When Eve Ball started telling the “oral history” stories she’d heard from the last living warriors who knew Cochise, Victorio, Juh and Geronimo, many dismissed her. Not only did they see her as a teacher who was pretending to be a historian, but the subject matter of Native Americans wasn’t seen as important—“their side of the story” wasn’t yet valued. That didn’t stop this woman who never wrote a word before age 60, but whose numerous books and articles—some published in True West magazine—would become a treasure trove that preserved an important hunk of American history. She came to be known as “The Old White Lady with Many Stories,” and historians as noted as Paul Hutton say that today she is “universally praised.” She was born in 1890, earned teaching degrees and taught for many years before moving to Ruidoso in 1942—a move that would change our understanding of history. Her home was on the route used by Apache women walking into town, and she was fascinated—she set up a table along the path and offered water, sometimes lemonade, and tried to ask questions, but found she learned more when she just listened. Eve Ball learned that the “king pin” of the reservation was Asa Daklugie, beloved nephew of Geronimo and son of Chief Juh. He didn’t like “white eyes,” but he came to like and trust Eve and told her the stories of his people and his life. With his trust came the endorsement that brought 67 elderly Apaches to her door. Her first book, “In the Days of Victorio: Recollections of a Warm Springs Apache,” is told through the eyes of Chief Victorio’s nephew, James Kaywaykla. Eve had to pay for its publication herself, as publishers weren’t interested, but once it was released, people saw its value to history and her role in bringing it to life. In 1982, Eve Ball won the “Oscar of western writing,” the Golden Saddleman. The next year she was honored with the national Medal of Freedom, and was also inducted into the Cowgirl Hall of Fame. She died on Christmas Eve in 1984, leaving behind an unprecedented legacy.
April 2016
In This Issue:
More In This Issue
- Another Reason To Love “Buckey” O’Neil
- Mickey Free S.O.B.
- What is locoweed?
- The Godfather of Westerns
- Bank Robbery at Round Rock
- Traveling the Chisholm Trail
- Johnny Western
- What Do the Donkey, the Elephant and Santa Have in Common?
- Stinking Badges!
- Tiffany Schofield
- Leader of Destiny: Sitting Bull
- Crash at Crush
- A Square Deal for the Women of Arizona
- The Graham Family vs the Tewksbury Family
- Loser Mountain
- I’ve heard Westerns state “something” is a day’s ride away. How far was a day’s ride in the Old West era?
- A Long Shot
- Famous Last Words
- Bub Meeks and Butch Cassidy
- The Brotherhood of Empirical Failure
- Dining on the Iron Horse
- Betting the Farm in Arizona Territory
- A Fist Full of Double Trouble
- The True History of Lonesome Dove
- Taming Ash Fork, Arizona
- One of the Toughest Lawmen in the West
- Nebraska’s Homestead Settlement Trail
- Trail of Horses
- The Night I Discovered Pluto
- Aztec’s Astonishing Arches
- Gold on the Klondike
- Tom Horn’s Gun
- Wyatt Earp’s Wild Times in Nome
- Hitching Your Wagon to a Star
- History of the Gunfighter
- Back to the Future with J. Frank Dobie
- Arizona’s Laddie Godiva
- Now That was a Party
- The Wild West of James D. Horan
- New Mexico’s Rio Grande
- Wyatt Earp: The Missing Years
- Arizona’s Cowboys and Cattle
- The Apache Joan of Arc
- Bean Belly Egged On
- Why do people mount horses from the left side?
- The Lonesome Dove Trail
- The Legend of Red Ghost
- The Old White Lady with Many Stories
- Dance Hall Queens and Broadway Beauties
- Ben Johnson’s Last Trail Ride
- Henry Clay Hooker’s Turkeys
- Frank Reno Didn’t Get the Last Laugh
- Legendary Dishwasher
- Nevada’s Bonanza of History
- Little Gertie the Gold Dollar
- John Reno’s Biggest Mistake
- The True West January 2016 issue published a photo of John Slaughter and several of his cowboys. Which one was his foreman at the San Bernardino Ranch?
- Deadlines Missed
- Thankfully, She was a Song Catcher
- Rocky Mountain Cloak and Dagger
- A Drunken Debacle
- Assault on the Deadwood Stage
- The Bandit Queen
- She Cradled Lincoln’s Head
- Getting Rich Behind a Counter
- The Amazon of the Border
- Why did the great artist Charlie Russell wear a red sash?
- The Camp Grant Massacre
- Cornish Miners in the West
- The Perfect Name for a Madam
- Happy Jack Morco
- Cowboy Lingo
- Nourishment at the Homestead
- Danger in the Mines
- Arizona’s Confederate Governor
- Russian Bill Swings at Shakespeare
- Bringing the American West to Life
- House of the Rising Sun – A Blood Red Sun
- Eva Dugan’s Noose
- Butch Cassidy’s Castle
- How come Arizona never extradited Wyatt Earp for the Vendetta Ride killings?