Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Our New Logo

 

Our  new logo is a bit of re-branding to tip our hat to the real frontier dust heros of the American West. Lots of great things coming in the near future.  Watch for Trains, Trails & Outlaws which will be my 3rd book in the Dusty Trails of The Old West Anthology. We are also planning on having some T-shirts made up with these graphics!



Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Magazine Review "Haunted West" By G.C. Stevens

 

Photo from "Haunted West" Published by McClatchy Lifestyle & Entertainment
                  The CSL&OH.A. give
                 Haunted West 5 stars 

While shopping at a local Walmart the author was pleasantly surprised to run into this magazine at the check-out counter. Two very familiar faces of Buffalo Bill and Calamity Jane graced the cover of this intriguing publication. The magazine title "Haunted West" was a real eye catcher. The cover is extremely well done and was a reminder of wild west magazines from days gone by. I was proud to see a company that was trying to keep the spirit of the wild west alive, through stories of the free roaming ghosts, in old ghost towns, with Lawman and Outlaws of the old days, wandering the ether between worlds.
The magazine contains ninety-eight pages of stories, and it is packed with photos of well know and forgotten figures of the American west. The magazines content includes, an introduction, an explanation of how the west was won and five chapters that cover 1. Ruthless Outlaws, 2. Dangerous Lawman, 3. Hero's and Legends and lastly Bold Women and Infamous Cities.  The stories are a wonderful confluence of myth and legend, against a background of sage brush and frontier dust. The cover price is $14.99 But it's well worth it, as this is a great collector's item for wild west enthusiasts. 

Rear Cover

The Magazine if filled with vignettes of famous westerns figures connected with their legends and ghost stories of western lore.

  Does Jesse Still prowl the James Farm?
The author has visited and spoken at the James Farm. So this story is my favorite and worth more research!

  Some snapshots of other short stories containe
 "Haunted West"      





Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Beyond the Showdowns: The Untold Truth About Gunfights in the Old West | Ken Hulsey


Photo courtesy of Ken Hulsey
Read More of Ken's articles at
Miracle Mindset

The gunfight is a staple of every Western television show, movie, and pulp novel. If you watched classic TV series like The Rifleman, Gunsmoke, and Wagon Train, you know it was the climactic scene in nearly every episode. The narratives of these popular shows and films, featuring legends such as John Wayne, Jimmy Stewart, and Clint Eastwood, portray the Old West as being filled with hired guns, trigger-happy outlaws seeking revenge, and fighters looking for a brawl. It creates tension, doesn't it? Picture a showdown in a deserted street, guns blazing as two men face off in a winner-takes-all battle to the death. The fastest draw usually emerges victorious, that being most often the town marshal or the good-looking hero of the story.

If you believe these narratives, you might think gunfights were a common occurrence, happening daily. Just stroll into any town at dawn, dusk, or, ideally, high noon, and you’d expect to see two gunfighters at opposite ends of the main street, ready to draw. However, such gunfights are largely products of romanticized Western fiction. In reality, most of these legendary gunfights took place in famed towns like Dodge City and Tombstone, where carrying a gun inside city limits was actually illegal. Ever see a movie or show where the bad guys had to check their guns at the outskirts of town? That's how it was in reality.

This isn't to say that fights—including those involving guns—never occurred. They did, but they were rarely the clean and fair "duels" depicted on screen. Instead, they were often disorderly skirmishes fueled by alcohol, stemming from disputes over cheating at cards, rivalry over a woman, or just too much bravado. If you've seen a bar fight today, you can imagine it was quite similar back then. In fact, the majority of gunshots fired missed their intended targets and struck innocent bystanders instead. 

One famous gunfight that many people recall is the duel between “Wild Bill” Hickok and Davis K. Tutt, which, incidentally, did not take place in the Wild West but in Missouri.

Photo of Wild Bill Hickok, Prop Card from the collection of G.C. Stevens

The nation’s first one-on-one quick draw duel took place on Springfield's town square between J.B. “Wild Bill” Hickok and Davis K. Tutt on July 21, 1865. What began as an argument over gambling debts turned deadly when Tutt seized a prize watch of Wild Bill’s as collateral. Warned against wearing the watch in public to humiliate Wild Bill, Tutt appeared on the square on July 21, prominently wearing the watch. The two men then unsuccessfully negotiated the debt and the watch’s return.

Hickok returned to the square at 6 p.m. to again find Tutt displaying his watch. Wild Bill gave Tutt his final warning. “Don’t you come around here with that watch,” Tutt answered by placing his hand on his pistol. Standing about 75 yards apart and facing each other sideways in dueling positions, Tutt drew his gun first. Wild Bill steadied his aim across his opposite forearm. Both paused, then fired nearly simultaneously. Tutt missed. Wild Will’s shot passed through Tutt’s chest. Reeling from the wound, Tutt staggered back to the nearest building before collapsing. Wild Bill was acquitted of manslaughter by a jury after a three-day trial. Nothing better described the times than the fact that dangling a watch held as security for a poker debt was widely regarded as a justifiable provocation for resorting to firearms.

