This piece looks at what life in the Old West was really like beyond the movie version It covers how cowboys worked lived and handled daily needs on the trail and ranch Stories focus on real condition ...
It's a tale that sounds like something out of an old Western: A big-moneyed city dweller descends on a small Texas town with nefarious plans to turn the community into a new development, and the town ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The quirky plot in the mini-movie "Halfway to Amarillo," produced by Burt Binder, involves a struggling writer, Michael Coleman, ...
Cowboy Carter Chronicle explores a groundbreaking course at the University of Houston that unravels the rich tapestry of Black contributions to the American West ...
Roping and riding, driving cattle across the country, one in four cowboys of the Old West was Black – a little-known fact that will be spotlighted Feb. 28 at the Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum. A ...
Life on the trail was rough, and cowboys had to rely on practical remedies when a doctor was miles away. Many of those fixes ...
After the Civil War, freed slaves were able to get jobs as cowboys in the Wild West. Valley 101 shares the story of Black cowboys now and then.
West Marin native Chris Hulls aims to preserve the old-timey watering hole as a vestige of the town’s rapidly disappearing ...
Wyoming's famous 21-foot Tumble Inn Cowboy sign, which was falling apart and rescued from remote Powder River, has been re-painted, polished and the ...