The Acoma Indians have occupied this pueblo, 60 miles west of Albuquerque, New Mexico, for more than 900 years, making it one of the nation’s oldest, continuously-inhabited communities. When Ben Wittick visited Acoma pueblo, while working for the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad in 1883, he photographed these women balancing ollas atop their heads as they traversed the rocky path of Sky City village. Two hundred years had passed since their ancestors fought in the Pueblo Revolt in an unsuccessful attempt to throw off Spanish rule, and now the Acoma found themselves on a U.S. reservation.
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Jim Latham Sky City
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Divine Intervention
According the experts there should not be less than five men to pull a successful train robbery.
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Lawrence Kreger
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Lawrence Plourde Interesting information.
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Cattle is King
Most often, when that phrase is used to describe the Old West, we think of Texas. And while cattle were important to Texas, we find it was just one of many factors that fed that state. 
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Dan Golden Times then you didn't wait on gov. To get it for you, did it all your self.
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Gene Michel Yea this is a nice page , I like it
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The Australian Jesse James
Can a film be a Western if the story takes place on the other side of the globe?
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Carol Prestridge Been done - Quigley Down Under with Tom Selleck - as fine a western as ever was made in this country. So, Yes!!!
LikeReply133 hrs
Bryan Boatwright Yes it can. The theme is of the time frame. Western refers to America, but the essence it represents applies to any frontier territory. Quigley Down Under, Crocodile Dundee for the modern and one Heath Leger was in .
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The Swiss brothers, Frank and Henry Dubacher, brewed about 150 gallons of beer daily at the Bisbee Brewery they opened in the early 1880s. Their nephew, Joseph Muheim, who began working for them in 1888, owned a pet bear that he tied to a tree between the brewery building and Goar’s Garage. Legend goes that the miners who frequented the bar found it a great sport to box with the 300-pound bear. Unfortunately, as the tale goes, the bear had too much to drink one night and accidentally hanged himself with his chain after he climbed up into the tree to go to sleep.
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Rod Noel You mean the bear was truly hung over at the brewery? OMG!
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Bryan Boatwright A reminder to bear your soul in tale and brew. Anyone remember the beginning of The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean?
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Branding
Utilizing heated marks to brand property dates back to the ancient Egyptians.
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Richard Lower Thank you😀
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Dennis Gallagher Like the story
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Samuel Colt was late to the double action game; he considered the design to be unreliable. Twenty years after Colt’s patent expired in 1857, Colt attempted a small-frame revolver; the following year, 1878, the company’s large-frame double action came out, known as the Frontier Colt. In this 1880s photo, a buckskin-clad dandy sports his nickeled 1878 Frontier Colt on his hip. 
– Courtesy Herb Peck Jr. Collection –
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Alex Antonopoulos This is the man who was responsible for the double-action revolvers of Colt's Patent Firearms Manufacturing Company, William Mason.
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Alex Antonopoulos Samuel Colt died in 1862.
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Two German-born brothers, Frank W. and George Freund, followed the track of the Union Pacific Railroad westward, including to Laramie, Wyoming Territory, where, in the photo shown here, the man on the sand mound holds a double-key percussion muzzleloader, while the man to his right holds an 1866 Winchester. By 1870, with the Union Pacific built, the brothers had opened shop in Denver, Colorado, and eventually went on to secure patents for Sharps, Remington, Colt and other big gun manufacturers. 
– Courtesy Union Pacific Railroad Museum –
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