FRONTIER COLOSSUS

He almost single-handedly created the cattle industry, invented the chuck wagon, was an innovator for modern irrigation, helped save the buffalo from potential extinction, fought Indians, befriended Indians, scouted the plains, hauled freight, hanged rustlers, saved lives, kept his promises, founded the first ranch on the Texas Panhandle, is considered by some to have been the first Landman, and posthumously served as the inspiration for Larry McMurty’s lead character “Captain” Woodrow F. Call in the author’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Lonesome Dove. Few men could have boasted of having blazed such an impactful trail across the American West throughout their lifetime. While the “Father of the Texas Panhandle” rarely gloated over his own accomplishments, True West is only too happy to celebrate the extraordinary life and achievements of a true colossus of the frontier. Was “The Colonel” the original man of vision? Yes, a hell of a vision.
Charlie’s exploits over the next 70 years would—and have— filled volumes. During his youth, Charlie, like all Texas immigrants, lived within the menacing shadow of the Comanche nation. Clashes between Americans and Comanches were shockingly brutal, even by the standards of frontier warfare. The Comanches, once the undisputed masters of the Texas Plains, found themselves pushed farther northwest, and the clashes between Indians and Whites became more frequent. Having no army to protect them, Texans often formed their own militia. Goodnight joined a group of Texas Rangers captained by one Jack Querton, signing on as a scout. “First, [to be a scout] a man must be born a natural woodsman and have the faculty of never needing a compass except in snowstorms or darkness,” he later recalled. “I’ve never owned a compass.” By his early 20s, Charlie was a more capable scout and guide than just about any of his fellow rangers.
Dit verhaal komt uit de March-April 2025 editie van True West.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Al abonnee ? Inloggen
Dit verhaal komt uit de March-April 2025 editie van True West.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Al abonnee? Inloggen

THE WILD FRONTIER TRAIL: A JOURNEY THROUGH WYOMING'S OUTLAW HISTORY
There's a wildness to Wyoming that never quite disappeared. The ghosts of outlaws, lawmen and restless cowboys still linger in the wind sweeping across the open plains. This is a land where Butch Cassidy planned his next heist, where Tom Horn faced justice and where cattle wars sparked gunfights that shaped the frontier. To travel through Wyoming is to follow the hoofprints of history, where adventure and danger once went hand in hand. Buckle up for a road trip that takes you deep into the heart of the Old West.

JOURNEY THROUGH TIME: A Historical Road Trip Along Nevada's Cowboy Corridor
Nevada's Cowboy Corridor, stretching along Interstate 80, isn’t just another highway—it’s a living, breathing testament to the Old West. This route was carved out by fortune seekers, cattle drivers and rail tycoons in the 1800s, and today, it's your gateway to experiencing the legends that built the frontier. Saddle up, because this is no ordinary road trip—it’s a full-throttle ride into history, where every town, trail and tumbleweed tell a tale of grit, glory and gold.

Cavalcade of Ask The Marshall
Lessons I have learned during more than a quarter century of “Ask the Marshall.”

SHOWDOWN BRIDGER VS.BRIGHAM
DOES AMERICAN PRIMEVAL TELL THE TRUE STORY?

THE MOUNTAIN MAN AND THE MORMON MOSES
PATHFINDER JIM BRIDGER TANGLES WITH PROPHET BRIGHAM YOUNG

Did Brigham Young Order a Massacre?
Columnist Will Bagley and Brigham Young University Professor Ron Walker present opposing viewpoints to the Mountain Meadows Massacre.

AMERICAN PRIMEVAL -GOOD AND EVIL
The Mountain Meadow Massacre is center-stage in this brutal and enthralling pioneer docudrama.

Remington's 1875– a Copycat Peacemaker?
This 1873 Colt lookalike was a solid, hard-hitting revolver, but it never could rival the famed six-gun it emulated.

The Ghosts of Mountain Meadows
In September 1857, the members of the Fancher Wagon Train, enroute from Arkansas to southern California via the Old Spanish Trail, encamped in an idyllic oasis high in the mountains of southwestern Utah Territory, on the very cusp of the Great Basin.

THE BATTLE AXE AND A RAW DEAL
A UTE ELDER SHARES HIS THOUGHTS ON THE SO-CALLED \"UTAH WAR.\"