                                                     250 Years of American History

Friday, March 6, 2026

The Erasure of History By Mindy Esposito

 


Over the past few years.  Forces operating outside the boundaries of normal decency and behavior have advocated and executed plans with ill intent, to destroy various monuments throughout the United States that have either patriotic significance and/ or connections to the  American civil war. The main target of these attempts was concerted effort to smother history and to thwart historic preservation of southern monuments dedicated to the Confederacy. Many of the targeted monuments were dedicated to the reconciliation and reestablishent of the union between the states that were previously engaged in an internal conflict. These monuments were intentionally destroyed by state sponsored efforts.  
The Central States Lawman and Outlaws Historic Association supports all historical preservation. 
G.C. Stevens 

THE FIRST ERASURE: HOW CONFEDERATE MEMORY BECAME THE BLUEPRINT FOR AMERICA’S CULTURAL REVOLUTION

By: Mindy Esposito December 5, 2025

Nashville, Tennessee 

 "A Nation’s Soul The erasure of memory is not simply academic. It affects how we understand liberty, duty, sacrifice, and identity. Confederate dead were once honored as American soldiers who fought bravely for their homes, respected even by their former enemies. To recast them as villains was to sever a sacred thread of national reconciliation."

- Mindy Esposito

In recent years, Americans have struggled to understand how their nation, long anchored by shared history, faith, and civic identity, could suddenly feel unmoored. Retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn’s assessment of an attempted cultural revolution explains much of this turmoil. But when viewed through the lens of Southern history, a deeper truth becomes clear: Confederate memory was not only an early casualty of this ideological struggle, it was the proving ground.

Long before the nation realized what was happening, Southern monuments, graves, flags, and historical narratives were quietly placed under assault. What seemed at first like isolated controversies were in fact early experiments in coercion, censorship, and the rewriting of memory. The destruction of Confederate heritage was the pilot program for a much larger transformation. The revolutionaries learned on the South what they later unleashed on the whole Republic.

I. Confederate History as the First Test Case

The American cultural revolution could not succeed without first weakening the nation’s historical foundations. Crucially, Confederate memory offered a politically convenient target, safe to attack, unlikely to trigger broad institutional resistance, and rich with symbolic power. Decades before the wider public felt the pressure of ideological enforcement, Confederate symbols were:

removed under cover of darkness, vandalized without consequence, stripped of historical nuance, and recast as badges of collective guilt rather than memorials to the dead.Anyone who questioned this narrative, historians, descendants, preservationists, found themselves smeared, silenced, or socially punished. What Flynn calls “behavioral conditioning” was practiced first on Southerners. If society could be trained to accept the erasure of one region’s history, activists reasoned, the rest of America would follow in time.They were right.

II. A Nation That Forgets One Past Can Forget Any Past Once Confederate memory was successfully recoded as shameful, the ideological project expanded outward with remarkable speed. Monuments to Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Columbus, and even Union generals were suddenly “problematic.” The Declaration of Independence became suspect. The Constitution was recast as an artifact of oppression. School curricula replaced civic literacy with grievance narratives. What began with the Confederacy was never just about the Confederacy. It was about whether Americans could be persuaded to sever themselves from their own history. The architects of this revolution understood something simple and chilling: A people who are taught to hate their past can be made to surrender their future.

III. Red Washing: How a Nation’s Memory Was Rewritten Flynn’s term “red washing” describes the deletion, distortion, and replacement of historical memory; precisely what Confederate descendants witnessed long before the nation awakened to it. For years, textbooks quietly shifted. Museums changed language. University departments reclassified American and Southern history as political battlegrounds. Stories of courage, faith, sacrifice, community, and reconciliation were buried beneath ideological narratives that served a modern agenda rather than truth. By the time the public realized how radically history had been rewritten, entire generations had already been taught: not what happened, but what they were supposed to feel about it. This was the revolution’s most powerful weapon.

IV. Suppressing Southern Heritage Was a Trial Run for Suppressing American Identity Flynn describes the cultural revolution as a coordinated alliance between bureaucracies, activist networks, and media institutions. Nowhere was this alliance more boldly displayed than in the treatment of Confederate heritage.The South became a controlled environment where the ideological project measured: how much dissent people would tolerate, how quickly institutions would comply, how aggressively media could shape narratives, how forcefully public symbols could be removed. When the experiment succeeded, when monuments fell quietly and opposition was muted, the blueprint was expanded nationwide.The targeting of the Confederacy was not the end goal; it was the gateway.

V. The Stakes: A Nation’s Soul The erasure of memory is not simply academic. It affects how we understand liberty, duty, sacrifice, and identity. Confederate dead were once honored as American soldiers who fought bravely for their homes, respected even by their former enemies. To recast them as villains was to sever a sacred thread of national reconciliation. And once that thread was cut, all of American memory became vulnerable. The Founders, frontiersmen, pioneers, soldiers, inventors and every figure who once formed the backbone of our civic story, became fair game.

