Well here he is, Yellowstone Bill. And for good measure, the Famous East Side Cave where he resided for a while in the 1890's. These are from a lengthy article in the Minneapolis papers from 1897.
I'm really not sure how much of the details of his life to believe, but here we go....
His real name was Martin Frank Walker. He is described as youthful looking - despite being 58 years old - with a magnificent mustache and with dark hair flowing out from under a broad brimmed dark slouch hat. He was born in Titusville, PA in 1839. He left home "at an early age" and meandered about Wisconsin and Iowa for a time. Eventually his family moved to Austin, Minnesota. This could not have been before the mid 1850s. But he did not stick around long, and after making a living giving horse breaking lessons for a dollar a pop he joined the Cadwell & Van Arnburg Circus for four years, working as an acrobat.
He had to leave that career after fighting a duel with a fellow performer and, being the first one able to get out of the hospital decided to put some distance behind him. It was now the early 1860's and he claims to have been a hunter and trapper in various far Western states, and to have been a scout under General Reno. His fanciful tales of fighting Indians, while no doubt the hair raising stuff he told visitors to his cave home, are beyond plausible.
He left this life in 1877, returning to Austin, Minnesota briefly before traveling - reasons unspecified - through Asia and Europe. He came to Minneapolis sometime thereafter, living on a houseboat. By one account he decided to take it over St. Anthony Falls as a stunt, being later charged with animal cruelty when his dog drowned. Another consequence was that his son was taken away from him it being considered that he was .."too wild a character"... to have charge of the boy.
Bill occupied the Famous East Side Cave intermittently, evidently for 12 full months on one occasion. He is known to have lived there in 1893 when he was fined after his dog bit somebody. He had it set up as a sort of museum/souvenir shop. A few brief excerpts from the 1897 article should suffice to give the flavor of it.
"What first catches the eye in this big vault is the skin of a giant silver-tip grizzly, one of the finest skins of its kind in Minneapolis. No mansion in the twin cities possesses a fur rug which could compare to it..."
"The collection of minerals, petrified woods, etc is very large and of considerable value. There are a number of fine Bad Lands shells, petrified fish enameled, closely resembling mother of pearl and found in moss rocks......There are cave crystals and formations of rock of great beauty....a petrified piece of a mastodon's jaw....and what Walker says is the only petrified sea-snake's head ever found....and portions of a petrified turtle. Walker says this turtle weighed a ton. The Times reporter could not dispute the assertion."
Walker lived in the cave with his wife. His two favorite horses also lived in there with them. Here's one of them.
Evidently in the late 1890's Yellowstone Bill left Minneapolis for parts uncertain. In 1908 his son put an appeal in the paper looking for help finding a father he'd not seen in 17 years. (This would seem to put the houseboat incident in 1891. There was a partial reply suggesting that Bill had last been heard from in 1899 at which point he was in Northern Missouri and, very appropriately, engaged in the sale of hair remedies!*
I've tried to search online sources for more details, especially for an obituary. So far without luck.
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* The houseboat incident seems a bit sketchy. I did find reference to him living on a boat in April 1891. It had been burglarized. The location is given as being near the Bohemian Flats, which is basically right across the river from his later cave habitation. So....did he bring the boat up through the locks to run it over The Falls?
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