The Spanish asked the Zunis who those renegades were who were running off with all their horses and a Zuni said, “Enemies,” which sounded to the Spaniards like Apache. When the Navajo were asked who built the abandoned pueblos, they said, “ancient enemies,” which ended up as Anasazis. When the Pima were asked who their neighbors were, they said, as a joke, “the bean eaters,” which became Papago. The Pimas got their handle when they repeatedly answered “I don’t know” to the Euro

True West March/April 2025
In This Issue:
Western Books & Movies
More In This Issue
- Truth Be Known
- What Has Taught Me: Deb Goodrich
- Earp, Cowboy Songs & Prairie Hygiene
- Trails of the Old West
- The Frontier Characters of South Dakota
- The Bowie Knife
- The Kindled Flame 1835
- King of the Scatterguns
- Selling the Mythic West and the Real West
- A Gut Punch Turns into a Miracle Reprieve
- The Beginnings of the Bird Cage
- Frontier Colossus