VI. What the South Knew First, America Knows Now For decades, Southerners warned that if history could be erased for one group, it could be erased for all. Today, the nation is waking up to that truth. Americans of every region now feel pressures once experienced almost exclusively by descendants of Confederate families: censorship, social punishment, coerced conformity, fear of speaking openly, rewriting of the national story. The South was not the outlier. It was the early warning system.

VII. The Path Forward

If Flynn is correct, and many believe he is, the cultural revolution has fractured, but not vanished. Its project has been slowed but not defeated. The restoration of American civic life begins with reclaiming memory: understanding, teaching, and preserving the truth of our past so that future generations cannot be cut off from it. Confederate history is part of that restoration, not only for the South but for the nation as a whole. It embodies principles the revolution sought to erase: honor for the dead, reverence for ancestors, fidelity to local identity, resistance to centralized coercion, courage in the face of overwhelming power. These values are not sectional. They are American. And they are worth defending.

250 years of American history, Preserve all American History


CITATIONS & SOURCES

I. Historical Erasure, Memory Rewriting, and Ideological Use of History

Lowenthal, David. The Past Is a Foreign Country – Revisited. Cambridge University Press, 2015.

— Definitive scholarly work on how societies reshape and erase historical memory for political purposes.

Hobsbawm, Eric, and Terence Ranger, eds. The Invention of Tradition. Cambridge University Press, 1983.

— Seminal study showing how political groups create or overwrite historical narratives.

Banner, James M. Jr. The Ever-Changing Past: Why All History Is Revisionist History. Yale University Press, 2021.

— Explains how history is routinely reframed for political ends.

Upton, Dell. What Can and Can’t Be Said: Race, Uplift, and Monument Building in the Contemporary South. Yale University Press, 2015.

— Documents coordinated campaigns to reinterpret or remove Confederate monuments.

“The War Over Confederate Monuments.” Smithsonian Magazine, Aug. 2017.— Shows institutional and activist alignment in reframing Southern history.

II. Institutional Capture, Bureaucratic Ideology, and Government Overreach

“Review of DHS Intelligence Reports.” Office of Inspector General, Department of Homeland Security, Report OIG-22-91, 2022.

— Documents ideological bias and improper internal training within DHS.

“Political Activities of Federal Employees.” Government Accountability Office (GAO), 2020.

— Identifies patterns of improper political influence inside federal agencies.

The Twitter Files.

Independent investigative reporting (2022–2023) led by Matt Taibbi, Bari Weiss, and Michael Shellenberger.

— Documents coordination between federal agencies and social-media companies on political content moderation.

Church Committee Reports (Final Report). U.S. Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, 1976.

— Historic evidence of federal agencies surveilling citizens based on ideology.

III. DEI as a Mechanism of Coercion or Compelled Ideology

Meriwether v. Shawnee State University. 992 F.3d 492 (6th Cir. 2021).

— Federal court ruling that DEI policies cannot compel ideological speech.

U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Novant Health Settlements, 2022–2024.

— Shows instances where DEI was used improperly in employment decisions.

Rufo, Christopher F. America’s Cultural Revolution: How the Radical Left Conquered Everything. Broadside Books, 2023.

— Documents DEI training systems, activist staff pipelines, and ideological conformity pressures in government, corporate, and academic institutions.

“The Rise of Mandatory DEI Trainings.” Wall Street Journal, 2021–2024 series.

— Investigative reporting on coercive or ideologically driven DEI mandates.

IV. Evidence of Government Surveillance or Targeting of Ideological Groups

Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration. Inappropriate Criteria Were Used to Identify Tax-Exempt Applications for Review. 2013.

— The IRS targeting scandal (Tea Party and conservative groups).

FBI Richmond Field Office. Domestic Terrorism: Radical Traditionalist Catholics Memo, Jan. 2023 (withdrawn).

— Direct evidence of ideological profiling inside the FBI.

National School Boards Association Letter to DOJ, September 2021 and subsequent DOJ communications.

— Shows federal involvement in labeling parent dissent as domestic extremism.

V. Coordinated Activist Networks, Funding Streams, and Narrative Alignment

Gurri, Martin. The Revolt of the Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium. Stripe Press, 2014.

— Explores how activist networks reshape political structures and public narratives.

Fisher, Dana. American Resistance: From the Women’s March to the Blue Wave. Columbia University Press, 2019.

— Academic documentation of interconnected activist networks, overlapping staff, and coordinated messaging.

Capital Research Center Investigative Reports (2018–2024).

— Maps funding networks linking activist organizations across racial justice, environmental, feminist, and anti-police movements.

“How Philanthropy Shapes Progressive Activism.” The New York Times, May 2021.

— Documents shared donors, staff, and organizational overlap across multiple ideological movements.

VI. Memory Suppression and Ideological Reframing in Education

Stanford University. History Wars and the Classroom: Democratic Ideas in Conflict, 2018.

— Documents how historical curricula shifted toward ideology-driven narratives.

National Association of Scholars. The 1619 Project: A Critique, 2020–2022.

— Demonstrates factual distortions and ideological intent in rewriting American history.

RAND Corporation. The Ideological Exposure in K–12 Education Report, 2021.

— Shows coordinated ideological shifts in school curricula.

