Annie ‘Little Sure Shot’ Oakley

Annie ‘Little Sure Shot’ Oakley By western author Nick Brumby “I ain’t afraid to love a man. I ain’t afraid to shoot him either.” — Annie ‘Little Sure Shot’ Oakley She was America's first female superstar and a global legend, shining bright in a male-dominated sport. A once in a lifetime crack shot who thought nothing of amazing millions of people with her shooting

Annie ‘Little Sure Shot’ Oakley2024-06-30T03:47:33-06:00

1861 Armored Prairie Schooner

1861 Armored Prairie Schooner By western author Nick Brumby "Two horses should git 'er there in half the time of one." —Missouri inventor Zeke Mycarsarustbucket peers out of the window of his revolutionary 1861 armored prairie schooner. Zeke, a blacksmith, designed the vehicle in a blinding fit of rage after his own prairie schooner burned to a pile of ashes following an incident

1861 Armored Prairie Schooner2024-06-30T03:48:51-06:00

John Wesley Hardin

John Wesley Hardin By western author Nick Brumby “They say I killed six or seven men for snoring. Well, it ain’t true. I only killed one man for snoring.” —John Wesley Hardin, Texas’ most deadly gunman He gunned down lawmen, former slaves, Federal troops, cowboys, Mexican herders and drunken gamblers. Yet for all his killings, enemies and showdowns, John Wesley Hardin’s most dangerous

John Wesley Hardin2024-06-30T03:50:34-06:00

Charley Parkhurst

Charley Parkhurst By western author Nick Brumby “She out-swore, out-drank, and out-chewed even the Monterey whalers.” –Unknown companion of Charley Parker The West was a land of big stories and bigger personalities. However Charley Parkhurst possibly had the biggest story of them all. Charley was a tough tobacco-chewing, whiskey drinking, cursing, gambling, California stage driving gun killer. Oh, and did I mention that

Charley Parkhurst2024-06-30T03:52:51-06:00

Old West lariats

Old West lariats By western author Nick Brumby  “When you reach the end of your rope, tie a knot in it and hang on.” —Cowboy wisdom The lariat is like a cowboy’s Swiss army knife – a seemingly simple tool with a million different uses. No self-respecting cowboy would be caught out on the range without a strong rope near to hand. A

Old West lariats2024-06-30T03:54:36-06:00

Native American feathers

Native American feathers By western author Nick Brumby “That is why the Indian is always feathered up, he is a relative to the wings of the air.” —Black Elk, Oglala Lakota Sioux For a Native American warrior his or her story was written in their feathers. Respect, honor, loyalty, freedom, truth, wisdom, fertility, trust, power and achievements were all displayed proudly in a

Native American feathers2024-06-30T03:58:43-06:00

Snake oil salesmen

Snake oil salesmen By western author Nick Brumby “Good for man and beast. The most remarkable curative discovery ever made in any age or country. A liniment that penetrates muscle, membrane, and tissue to the very bone itself, and banishing pain with a power that has astonished and convinced two generations of intelligent people.” — Label on a bottle of ‘genuine’ snake oil

Snake oil salesmen2024-06-30T03:59:41-06:00

Stagecoach robber Charles ‘Black Bart’ Boles

Stagecoach robber Charles 'Black Bart' Boles By western author Nick Brumby “I've labored long and hard for bread, For honor, and for riches, But on my corns too long you've tread, You fine-haired sons of bitches.” — Stagecoach robber Black Bart, 1877 For a man who wrote poetry, was deathly afraid of horses, and maintained an air of politeness and sophistication while robbing

Stagecoach robber Charles ‘Black Bart’ Boles2024-06-30T04:01:23-06:00

Cowboy boots – a history

Cowboy boots - a history By western author Nick Brumby “Cowboy boot (noun): a boot made with a high arch, a high Cuban heel, and usually fancy stitching” -- Miriam Webster Dictionary The cowboy boot story is as long and winding as the Goodnight Loving Trail. They often have more personality than the cowpoke wearing them. Cowboy boots are more than just footwear

Cowboy boots – a history2024-06-30T04:03:30-06:00

Al Swearengen and his Gem Theater

Al Swearengen and his Gem Theater By western author Nick Brumby “Harrowing tales of iniquity, shame, and wretchedness; of lives wrecked and fortunes sacrificed; of vice unhindered and esteem forfeited, have been related of the place, and it is known of a verity that they have not all been groundless.” –Black Hills Daily Pioneer article about Al Swearingen’s notorious Gem Theater, after it

Al Swearengen and his Gem Theater2024-06-30T04:10:37-06:00
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