by Jana Bommersbach | Jun 5, 2019 | Departments, Old West Saviors
Of course, he’d become one of the frontier’s most ardent historians and collectors because history called early to Doug McChristian. He’d always been a reader because his grandmother was the county librarian and his mother was a teacher—besides, his dad read those...
by | Apr 2, 2019 | True West Blog
Was Buffalo Bill was instrumental in the near extinction of the American bison (Buffalo)? In an odd sort of way Bill Cody helped in the preservation of the bison. In 1867 Cody was hired by the Kansas Pacific Railroad to feed the railroad construction workers building...
by True West Editors and Stuart Rosebrook | Jan 4, 2019 | Features & Gunfights
We get a kick out of those who talk about the Western myth. What myth? The frontier was as real as a sawed-off shotgun and wilder than anyone could make up. The same goes for the towns where our unique American story unfolded. They’re still out there, working hard in...
by Johnny D. Boggs | Nov 21, 2018 | Departments, Renegade Roads
The first thing you notice about Willcox, Arizona, is the wine. Wineries. Wine-tasting rooms. Wine festivals. Wine has practically taken over this old cowtown. Those wine festivals can bring in 3,000 people—almost doubling the town’s population. But what would late...
by | Sep 6, 2018 | True West Blog
In 1849 Kit Carson rode as scout for a company of Dragoons in pursuit of Apache raiders along the Santa Fe Trail. They had taken a white woman, Mrs. Ann White and her infant child, captive. Carson’s men picked up the trail and just before they caught up with the...