Utter had been a close friend of Hickok's for some time previously, constantly watching to ensure that Hickok's weaknesses of
alcohol and
gambling would not bring Hickok to a bad end. Utter was not present on August 2, 1876, when
Jack McCall fatally shot Hickok in the back of the head as Hickok played poker in a Deadwood saloon. Utter later claimed the body and placed a notice in the local newspaper, the
Black Hills Pioneer, which read: Attendance at the funeral was heavy, and Utter had Hickok buried with a wooden grave marker which read: Utter left for Colorado, but returned in 1879 to have Hickok reinterred, at Calamity Jane's urging, in a 10-foot-square plot at the
Mount Moriah Cemetery, surrounded by a cast-iron fence and with an American flag in the ground. In February 1879, Utter purchased the
Eaves Saloon in
Gayville, a mining town west of Deadwood, but ran into a string of bad luck. He was found guilty of selling liquor without a license. Later that year, Utter opened a dance hall in
Lead, a
company town far more sedate than its raucous, rollicking neighbor,
Deadwood. The dance hall's "boisterous music and scandalous
cancan dancing" earned Charlie an appearance before the honorable
Gideon C. Moody. Charlie was convicted of "operating a nuisance", but because he had already closed the establishment, Judge Moody sentenced him to a mere one hour in jail. He was also fined $50 on the charge of disturbing the peace. Utter was back in Deadwood by the fall of the year. He opened another dance hall and also managed one of Deadwood's theaters. On September 26, 1879, a fire devastated Deadwood, destroying more than 300 buildings (including Charlie's dance hall and the theater he managed) and consuming the belongings of many inhabitants. == After Deadwood ==