Tuesday, November 3, 2015

True West

The Great Menken

Adah Issacs Menken
Provocative encores could be lucrative in those rich mining towns of the West. Adah Issacs Menken, a free-spirited performer, appeared in La Mezappa in Virginia City, Nevada, in a role that called for her to ride across the stage strapped to the back of a horse wearing nothing but a flesh-colored body stocking (Adah, not the horse.) The mostly-male, lonely, women-starved audience was so inspired by the illusion of this beautiful, nude nymph making a daring ride across the stage strapped to a black stallion that when she came out for an encore, they began showing the stage with gold and silver coins. Ms. Menken knew a good deal when she saw it. Wearing nothing but a smile and a gauzy, body stocking, she made encore after encore, raking in thousands of dollars in gratuities from her lusty, red-blooded male admirers. It’s been said (by me) that it was Nevada’s richest one night stand until Elvis came to town.

What do you think?

MARSHALL TRIMBLE

Marshall Trimble is Arizona’s official state historian and the vice president of the Wild West History Association. His latest book is Arizona’s Outlaws and Lawmen. If you have a question, write:  Ask the Marshall, P.O. Box 8008,  Cave Creek, AZ 85327 or e-mail him at
marshall.trimble@scottsdalecc.edu

Treasures of the Black Range

Hidden Treasures book cover
A new, beautiful book about the search for lost Spanish gold—and all the danger, intrigue, adrenaline and obsession that lies therein—has just been published by Frontier Shadows: Hidden Treasures of the Black Range: The Real Story of the Lost Adams Diggings written by Marshall Bulle (with the help of his childhood friend Larry Ditzer). Anyone who is fascinated with the lost treasures of the West, going back to Esteban’s “Seven Cities of Gold” should own this book. Bulle has spared no expense in this lushly published and extremely detailed collectible volume on his three decade exploration of the Black Range for lost Spanish Treasure and the Lost Adams Diggings with his friend Larry Ditzer. If you would like a copy for yourself, and be ready for an adventure in print as thrilling as any lost mine story from the Old West, go to FrontierShadows.com and order a copy right away.

STUART ROSEBROOK

As senior editor of True West Magazine, Stuart Rosebrook oversees all editorial covering Old West travel, firearms and books. He has a Ph.D in U.S. History from Arizona State University, and he owns a multimedia communications business, Quo Vadis Communications, based in Iowa City, Iowa.

Townful of Santas

Minden, Nebraska
Minden’s strong Christmas spirit dates back to a century ago, when J.W. Haws strung Christmas lights atop the dome of the Kearney County Courthouse, beginning a Nebraska tradition that, today, can be seen for miles. 
– Courtesy Minden Opera House –
Minden bills itself as “Nebraska’s Christmas City,” stringing 15,000 lights throughout its town square to seal the deal.
But to know why this town of just 3,000 deserves to wear the heart and spirit of Christmas, then the story of a giving and generous community rallying around the Minden Opera House must be told.
In 1997, Nebraska’s retired director of the Department of Agriculture, Rob Raun, looked around his hometown and realized the opera house where he had danced as a boy was in such bad shape, “we were gonna lose it.”
The lifelong farmer had watched the building deteriorate over the years—antique shops occupied the lower floor, while the second-floor ballroom was boarded up or used for storage. He couldn’t imagine his town without the majestic building built by Civil War veteran Wray Thorn in 1891—just 15 years after German, Swedish and Danish farmers founded the town.
Fortunately, a new community foundation was looking for a landmark project. Putting the two together resulted in the best Christmas present the town could ever want.
Not a cent of tax money went into the $2.8 million that renovated the opera house, which reopened in 2000. The project was paid for by individual contributions and grant money from generous corporations that included the Peter Kiewit Foundation, the Kellogg Foundation, Walmart and the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway.
Marcy Brandt, the director of operations, says a donor wall honors those who gave $1,000 or more. “There’s 100 to 150 names on that wall, and I know about 80 percent of them—that family lives over there; I know that family. The people of Minden really stepped up,” she says.
Born and reared in Minden, Brandt recalls the “old days” when the opera house presented yearly plays of the volunteer Community Players. “I played piano in Paint Your Wagonwhen I was in high school,” the mother of three proudly says.
The Community Players are back in the renovated building, entertaining with at least two plays a year. Other performances include musical concerts, comedy acts and a Classic Monster Movie Marathon. The opera house has also become a favorite wedding and prom venue.
“We’re super proud,” Brandt says—both of the opera house and the community efforts to save it.
Raun agrees, and he also offers advice for another town that faces the loss of a local treasure: “Don’t give up. If you’ve got somebody who’s really sold and can carry the ball, it will make all the difference.”
The Minden Opera House will be in its full glory this Christmas, when the town celebrates “100 years of lights.” It will host a community choir concert and a Miss Christmas City pageant, and will oversee the town square’s Light Parade.
But Christmas won’t shine just on the outside of this lovely Midwestern town; it will also be Christmas in everyone’s hearts.
Arizona’s Journalist of the Year, Jana Bommersbach has won an Emmy and two Lifetime Achievement Awards. She also cowrote and appeared on the Emmy-winning Outrageous Arizona and has written two true crime books, a children’s book and the historical novel Cattle Kate.

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