Schaefer, Elizabeth. “Confederate Memory in the Classroom.” Journal of Southern History, vol. 85, no3, 2019.

— Academic analysis of how Southern history has been selectively erased or reframed.**




Thursday, March 5, 2026

Locomotive #202 from Logging Workhorse to Hidden Treasure: By Ken Hulsey

 Unearthing History: 

The Remarkable Journey of Locomotive #202 from Logging Workhorse to Hidden Treasure

You can read Ken's blog at Miracle Mindset

Photos Courtesy of Ken Hulsey

 The Legacy of Locomotive #202: A Snapshot of Railroad History in Louisiana

For railroad history enthusiasts, few stories encapsulate the rich tapestry of early 20th-century logging operations in the United States like that of Locomotive #202. This venerable machine, with its beginnings dating back to 1913, provides a fascinating glimpse into the timber industry’s reliance on rail transport and the technological evolution of locomotives during that era.

Locomotive #202 was part of an ambitious order by the Crowell Interests, consisting of twelve distinct locomotives, each crafted to meet the burgeoning needs of the Meridian Lumber Company in Meridian, Louisiana. Designed primarily as a woods engine, #202 was instrumental in transporting timber from the expansive forests to the mill, symbolizing the industrial energy that characterized the American landscape in the early 1900s.

In the years following its launch, #202’s role expanded as Meridian Lumber navigated the challenges of logging operations. In 1919, the company bolstered its fleet with the purchase of a nearly identical sister locomotive, #204, further enhancing its capacity to manage timber logistics from the logging camp in Sieper, Louisiana. Another notable addition was the acquisition of the robust 2-8-0 #206 in 1923, which took on the vital task of operating the main log train from Sieper to Meridian until a devastating fire claimed the Meridian mill in 1928. This event marked a turning point for both the operations and #202's life in the service.


Following the fire that destroyed the Meridian mill, its operations transitioned to Alco, and with them, Locomotive #202 also changed its working territory. Throughout the 1930s, #202 continued to serve as a woods engine, facilitating the movement of timber, likely from both Sieper and Alco. This was a time of uncertainty for the lumber industry, yet #202 proved its resilience, thriving in the challenging terrain of Louisiana’s forests.

The years leading up to World War II presented further challenges, as the Sieper Camp ultimately ceased operations. However, rather than being retired, #202 was redirected to Longleaf, where it worked along the eastern extension of the Meridian tram line. Its sister locomotive, #204, became a favorite in this new role—until a fateful accident in December 1952, which saw #204 overturn, leading to #202’s return to full-time service.

By the fall of 1954, when the entire logging operation came to a halt, #202 became the last steam locomotive in service for the Crowell log tram. This moment marked the end of an era, as the transition from steam to diesel gradually reshaped the industry. Following its retirement, #202 was stored near the intersection of the Meridian tram line and LA 497, where it remained largely forgotten for decades.


In a remarkable turn of events, the locomotive was rediscovered and rescued from obscurity by the 1990s, hidden under a layer of vegetation. Today, it resides within the Southern Forest Heritage Museum, representing the last of the wood-burning steam locomotives in Louisiana—a testament to the region’s rich logging history and the integral role of railroads in its development.

For railroad enthusiasts and historians alike, Locomotive #202 is more than just an engine; it is a living relic of a bygone era, chronicling the stories of those who relied on its strength and reliability to build their livelihoods and shape their communities.

- Southern Forrest Heritage Museum

     250 Years of American History 

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Roots of The Civil War: The Border Wars, Jay Hawkers and Bushwhackers: By G.C. Stevens

 

Photo Courtesy of Don Wilson, originally published in the 
Maries County Advocate

"Sir: Your dispatch of the 15th instant, making a call on Missouri for four regiments of men for immediate service, has been received. There can be, I apprehend, no doubt that the men are intended to form a part of the Presidents army to make war upon the people of the seceded states. Your requisition, in my judgment, is illegal, unconstitutional, and revolutionary in its object, inhumane, and diabolical and cannot be complied with. Not one man will the state of Missouri furnish to carry on any unholy crusade.

-Governor Clairborne Jackson in Response to President Lincoln's call for 
Missouri to provide 75,000 troops

By 1861, all options to resolve the internal conflict surrounding the issue of slavery had all failed. the nation was divided, and the promised constitutional amendments, court cases and the Presidential election had only served to fan the flames of war. The Kansas-Nebraska act had failed to provide a workable path to allow new states to enter the union and the question of slavery had poured over the borders of Kansas and Missouri as the enigmatic abolitionist firebrand radical, John Brown had conducted an insurgency into the region by way of Iowa, Missouri and Kansas. Brown ran guns and committed acts of violence against the pro-slavery factions in Kansas. John Brown first came to attention when he led anti-slavery volunteers and his sons on a mission into the region, during the Bleeding Kansas crisis of the late 1850's. This conflict pre-dated the civil war and was state-level war over whether Kansas would enter the union as a slave state or a free state. Brown was dissatisfied with abolitionist pacifism, saying of pacifists, "These men are all talk. What we need is action—action!"  In May 1856, John Brown, along his sons killed five supporters of slavery in the Pottawatomie massacre, an apparent response to the sacking of Lawrence by pro-slavery forces. Brown then commanded anti-slavery forces at the Battle of Black Jack and the Battle of Osawatomie.                                                                                                                  
 The War in the West / The Border War

Jayhawker: A mythical Irish bird of prey that stole eggs from
 the nests of other birds, became the name attached to Kansas troops. Western Missouri was plagued by Jayhawker raids.

