The Sheol Springs Chronicle – only the best Wild West history
Wild West oxen
Wild West oxen By western author Nick Brumby "Martha, you can take yer iron horse and poke it where the sun don't shine. I'm trustin' these ladies to get us home." Horses are fine and good, but when you absolutely positively needed to pull a load of freight from Kansas to Colorado, oxen were overwhelmingly the most popular
Old West chuckwagons
Old West chuckwagons By western author Nick Brumby "Beans are ready, boys. Eat'em or don't, ain't no skin off my nose. Any more complainin' and you'll have skunk for supper." A cattle drive cook works his magic in front of his chuckwagon. One of his most important jobs was carried out in the early hours, before the cowhands
Texas Ranger James Hawkins
Texas Ranger James Hawkins By western author Nick Brumby "Don't mess with Texas, boy, it's the last mistake you'll ever make."* This is Texas Ranger James Hawkins, circa 1875. And that's a stare that would stop a bullet dead in its tracks. James Hawkins enlisted in Company D of the Rangers in Blanco in 1874 under Captain Rufus
Colonel George Custer
Colonel George Custer By western author Nick Brumby "There are not enough Indians in the world to defeat the Seventh Cavalry." - Col. George Custer Custer and his chief scout, Bloody Knife, consult a map of Sioux country on their first campaign together in 1873. Custer's two Russian wolfhounds lay sprawled at his feet. Bloody Knife was half