Law and Order on the Border
In Cowboys and Gangsters: Stories of an Untamed West (TwoDot Publishing, $16.95) Samuel K. Dolan refutes the idea that t…
Granville Stuart: Gentleman Vigilante
Call Granville Stuart the gentleman vigilante. He was a prominent rancher, merchant and civic leader in Montana, startin…
Bread Across the WestThe cultural breads that sustained pioneers on the frontier.
“Vile stuff” that suggested the “properties of poison” turned the bread a “green-yellow tinge” at the Pony Express station near Wyoming Territor…
Fantastic Firearms in Cody2017 marks the centennial of the Buffalo Bill Center of the West and its Cody Firearms Museum.
Loved and respected by royalty as well as the common man, William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody embodied the spirit of the Amer…
Did Old Westerners Generally Load only Five out of the Six Chambers?
Did Old Westerners generally load only five out of the six chambers? -Dan Clutter of Denison, Iowa Yes, letting the hammer rest on an empty chamber wa…
The Women on the Mother Road
It was John Steinbeck who first named Route 66 the “Mother Road”–all 2,400 miles of it from Chicago to Los Angeles…
The Walk Down
It was the most famous stroll in American history. Neither fast nor slow. Purposeful, with a sense of intimidation. It h…
John Larn
John Larn was a vigilante leader and lawman in Shackleford, Texas in the mid-1870s. But that was a front. Larn and his …
Fantastic Firearms in Cody2017 marks the centennial of the Buffalo Bill Center of the West and its Cody Firearms Museum.
The Walk Down
Buckskin Frank LeslieFilling the gaps in the long and illustrious life of a Tombstone legend.
“I, Nashville Franklyn Leslie, was born near San Antonio, Texas on the 18th day of March 1842 and am now a resident of Tombstone, Arizona and have bee…
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