The American civil war in the west was truly a war which pitted brother against brother and neighbor against neighbor. As time has passed, many descendants of those who were swept up in the Border wars in that region, have begun to come forward to tell the story of their ancestors who suffered through that time. Local historian and author Don Wilson who was born and raised in Phelps County Missouri is descendant of William "Bill" Wilson a famed Bushwhacker, who was born around 1830 in Phelps County, Missouri. His father, Sol Wilson, was a very well-to-do farmer who owned several slaves, but freed them before the Civil War. Sol remained neutral and advised his children to do the same. But the war in Missouri was very heated and the state endured some 40 percent of the battle and engagements nation-wide in the first year of the war and 40 percent of the casualties. In fact, three of the four biggest battles of the first year of the civil war, Wilsons Creek, Lexington and Belmont were fought in Missouri, in most part by Missourians. According to historian Don Wilson, Union troops entered Maries County under the guise of maintaining order, but instead, he says that troops took what they wanted, destroyed what they could and left families struggling to survive.

Bushwhackers
Guerrilla warfare common during the American Revolutionary War, War of 1812, American Civil War and other conflicts in which there were large areas of contested land and few governmental resources to control these tracts. This was particularly prevalent in rural western areas during the Civil War where there were sharp divisions between combatants.

"Our rights have been usurped, dear, by Northmen of our land:
Fanatics raised the cry, dear politicians fired the brand, the Southrons spurn the galling yoke, the tyrants' threats defy, They find we've sons like sturdy oaks to raise the battle cry."
- The Volunteer by Harry MaCarthy
While Union troops were mostly portrayed as "the good guys," for the Wilson family, soldier's actions were a form of war time terrorism. These actions created Bushwhackers who were civilian soldiers who felt that they needed to fight for their freedom. The military activity in Missouri was not isolated, and was widespread throughout the state, the situation created a chaotic mix of regular army troops (both union and confederate), militias, and gangs of independent home guard "Bushwhackers." The war in the west is filled with moral ambiguity, which brings the story down to a very human level, as Missourians were fighting Missourians. These personal stories handed down through families, give life to the deeper story of the civil war. A reminder that wars aren't just fought on battlefields, the war in Missouri was brought home to the front yards of the people who lived there. Children saw troops march through their towns, where crops were destroyed, and livestock were stolen. Even decades later those events are still visible in Missouri, and the descendants of families like the Wilson's carry those oral histories forward, keeping the memories of their ancestors alive. It's interesting to note that Wilson's great grandfather, Bill Wilson's experiences during the civil war inspired the Hollywood movie "The Outlaw Josey Wales" In the 1976 dramatized movie, Clint Eastwood, playing Wales was a farmer whose family had been killed by a group of "Red Leg Jayhawkers" when they attacked his homestead.  Wales then joined Missouri guerillas during the war and became a feared outlaw and wanted fugitive while trying to flee south to escape his Red Leg pursuers. The films portrayal of the attack on Wales home, draws attention to the real-life devastation that many families in Missouri experienced during the war between the states.

About Don Wilson
Born in 1946 Don Wilson grew up on the farm built by his great grandfather Bushwhacker Bill Wilson. Without any electricity he grew up as the last of his generation to learn how to do things “the old way”. He grew up hearing the story of his great grandfather along with his fourteen brothers and sisters, and has been asked by many to recite his story onto the pages of his book. Complying he has created this book in the honor of his great grandfather to describe what his true story was.



References

-Maries County Advocate Article by Alvin Hett

- 1861 Civil War Almanac "The Civil War in Western Missouri and Eastern Kansas" 
By Harold Dellinger Special Projects Editor, Windingriver.com






Author portraying a confederate guerilla 


250 Years of American History






Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Rest in Peace Robert Carradine by G.C. Stevens

 

Original photo from IMDB, Robert Carradine (right)

I was sad to hear about Robert Carradine's Passing this morning. I loved cinema when I was growing up. It was the movies that gave me my love of western history. And the Carradine family was a dynasty that went back to the early days of film making.  The above photo is from the movie " The Long Riders" Keith Carradine (L) played Jim Younger, David Carradine (M) Played Cole Younger and Robert Carradine (R) Played Bob Younger.

The Long Riders

The hills of Clay County wild and free, an outlaw's dream, the border battle made them brave, with scores to settle along the way. They mounted up, headed north, to Adair town where they shook the earth, they rode the southern borders meeting folks along the way, they seemed polite and always paid, but then they robbed to local bank, they rode long and fast, it was Jesse's way, with the brother Frank beside him they gained the outlaw fame, the fastest bandits of the west, outlaws to some, hero's to the rest. The posse couldn't keep up, the long riders a step ahead, back into Missouri they rode, until the very end.

