Death of a Champion
True West Magazine
by Mark Boardman
9h ago
The Wyoming invasion claims its first victim. April 8, 1892. A small army of mercenaries, hired by the Wyoming Stock Growers Association, surrounds the cabin of Nate Champion. It’s the start of the so-called “Wyoming Invasion.” The goal: kill or drive out small ranchers/rustlers. Champion–inside his cabin–holds off the attackers for several hours. But late in the day, the army sets fire to the cabin. Champion runs out with a Winchester in one hand and pistol in the other. He’s hit 28 times.  The post Death of a Champion appeared first on True West Magazine by Mark Boardman. Only the True ..read more
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The Los Angeles Breakfast Club is an educational ...
True West Magazine
by True West
9h ago
The Los Angeles Breakfast Club is an educational club and community organization founded in 1925. Henry Parke will be giving a presentation at the LA Breakfast Club, centering on the release of his new book The Greatest Westerns Ever Made, and the People Who Made Them, which features expanded versions of his articles for True West Magazine. Tickets can be purchased for Henry’s presentation on the morning of Wednesday, May 1st by clicking HERE. The deadline to purchase tickets is Monday 4/29 at 12pm PT. The LA Breakfast Club is excited for this event! Notable speakers & members include Leo ..read more
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Carson vs. Chouinard
True West Magazine
by Marshall Trimble
9h ago
Kit shut up a troublesome trapper Kit Carson had a gunfight at the rendezvous on the Green River in 1835. A French Canadian named Chouinard got loaded on whiskey and began challenging all comers to fight. After the Frenchman beat up two or three men, he bragged that he’d take on all Americans and beat them like children. Carson took up the challenge. Both went for their guns—Carson a pistol, Chouinard a rifle. Carson’s bullet hit his target in the arm; Chouinard’s missed. The French Canadian didn’t cause any more trouble at the gathering. The post Carson vs. Chouinard appeared first on True W ..read more
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The Kid’s Comeuppance
True West Magazine
by Marshall Trimble
3d ago
Pat Garrett takes down Billy July 14, 1881. Billy the Kid had come to the Maxwell house at Fort Sumner to cut a slice of meat. He was barefooted, carrying his pistol and a knife. He noticed the door to Pete Maxwell’s bedroom was slightly open and he entered. Pat Garrett was inside, talking with Maxwell. In the darkness, Billy he failed to recognize Garrett; he asked “Quien es?” or “Who is it?” Garrett recognized the voice and fired twice. The first bullet lodged in his chest, just above the heart, fatally wounding the Kid. The second shot missed. The post The Kid’s Comeuppance appeared first ..read more
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The Death of a Legend
True West Magazine
by Mark Boardman
6d ago
They laid poor Jesse James in his grave. April 3, 1882.  Outlaw Jesse James is gunned down in a rented home in St. Joseph, Missouri.  The culprit?  Robert Ford, a relatively new addition to the James criminal outfit.  Ford and his brother Charlie are tried and convicted of first-degree murder in the shooting.  But by a pre-arranged agreement, the pair are pardoned by Missouri Governor Thomas Crittenden.  Charlie commits suicide a few years later.  Robert Ford is murdered in Creede, Colorado in 1892. The post The Death of a Legend appeared first on True West ..read more
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April Fools!
True West Magazine
by Mark Boardman
1w ago
Hoosier outlaws pull a fast one on their jailers. On this date in 1868, those words are written above a hole in the wall of the Council Bluffs, Iowa jail. Outlaw leader Frank Reno and two of his cohorts have escaped. They were arrested a few days before by detective William Pinkerton after robbing three county treasuries (netting nearly $50,000). But the jail isn’t strong enough to hold them. They make their way back to the home base of Indiana. The post April Fools! appeared first on True West Magazine by Mark Boardman. Only the True West ..read more
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Breaking the Bank
True West Magazine
by Mark Boardman
1w ago
The Reno Gang empty Missouri county treasuries. March 29, 1868. Pinkerton agents arrest four members of Indiana’s Reno Gang, far from home in Iowa. Over the past six weeks, the outlaws have burglarized four county treasuries for a total of more than $50,000. In fact, the work of Frank Reno, Miles Ogle, Albert Perkins and Mike Rogers has basically bankrupted two of the counties, including Harrison (photo of courthouse/treasury). Lawmen have been trying to nail the Reno outfit for more than three years, so this is quite the get. But the tables will turn in a few days. The post Breaking the Bank ..read more
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School Days in Arizona
True West Magazine
by Marshall Trimble
1w ago
Education was an adventure. The Fourth Territorial Legislative Assembly passed a bill in 1867 creating school districts in Arizona. But it took four years for the first public school to open—many districts lacked the money for schools. The lifestyle for young people residing in the territory was not conducive to learning. One teacher took a pistol away from a youthful cherub and angrily tossed it into the pot-bellied stove. However, she forgot to remove the cartridges and the resounding gunfire inside the stove loudly punctuated her oversight. The post School Days in Arizona appeared first on ..read more
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The Classic Gunfight
True West Magazine
by Marshall Trimble
1w ago
Wild Bill versus Davis Tutt. It’s reputed to be the first (and one of the only) Hollywood-style gunfight in the Old West. On July 21st, 1865, Wild Bill Hickok and Davis Tutt faced off in the Springfield, Missouri town square. The disagreement was over gambling. The two men firee at a distance of 75 yards. Tutt missed. Hickok’s shot hit Tutt in the heart. Tutt staggered back towards the courthouse and cried out, “Boys I am killed!” And he was. Wild Bill’s legend was cemented with that gunfight. The post The Classic Gunfight appeared first on True West Magazine by Marshall Trimble. Only the Tru ..read more
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The Arizona Ghost Story
True West Magazine
by Marshall Trimble
1w ago
The truth behind the Red Ghost The legend of Red Ghost began in 1883 at a lonely ranch at Eagle Creek in Arizona. A woman was stomped to death by a strange-looking beast with a devilish-looking creature strapped on his back. Additional reports followed. A rancher awoke one morning and saw the ghost–a camel– grazing in his garden. He shot the beast. The animal’s back was scarred from rawhide strands that had been used to hold a body of a man. But how the human body came to be attached to the back of a camel remains a mystery. The post The Arizona Ghost Story appeared first on True West Magazin ..read more
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