like many other cowboys. The first time he met a mean group of Indians he said he was too scared to run. Nat found love at first sight by a Spanish woman when he passed by a house in Old Mexico. They got married, but she died the spring after because of sickness. Later, he married another woman in Denver, CO. Nat eventually gave up on being a cowboy for the railroad industry instead. In 1980, he got a job in the Pullman service on the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad.