-G.C. Stevens



Sunday, February 22, 2026

CSL&oH.A. Podcast #1 Nicholas Porter Earp

 

Nicholas Porter Earp, Public Domain

Welcome to Our very first podcast.
#1 Nicholas Porter Earp. 
Father of Wyatt Earp


                                                        250 years of American History



Friday, February 20, 2026

Western Poetry, Old Nick Earp By: G.C. Stevens

 

Nicholas Porter Earp, Photo public domain

Some died on the frontier, while some could never be killed, those who survived well, were sometimes despised, the modern weak seek to destroy the strength and honor they can never have, lies cloaked as heroism are the words by which they abide.. The true story is that Nick Earp was hell on wheels, a true man of steel. It took grit to conquer the wide prairie, and there was a grave every mile. The lady who complained was not fit to judge, she risked the lives all, for ego and nothing more. If it wasn't for old Nick.. The Indians would have settled the score, like they did many times before. They crossed the great prairie, like so many did at the time, and he was the captain who navigated trail and brought his people to San Bernadino, alive and well.

Nicholas Porter Earp The True Story


250 YEARS OF AMERICAN HISTORY




Thursday, February 19, 2026

Historic Reenactments 2026 updated 02/23/26

250 YEARS OF AMERICAN HISTORY

2026
Iowa
Reenactments

Another season of reenacting is quickly approaching. I look forward to another year of fun and sharing American history. Thank you to O.J. Fargo from the Army of the Southwest (ASW) for organizing the ASW and providing the list of Civil War Reenactments for 2026. This list is not a complete and only reflects the schedule for ASW and the upcoming Buck skinners Fair in Boone Iowa. If any event or group would like to get on this list. Please reach out to me at gene9156@yahoo.com


 March 20, 21 & 22 Buck skinner Fair Boone Iowa *See below

 Fort Dodge Frontier Days – June 6-7 

 Jefferson Bell Tower Festival June 13-14

 Zering  July 25 

 Albert City – August 7-9 

 Vinton – August 22-23 

Madrid Memorial Day – Aug. 29-30 

September 5-7 Rendezvous Steam Boat Rock IA

 Winterset  – Oct. 10-11





Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Coffee In the Wild West By G.C. Stevens

 

                    Ken Curtis as Festus Haggen "Gunsmoke" Photo courtesy of Andy Falls

As a historic reenactor, the author of this article has huddled around many campfires on some brutally cold of mornings after crawling out of a frost covered canvas A-tent and awaited a cup fresh brewed cowboy coffee which is still his coffee of choice.
- G.C. Stevens

Coffee in the Old West was sometimes called the "six-shooter coffee" because of its strength. Cowboy coffee was typically brewed by simply boiling ground coffee in large tinned pots over campfires. Cowboys, soldiers and settlers relied on this hot brew to wake up and stay alert. Arbuckles' Coffee was the first pre-roasted, packaged brand of coffee it was very popular in the old wild west


 "Cowboy coffee," (the authors favorite) was made by throwing grounds into boiling water, and allowing the grounds to settle to the bottom of the pot. Cooks would add cold water and eggshells. Before 1865, coffee was sold green and had to be roasted in skillets. Arbuckle Brothers patented a process for roasting, egg-coating, and packaging coffee, making it accessible to pioneers. It was almost always drank black, very strong, and it was sometimes gritty. If coffee was not available, substitutes were sometimes used like roasted grains, chicory, or even sweet potatoes. In the west, Coffee was highly prized, with Arbuckle's packages often containing small gifts like peppermint sticks. The phrase "Man at the Pot" was commonly shouted to signal that fresh coffee was ready. It was brewed in large 3-5 gallon pots, often left on the fire for anyone to take a cup, regardless of the time of day.


Monday, February 16, 2026

The Passing of Robert Duvall By: G.C. Stevens

Robert Duvall as Al Sieber and Gene Hackman as Brig. General George Crook
       From the Movie Geronimo: An American Legend 1993 Photo
 from IMDB
     Robert Duvall 1931-2026
 I'm sad to report that famed Actor Robert Duvall has passed away. Duvall was an actor of immense talent who played in many roles, portraying many characters. I had first come to know Duvall through his role as Tom Hagen in the Godfather series of movies. But my favorite of Duvall's characters were, Lt. Col Kilgore in Apocalypse Now (1979), The Apostle E.F. in The Apostle (1997) and Al Sieber in Geronimo; An American Legend (1993). But out of these three roles I mention, his recreation of Al Sieber is my favorite.


