When the West Was Young
WHEN THE WEST
WAS YOUNG
John Slaughter was gathering a great herd
Copyright, 1922, by
The Century Co.
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
To Mr Father
Dr. A. F. BECHDOLT
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The writer is indebted for the material in this book to a goodly number of the old-timers, from whose lips came much of which is written in the following pages, and to numerous printed works which he consulted, sometimes to authenticate data and sometimes to get additional facts.
Among the former to whom he wishes to make acknowledgment are: Former Sheriff John Ralphs, San Bernardino, California; Captain Harry C. Wheeler, Douglas, Arizona; A. M. Franklin, Tucson, Arizona; Colonel William Breckenbridge, Tucson, Arizona; Dr. D. T. MacDougal, Carnegie Institution; William Lutley, Tombstone, Arizona; Judge Duncan, Tombstone, Arizona; A. H. Gardner, Tombstone, Arizona; C. M. Cummings, Tombstone, Arizona; Andy Smith, Tucson, Arizona; Guy C. Welch, Tombstone, Arizona; Mr. and Mrs. John Slaughter, Douglas, Arizona; James East, Douglas, Arizona; Horace Stillman, Douglas, Arizona; D. F. McCarthy, Lipscomb, Texas; and the Arizona Pioneers' Association.
Among the latter are old files of the “Tombstone Epitaph” and other Arizona newspapers; Manley's “Death Valley in '49”; Upton's “Pioneers of Eldorado”; Ridge's “Life of Joaquin Murieta”; Dukes' “Famous Criminal Cases”; Farish's “History of Arizona”; McClintock's “History of Arizona”; Hittel's “History of California”; Bancroft's Works; Visscher's “Pony Express”; G. D. Bradley's “Story of the Pony Express”; “Overland Stage to California,” by F. A. Root and W. E. Connely; Inman's “Santa Fé Trail”; Humphreyville's “Twenty Years Among Our Hostile Indians”; Richardson's “Beyond the Mississippi”; Bourke's “On the Border With Crook”; J. Ross Brown's “Adventures in the Apache Country”; Charles Siringo's “History of Billy the Kid”; Bard's “Life of Billy Dixon, Scout and Plainsman”; Brown's “History of Texas.”
Contents
page How Death Valley Was Named 3 Joaquin Murieta 25 Tombstone 54 Tombstone's Wild Oats 80 The Show-Down 105 The Passing of John Ringo 132 John Slaughter's Way 160 Cochise 190 One Against Many 218 The Overland Mail 248 Boot-Hill 277
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.
The longest-living author of this work died in 1950, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 73 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse