Cowboy Heros

I remember all those. My father used to talk about Tom Mix. More his era perhaps.

I got into a series some years ago called Lawman. A sheriff in Wyoming. Didn't say much. Didn't smile too often. Not the sort of person to be messed with.. Typical western TV character. But overall, I don't think any of them can beat John Wayne.
I still watch Lawman on H&I weekdays at 5:30am.

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Here is an article I found last night regarding some real cowboys in Montana in 1895. MY ggf and gf were ranchers in northern Montana anf the range wars and range riders were happening. Cattle ranchers hated sheep ranchers. I don't know why this killing happened but I suspect it was a range war. My family managed to keep out of it all.

JESSIE DAVIS KILLED: Jesse Davis was killed at a ranch about 25 miles north (sic) of Malta last Saturday night. He, with a party of half a dozen other unknown men, went to the ranch of James Marshall on Beaver Creek, to execute a threat made some days previous. …

Davis, approaching the door, told Marshall to come out. Marshall refused to move, and the door was opened and Davis crossed the threshold. As he did so, there was a flash, a loud report and Davis fell to the floor stone dead with a charge of shot directly to the neck. At this the rest of the party quickly mounted their horses and rode off in the darkness. … Jesse Davis is one of three brothers well known in and around Malta. He was the youngest of the three, being 22 years of age. … Marshall is a sheepman and lives on Beaver Creek just across the boundary line of Choteau and Valley counties. He is one of the firm of Mercer & Marshall and is quite a prosperous sheep owner.

This from the Glasgow Courier in Montana.
 
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Bob Fleming, Barney Furey, Frank Leigh, and Tom Mix in King Cowboy (1928)
 
They have quite a collection of fabrics from silent movies to Hell on Wheels. I find it fascinating how tiny most of the actor are/were. Today is not going to happen as my crud is hanging on. I will try to get actual measurements of John Wayne.
 
They have quite a collection of fabrics from silent movies to Hell on Wheels. I find it fascinating how tiny most of the actor are/were. Today is not going to happen as my crud is hanging on. I will try to get actual measurements of John Wayne.
6' 4"
 
There were a handful of real life famous cowgirls. To name three: Calamity Jane, Annie Oakley, but Belle Starr was my favorite, lol

For all her antics in the 1800’s I can’t believe she rode side saddle. It takes a heck of a rider to sit sidesaddle and wield a gun.

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“Belle Starr was born Myra Maybelle Shirley near Carthage, Missouri, on February 5, 1848. Her father was John R. Shirley, a farmer who later owned a local inn. Her mother, twenty years younger than her husband, was Elizabeth (Eliza) Hatfield Shirley, who was related to the Hatfield family of the infamous Hatfield-McCoy feud. As a child, Shirley attended Carthage Female Academy. She enjoyed the outdoors and horseback riding, becoming a better rider than most women of her time. Among Shirley’s childhood friends in Missouri was Cole Younger, who after the Civil War joined neighbors Frank and Jesse James in robbing trains, stagecoaches, and banks. Fleeing the law, they sometimes hid on the Shirley farm, and the teenage Shirley became influenced by their life of crime.”

Belle Starr (1848–1889) - Encyclopedia of Arkansas
 
There were a handful of real life famous cowgirls. To name three: Calamity Jane, Annie Oakley, but Belle Starr was my favorite, lol

For all her antics in the 1800’s I can’t believe she rode side saddle. It takes a heck of a rider to sit sidesaddle and wield a gun.

View attachment 378388
“Belle Starr was born Myra Maybelle Shirley near Carthage, Missouri, on February 5, 1848. Her father was John R. Shirley, a farmer who later owned a local inn. Her mother, twenty years younger than her husband, was Elizabeth (Eliza) Hatfield Shirley, who was related to the Hatfield family of the infamous Hatfield-McCoy feud. As a child, Shirley attended Carthage Female Academy. She enjoyed the outdoors and horseback riding, becoming a better rider than most women of her time. Among Shirley’s childhood friends in Missouri was Cole Younger, who after the Civil War joined neighbors Frank and Jesse James in robbing trains, stagecoaches, and banks. Fleeing the law, they sometimes hid on the Shirley farm, and the teenage Shirley became influenced by their life of crime.”

Belle Starr (1848–1889) - Encyclopedia of Arkansas
I liked to watch Hopalong Cassidy on TV. I remember I really liked it when Annie Oakley was in them. I had a crush on her. :) I loved watching her ride and do her stunts. Didn't she do the Buffalo Bill's "Wild West Show"?

Here is an episode of Hopalong...the beginning shows off Annie. No need to watch the whole thing unless you want.

 
There were a handful of real life famous cowgirls. To name three: Calamity Jane, Annie Oakley, but Belle Starr was my favorite, lol

For all her antics in the 1800’s I can’t believe she rode side saddle. It takes a heck of a rider to sit sidesaddle and wield a gun.

View attachment 378388
“Belle Starr was born Myra Maybelle Shirley near Carthage, Missouri, on February 5, 1848. Her father was John R. Shirley, a farmer who later owned a local inn. Her mother, twenty years younger than her husband, was Elizabeth (Eliza) Hatfield Shirley, who was related to the Hatfield family of the infamous Hatfield-McCoy feud. As a child, Shirley attended Carthage Female Academy. She enjoyed the outdoors and horseback riding, becoming a better rider than most women of her time. Among Shirley’s childhood friends in Missouri was Cole Younger, who after the Civil War joined neighbors Frank and Jesse James in robbing trains, stagecoaches, and banks. Fleeing the law, they sometimes hid on the Shirley farm, and the teenage Shirley became influenced by their life of crime.”

Belle Starr (1848–1889) - Encyclopedia of Arkansas
Beautiful poem on Belle Star’s tombstone featuring a star, a bell and a horse
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‘Shed not for her a bitter tear, Nor give the heart to vain regret, Tis but the casket that lies here, The gem that filled it sparkles yet’
 

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