Al Sieber Photo ref https://www.historiascripta.org/
Al Sieber was a German-American immigrant who served in the civil war.He enlisted on March 4, 1862, in Company B, 1st Minnesota Volunteer Infantry during the American Civil War (1861-1865). Sieber was severely wounded on July 2, 1863 in the Battle of Gettysburg, on the battlefield's westside heights of Cemetery Ridge. He fought in several key engagements, including the earlier Battle of Antietam, (September 1862 in the Maryland campaign, then following Battle of Fredericksburg during the winter of 1862-1863, and Battle of Chancellorsville, (1863), Battle of Gettysburg, (June-July 1863), then the post-war conflicts in the American Indian Wars later phase in the American Southwest territories of the Apache Wars, (1849 to 1886), with the Battle of Cibecue Creek (August 1881), and Battle of Big Dry Wash (July 1882). After the wars, he became a mineral prospector in California, Nevada, and in the old Arizona Territory, where he also managed a cattle ranch from 1868 to 1871. But Al did not die as portrayed in the movie Germino, he died on the Apache Trail as a result of a construction accident.

Robert Duvall played Al just as he played other western characters, such as Gus in Lonesome Dove, Boss in Open Range and Prentice in Broken Trail, with a deep southern accent and many “yessir” and “nossir, as he also did with his portrayal of Robert. E. Lee in Gods and Generals. He uses no German accent as the real Al had. But on the other hand, Al Seiber did not take part in the Gatewood expedition to capture Geronimo. And he was not shot and wounded by Geronimo and he was most certainly not killed in a Mexican cantina in a fight with bounty hunters. But Hollywood most certainly took creative license, and I believe it worked in this case.  Duvall will be remembered as one of the best screen actors of his time. 



Saturday, February 14, 2026

Presentation at their Boone Scenic Valley Railroad Museum

 


It was a real pleasure to speak at the Boone Scenic Valley Railroad Museum (BSVRR) today in Boone Iowa. It was a very pleasant Valentines Day, especially for a February in Iowa, so a lot of people came out. I spoke to a full house while the presentation was also streamed online. I got to meet and speak to a lot of great people there. I talked about Jesse James in Iowa, the 1873 Adair Train Robbery and I even got to recite some of my poetry. Many thanks to Mike Wendel of the BSVRR who put the program together.

THANK YOU
See you on the Dusty Trail!
G.C. Stevens


Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Welcome to The Central States Lawman and Outlaws Historic Association: G.C. Stevens


Fort Dodge Fort Museum  
photo by the author 




Welcome to CSL&OH.A.
Howdy, partners! Welcome to the Wild West History Blog— I hope you'll ride the trail or the train with us into the real American frontier.
Saddle up for tales of dusty cattle towns, railroad towns, gold-rush boom camps, lawless borderlands, and wide-open plains. We’ll walk Western towns, boardwalks, stand at the OK Corral, follow the Chisholm Trail, and trace the railroads that bound a nation.
No Hollywood gloss here—just the grit drawn from diaries, court records, old newspapers, and fresh scholarship. Meet the true Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, Buffalo Soldiers, Native nations, and trailblazing women who ran ranches and saloons.
Whether you love Western lore or just crave authentic frontier stories, pull up a chair by the campfire. New posts on sheriffs, outlaws, cattle barons, and pioneers drop regularly.
Grab your hat—let’s ride. The Wild West awaits.
 Author Information
Gene Stevens Is a local historian, reenactor and writer, who has studied and written about frontier history, covering the Old Northwest Territory, the Illinois territory and expansion into western Iowa. He has memberships with the John Wayne Birthplace Society, the Western Writers of American and he is the founder of the Central States Lawman and Outlaws Historic Association.                                                      
His books include, Last Stand at Old Man's Creek, Red Flag of Defiance, Navy Signalman in Their Own Words, The Battle of Apple River Fort, A Fiendish Crime the story of the first train robbery in the west, and the Author of the Dusty Trails of the Old West Anthology. He has traveled the country, studied and reenacted the American civil war, the Black Hawk war and wild west periods of American history.



 

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Go West Young Man; The Story of William Hudspeth and the Connection To Jesse James

 Story by Dennie Anderson.  Edited by Gene Stevens 

Descendant Dennie Anderson Holds up a photo of William Hudsepth


William Hudspeth approx, 1865
Photo Courtesy of Dennie Anderson

William Hudspeth was born in North Carolina on May 1st, 1778, a time when the colonies had declared independence from crown of England. In 1812, a war broke out, which was sometimes called the 2nd American revolution, as Britain once again made an intrusion onto American soil in a war that stretched along the Canadian border and along the great lakes in the old Northwest Territory. During that war, a young brave Willliam Hudspeth entered service as a Major in the 22nd Kentucky Militia. It's worth mentioning that Some 25,010 Kentuckians served in war, which was about five out of every six men then of military age. Fighting against both the British and their Native Americans allies, Kentucky sent a total of 36 regiments, four battalions, and twelve independent companies to the field, an almost unbelievable accomplishment considering the state's small population at the time. For his service in the war. Maj. William Hudspeth was granted 260 acres in Kentucky. He and his brother, Joel E,, moved their families to what in now Simpson County Kentucky. They farmed there and became fairly successful.
Hudspeth and Simpson County Kentucky
It was in 1819 that Simpson County Kentucky was carved out of existing Warren, Logan and Allen counties; as a result, the county seats of Bowling Green, Russellville and Scottsville became equidistant from Franklin.  The county name remembers with honor Captain John Simpson for his service in the war of 1812.  Franklin’s location can be noted humorously and practically.  One proposed site was contiguous to Drakes Creek; another was land belonging to William Hudspeth.  Water supply was vitally important to either location.  Tradition reports the night before Commissioners were to make a choice, Hudspeth worked rapidly to carry barrels of water from the creek to prime the well which he had dug without striking water (site now marked by a replica well structure).  Evidently, the water seeping to an underground stream allowed the almost deep-enough hole to open into the water supply.  What luck!  Hudspeth won the Commissioners’ vote.

