Pink Higgins survived the outlaws, cattle rustlers and deadly skirmishes that arose as pioneers moved westward and American Indians fought to keep their way of life. He posed for the above photograph with trail hands who drove cattle from Texas to Kansas via the Chisholm Trail. (Front row, from left): Felix Castello, Jess Standard, Bob Mitchell and Pink Higgins. (Back row, from left): Powell Woods, an unidentified cowboy, Buck Alle

True West November 2018
In This Issue:
Features
Western Books & Movies
More In This Issue
- The Medal of Honor
- Lynching and Hanging
- Horsethief Basin
- Revenge Begets Revenge
- What’s in a Name: Old West Style
- He Died with His Boots Off
- Maricopa
- The Train Robbers
- The Meticulous Rebirth of Old West Guns
- Rough Justice
- Tombstone Tragedy
- The Earp Attorney
- Never Give a Sucker an Even Break
- Whatever Happened to Big Nose Kate?
- Tucson, Tubac, Tumacacori, to Hell
- Kin to the James Boys
Departments
- Fire Engulfs Paramount Western Ranch
- Is Hard Knocks: A Life Story of the Vanishing West by Harry Young Accurate?
- Following the Bent Brothers
- Robber’s Roost Defender
- Did Frontier Women own Property during the Old West era?
- When did Navajos Arrive in Arizona?
- Western Events for November 2018
- A Historical Photo Shows a group of Cowboys with Pipes Upside Down in their Mouths. What’s that About?
- True West’s Hometown
- Old West Reproductions — the Devil is in the Detail
- Did Wyatt Earp own any Saloons in Alaska?
- Take Your Christmas Holiday Celebration to a New Level
- The Thirsty Trapper
- Hell on Wheels
- Tejano History Under One Roof
- “…Kill or Hang All Warriors…”
- Top 10 True Western Towns of 2018
- November/December 2011 Events