Ike Black and Zip Wyatt tried one robbery too many. Ike Black and Zip Wyatt robbed their way across Oklahoma Territory in the mid 1890s. But their...
![Their Luck Ran Out](https://truewestmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ftfairview.jpg)
Ike Black and Zip Wyatt tried one robbery too many. Ike Black and Zip Wyatt robbed their way across Oklahoma Territory in the mid 1890s. But their...
The Espinosa paid the price for letting their guards down. The Espinosa Gang ran roughshod over southern Colorado in the mid 1860s. They claimed...
On January 24th, 1848, James Marshall was constructing a tailrace for a lumber mill on South Fork of the American River. During the previous night,...
Women were an attractive curiosity during the heyday of the California Gold Rush. A woman could hang her underwear out on a clothesline and draw a...
Climax Jim was the darling of the Arizona press during the late 1890s. Thanks to the fertile imaginations of the old timers who knew him and the...
A successful outlaw got out of the game at the right time. Nathaniel Reed was called “Texas Jack”—a bit odd since he was from Arkansas and...
Preacher Smith’s murder couldn’t stop his words. Henry Weston Smith—better known as Preacher Smith—was the first minister in Deadwood when he...
Was Wyatt Earp a HERO or a VILLAIN? Tune in on August 18th at 5pm PDT to hear Bob Boze Bell's take on the matter. Watch on Facebook:...
Henry Weston Smith brought the Bible to the Old West town. Henry Weston Smith was the first minister in Deadwood, arriving in May 1876. For...
By the early 1900s the law was closing in and Butch was beginning to feel the pressure. He considered going to South America. The cattle...
A few years ago the late Jo Baeza and I spent many hours talking about the Pleasant Valley War. She had spent most of her life in Arizona’s...
The governor of the Arizona Territory Anson P.K. Safford, representatives from Arizona and California appealed to President Ulysses S. Grant to...