William Hudspeth in Missouri   
In 1826 William Hudspeth moved to Missouri and eventually settled near Fort Osage in Sibley Missouri, Fort Osage was established by William Clark in the Louisiana Purchase territory to provide a presence in the region and it established a trading post with Native Americans.

The Hudspeth Connection to Jesse James
In a three-volume family genealogy by Anna Ford called "Through the Years With the Hudspeths,"  Major William Hudspeth had migrated to Missouri by 1828.Which stated that he had been a soldier in both the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, and that he had founded Franklin, Ky. William was also considered a sportsman, bringing with him to Missouri a fine collection of foxhounds (the Hudspeth hounds later became famous, thanks to the efforts of a grandson, Thomas Benton Hudspeth). The major and his wife, Tabitha, whom he married in 1801, had 11 children — Nathan Beall, Thomas Jefferson, Sylvia, Joseph W., Missouri L., Silas Burke, Benoni Morgan, Joel Ephriam, George Washington, Robert Nichols and Malinda Paralee.
 The Hudspeth Settlement was established at what is now Lake City, Missouri. Robert Nichols ‘Bob’ Hudspeth, who never married, gave land for the small town. His house was about eight miles northeast of Independence. When he died in 1885, he owned 1,500 acres of land, which was being used for raising stock and farming. 

    Hudspeth's in the Civil War
When the Civil War broke out, Robert Hudspeth had served with the famed Confederate guerilla William Quantrill, and he and Frank James, who also rode with Quantrill, were apparently good friends. Robert and brother Silas, who owned a 120-acre farm, and he supplied the James-Younger Gang with valuable horses and allowed their homes to be used as hideouts. Frank James’ only son, Robert Franklin (1878–1964), was named for Robert Hudspeth, according to descendant Joe Elsea, whose great-grandfather was Joel ‘Rufus’ Hudspeth (1839–1895).

Rufus Hudspeth was a son of Joseph W. Hudspeth.  He married his first cousin Amanda in 1830 and become a successful Jackson County farmer. Amanda died in 1850, Joseph then married Louise (Rice) Brown, and they had one more child — Joseph Lamartine (‘Lam’) Hudspeth. Rufus, was friends with Frank and Jesse James when they all were schoolboys. He was one of several Hudspeths to serve in Quantrill’s guerrilla band, while other family members assisted the Rebel raiders. Rufus also later served under General Shelby and Maj. Gen. Sterling Price, in the trans-Mississippi theater.  After the war, Rufus went to Kentucky with Quantrill, but he later returned to Missouri in 1865, married Sarah Franklin the next year, had four children — Joseph, Mary Amanda (Elsea), Elvira Beall (Chiles) and Charles B. — and became a prominent farmer and stockman. Rufus’ brother William Napoleon ‘Babe’ Hudspeth also served with Quantrill. After the war, Babe married Nannie Ragland of Independence and built a large two-story Victorian home that still stands in Lake City, which was then a thriving community with stockyards and a racetrack. Other sons of Major William Hudspeth living nearby included George Washington Hudspeth and Joel Ephriam Hudspeth, who inherited the family farm. An 1877 history of Jackson County states: "It is probable that no finer nor a more extensive view of the surrounding country can be obtained than from the hill upon which the residence of Joel E. Hudspeth is located. It overlooks the Valley of the Blue. Its landscape is in its rural beauty." Many of the Hudspeths vacationed at Monegaw Springs, where James-Younger Gang members were known to hang out.

Strong Connections with the James-Younger Gang
A strong connection between the gang and Hudspeths, was probably known by the authorities, and it  became obvious from the testimony of former gang member James Andrew ‘Dick’ Liddil at the 1883 Gallatin trial of Frank James. Liddil, who also once rode with Quantrill, and had been part of Jesse James’ new gang, beginning with the October 8, 1879, and they were at the train robbery at Glendale, Missouri   ., and then had surrendered to the sheriff of Clay County on January 24, 1882. Liddil told the law most of what he knew about the gang, but his surrender was not publicized, so as not to alert Jesse James. The news didn’t become public until March 31. At his St. Joseph, Mo., home on the morning of April 2, 1882, Jesse read about it and supposedly commented that Liddil was a traitor who deserved to be hanged. Shortly thereafter, Bob Ford fired a shot heard around Missouri and beyond — the ball struck Jesse in the back of the head, killing the famous outlaw.



Re: Copy of letter sent to my cousin Malinda Paralee Hudspeth Woods the youngest daughter of William Hudspeth. Letter was written by Alexander Frank James.

                                        Family Historian Dennie Anderson at the Hudspeth Well

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