“Use enough dynamite, Butch?” Arguably one of the funniest scenes in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" is when Butch uses a little too much force to blast open a safe—the result of which is money raining down from the sky. Shown here is the Union Pacific railcar after the real-life Wild Bunch dynamited it in a 1900 holdup near Tipton, Wyoming (in the center, check out the payroll safe with the door blown off).
– Courtesy Robert G. McCubbin Collection –
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Michael Sexton Cmon outta there Woodcock!
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Jessica Zell I like before the explosion when Butch asks the clerk why he did that to the safe? Lol
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The Mystery of Jim French
Jim French is one of the most mysterious members of Billy the Kid’s Regulator gang. 
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Neal Tasker I'm gonna grow a tache like this next week...............
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Bruce Vaughan An alias for Marty McFly.
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The Union Pacific Railroad’s official photographer, Andrew J. Russell, captured this iconic photograph of the Central Pacific’s engine "Jupiter" nearly touching cowcatchers with the Union Pacific’s engine No. 119 at Promontory Point, Utah, on May 10, 1869. Railroad promoters upset by the display of drinking evident in this picture released a “clean” copy without the presence of bottles.
– True West Archives –
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John T Welch Another train, The C.P. Huntington was used to shuttle workers from California to Utah to complete the first transcontinental railroad....The C.P. Huntington was manufactured in Pennsylvania then was disassembled and loaded on a ship and went to California where it was reassembled... It is currently on display in the Rail Road museum in Sacramento California
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Fred Hemphill I live within a few miles from there they also build the engines for the space shuttle close by just bits of useless trivia
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Robb Kendrick
Robb Kendrick is old school in many ways, not just in his photography, where he prefers tintypes to digital film, but also in life: he opts for real-life experiences and does not engage in social media.
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Bill Fuller Kit Carson.
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January 1891 photograph of the “great hostile Indian camp on River Brule,” with the Lakota tipi camp in the background and horses at White Clay Creek watering hole in foreground.
– Courtesy Library of Congress –
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Lawrence Kreger
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Helen DeBerry Holt Love the History of the west n especially the Indians. Thanks for that. Love it.
Barry Strong Ok The Great Hostile Indian Camp. Wow looks peaceful to me. I don't see cannons anywhere. So now let the experts put there."my uncle was a soldier there" bull crap. The hostiles were behind the camera man about to Atack.
Old-Time Remedies
Staying healthy was a must in the old west, as there weren’t many doctors around and besides, being sick got in the way of chores. 
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Anita Blevins My grandfather was a doctor in rural Kentucky and my mom used these on us when we were kids. Mustard and flour mixed and plastered on our chest with an old clean dish towel folded up /over the mustard /flour paste. It worked !
Mary Ann Zaborowski As a child I had a deeply embedded splinter that was too painful to dig out. The neighborhood storekeeper put a piece of raw bacon on it and covered it with a band-aid. The next day the bacon had drawn out the splinter and my finger felt fine.
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Esteban: A Pass too far?
An African slave, Esteban de Dorantes, or Estevanico, helped spread the idea of Seven Cities of Gold in Spain.
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Sandy Dotson Love all the True west magazines
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Rich Schultz I like true west page love the short stories