Birth Of A Railroad Town
William “Wild Bill” Scoggins brought something extra to the May 15, 1882, birth of the city of Killeen, Texas. He brought his lariat.
When the steam engine of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad chugged into town, Wild Bill was
spotted on the cowcatcher. As the train screeched to a stop, Wild Bill jumped to the ground, uncoiled his lariat and proceeded to lasso the smokestack of the Santa Fe engine. All this occurred while a crowd of onlookers cheered, tossed their hats in the air and generally celebrated the birth of another railroad town.
This began the first phase of Killeen’s existence. The second phase was to come in 1942 with the opening of Camp Hood, giving credence to the catchphrase that the history of Killeen is really “a tale of two cities.”
