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Western Museums face the Challenge
Curators, staff and docents work hard to keep their great collections ready for the public.
PHANTOM OF THE DESERT
THE APACHE KID IS AS ELUSIVE IN DEATH AS HE WAS IN LIFE.
Still Riding to Glory
New treasures keep the beloved Pony Express alive.
Bullion? What Bullion?
Jesse James missed out on a big score because of semantics.
A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS
ALCHESAY OF THE PEOPLE OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS (DZIŁ ŁIGAI SI’ÁN N’DEE)
PUNCH YOUR TICKET WEST!
WESTERN HERITAGE RAILWAYS AND RAILROAD MUSEUMS ARE OPEN AND READY FOR PASSENGERS AND GUESTS.
Satin, Lace and Cherry Pie
The true story of how a small-town Texas girl became legendary madam, Big Bertha.
Homesteaders, Heroines and Hell-Raisers
It was a century ago that American women were granted suffrage, but they had been proving their equality in the settlement of the West long before.
Battle Tested, Battle Scarred
THE 1873 .45-70 TRAPDOOR SPRINGFIELD WAS ISSUED TO TROOPERS JUST BEFORE THE BATTLE OF LITTLE BIGHORN, AND ITS SUCCESS AND FAILURE THAT FATEFUL JUNE DAY IN 1876 IS STILL HIGHLY DEBATED.
WHEN WHISKEY RULED THE WEST
FROM LEWIS AND CLARK UNTIL PROHIBITION, THE GOLDEN ELIXIR WAS AS GOOD AS GOLD.
We Won't Back Down
Western women led the way for woman suffrage 50 years before 19th Amendment became the law of the land.
Lubbock, Texas
A little bit country, a little bit rock and a whole lot of Texas is ready to be discovered in the West Texas town.
Locked and Loaded!
Pearl Hart and a posse of sharpshooting Western women shaped the West from the barroom to the courthouse.
Cimarron's Old Model 1894 Rifle
Known as America’s Deer Rifle, this 126-year-old lever-action is back again in its original 1890s configuration.
A Fistful of Ladies
Women may love Westerns, but only a handful have directed one.
TV's ‘The Lone Ranger' at 70
Of all the people the Masked Man and Tonto saved, the most crucial was Clayton Moore.
The Great Race of Mercy
TRACKING DIPHTHERIA FROM NOME, ALASKA, TO TODAY.
ONE MAN KNEW
According to an excellent book, The Great Influenza by John M. Barry, the deadliest plague in history—1918-1919—started in Haskell County, Kansas, and one man, Dr. Loring Miner, knew firsthand about it, because many of his patients were dying, but no one would listen.
Keeping the Western Alive
Western publishers and independent authors chronicle the West, one story at a time.
On the Bison Trail
The heritage traveler can discover the history and natural wonder of the great buffalo herds from Texas to Montana.
“Our Father, Who Art....”
In Dakota Territory, those were building words.
Initiation to Robbery
Butch Cassidy’s first bank job set the standard for future holdups.
HERO OR GOAT?
The press declared curly a hero until gall called him out at the battle of little bighorn's 10th reunion
Gunpowder to Oysters
While today it the Odd fellows Halls in paradise valley, Nevada, in 1898, Fred M.Buckingham (behind the counter) sold everything from firefarms to coffee (right, foregrand) in his humboldt valley store
Deadwood, South Dakota
The Black Hills boomtown celebrates the Old West every day of the year.
“... Not a Single Notch!”
Captain Neal was the calmest Ranger of ’em all. Outlaws never doubted that he’d kill if necessary—he just never let it get necessary.
The Real Texas Rangers Armed AND Dangerous
Nearly two centuries ago, Texas founding father Stephen F. Austin unofficially created the Texas Rangers to protect his fledgling colonists farming and ranching near the colony’s capital of Velasco, along the Brazos River near the Gulf Coast.
TOO BRAVE TO DIE
THE HEROIC TALE OF THE DAWSON BRIGADE AND HENRY GONZALVO WOODS’S REMARKABLE SURVIVAL AT THE SEPTEMBER 1842 DAWSON MASSACRE
Lonesome Dove
THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AFTER LARRY MCMURTRY’S VISIONARY NOVEL WAS PUBLISHED, IT STILL INSPIRES OUR LOVE OF OLD WEST HISTORY.
La Frontiera
FROM THE SETTLEMENT OF TEXAS TO THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION, THE TEXAS RANGERS WERE THE MOST RESPECTED—AND FEARED— LAW ENFORCERS IN LONE STAR STATE HISTORY.