America’s first female superstar, sharpshooter Annie Oakley, is shown here, the summer before she sailed for England with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West.
– Courtesy Heritage Auctions, June 2012 –
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Kevin Fleming Must have been cold too...
LikeReply2952 mins
Steve Coleman compared to some ive seen from the old west, she was a nice looking lady.
LikeReply2854 mins
The abundance of 1892 and 1894 Winchester rifles in the array of weapons and ammunition next to this Revolutionist vaquero explains the popularity of the Mexican Revolution folk song, “Carabina Treinta Treinta,” about the .30-30 carbine.
– Courtesy Garry James Collection —
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Link Borland Winchester Model 94s & 95s were actually more popular during the Mexican revolutionary period moving into the new century. The advent of smokeless powders used after 1894 was the new technology of the time period and is still in use today.
LikeReply164 hrs
Hank Neal King I have a 30-30 Winchester. Sounds like a cannon when shot.
LikeReply128 hrs
Among the number of firearms Buffalo Bill Cody used throughout his colorful career, the one he held the highest in esteem was the 1866 Springfield .50-70 Allin conversion single-shot rifle he employed in buffalo hunts during his early scouting days (he holds it in his lap). Although others knew the rifle as the “needle gun,” due to its long firing pin, Cody called his “Lucretia Borgia.” Like the famous Renaissance femme fatale, she was “beautiful, but deadly.”
– Courtesy Buffalo Bill center of the west, Cody, Wyoming, P.6.906 –
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Rick Seward I have been told that the old gun was found standing in the corner of a stable many years after Bill's death. It is now on display at the museum in Cody, Wyoming.
John Kapusta I like these vignettes from the Old West it brings the characters to life!
LikeReply1023 hrs
Illuminating the Past
As book review editor at True West magazine, I receive hundreds of books a year from the largest publishers to the first time author.
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Mark Ford I just wanted to say your social media presence is top notch. Thanks.
Hays in an Uproar
Deputy U.S. Marshal James Butler “Wild Bill” Hickok converses with the bartender at Paddy Welch’s in Hays City, Kansas. 
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Eamonn Sheridan wild bill sees of the cavalry one of them a medal of honour winner
LikeReply8 hrs
Mary Lattin We're headed to Boot Hill (16th st.) next week.
Remembering Butch Cassidy
Charles Kelly was a Salt Lake City printer when he got to know cowboy artist Charlie Russell. 
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William Nicholas I have a much nicer copy of the first edition.
LikeReply12Yesterday at 6:11pmEdited
David Ellis The only one who knows the story is his sister Lula Parker Benson, and she did not say where Butch was buried .
Writing Bill Tilghman’s Biography
Zoe Agnes Stratton was a 22-year-old school teacher when famed lawman Bill Tilghman came-a-courtin’. 
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Lee Tillman Cool way to spell "Tillman"! Lol
Wyoming cowgirl Prairie Rose Henderson broke through the glass ceiling when she won the first Cheyenne Frontier Days race for women on August 23, 1899. The outdoor rodeo is still going strong and draws top professionals competing for more than a million dollars.
– True West Archives –
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Marque Ann Dunham For many years in the 70's and 80's my step-father calf roped with his rancher friends at Cheyenne. Little America was the best place to stay!. Miss those days.
LikeReply10Yesterday at 1:47pmEdited
Don Rockhill She looks full of life and loving it.
Custer’s Last Stand
Steven Kohlhagen’s Chief of Thieves, based on 32 historical characters and 12 fictional ones, is a saga that crisscrosses the American West between 1862 and 1876. 
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Lawrence Kreger