Gerald Hertslet and Thomas Beakbane’s boat, circa 1890s.
Notice the wood piled up and the stove in the center. It’s unknown who is in the boat, although historians suspect one of the men is Beakbane.
– Courtesy Historic Courthouse Museum in Lakeport, CA –
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Lawrence Kreger
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Glenn Chartrand It's not a stove, it's a steam engine to drive the boats propeller... Like a the ol' paddle-wheelers, eh!
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Shelly Purcell Jr. i learned to fish and swim in clearlake
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Traveling the Chisholm Trail
Texas. Just the name alone evokes imagery of a wild and untamed bygone era when anything was possible. 
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Lawrence Kreger
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John Coffman You can still stand on parts of this trail in the dry country of Texas, chishums descendants are still around, I bought that last lot of bullets that guy chishum made , he was a shooter ( benchrest ) that I competed with, he has now left the range.
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Jimmie D Jones Sr The Chisholm trail did not go near Lubbock or Amarillo. Neither did the Western Cattle trail that went through western Oklahoma .
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This 1904 orotone of Navajo riders crossing the desert in Arizona’s Canyon de Chelly is probably the best known of Edward Curtis’s photographs.
– Courtesy library of congress –
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Arlene Cosart A beautiful canyon especially close to sundown. I was lucky to have tour it with Doug, Tabitha and Jim when on a mission trip to the Navajo reservation. A Navajo was our guide and he gave us a lot of information
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Don Hukari We just saw an excellent exhibition of Edward Curtis original photos at the Palm Springs Museum of Art. Go see it if you get a chance!
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Johnny Western
Johnny Western, musician since 1946, when Johnny Western received his first guitar, he has entertained millions as a singer, songwriter and disc jockey.
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Lawrence Kreger
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Chester Johnson He sang the theme song to “Have gun will travel." Worked with Johnny Cash and I used to listen to his radio broadcast out of Wichita, KS not too long ago when there was real country music. He knew and shared lots of interesting stories of the west and western music.
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Billy Naylor I met Johnny Western in Tombstone years ago and we went riding in Steve Elliott's Duesenburg
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Stinking Badges!
One of the most well-known lines from a Western is widely misquoted: “Badges? We don’t need no stinking badges!” Actually, in the 1948 classic “The...
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Lawrence Kreger
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Rob Bob Trappen As the smiling Gold Hat in John Huston's 1948 classic "The Treasu pop cultural contributionre of the Sierra Madre," Bedoya delivered one of the most memorable lines in all of cinema: "Badges? We ain't got no badges. We don't need no badges. I don't have to show you any stinking badges."