"This deluxe anniversary volume is the first complete edition to
appear in forty years."
"For about 51 weeks a year the average old-time cowboy could be
classified as a hard working, fairly sober, and usually
conscientious individual. During the 52nd week, however, he might
erupt into a rip-snorting, free-spending hell raiser bent on
divesting himself of his earnings in the quickest and most
enjoyable manner possible. What caused this usually mild and
law-abiding creature to undergo such a metamorphosis? He was
celebrating--making up for the long and lonely weeks he had just
spent on the trail drive from Texas. He was delighted with the
thought that no more, for a few weeks at least, would he spend his
nights trying to nurse edgy cattle into tranquility. . . . He was
free now--unemployed, uninhibited, and rich--until tomorrow or next
week And waiting for the trail cowboy and his cash, almost rubbing
its hands in anticipation, was the cowtown."--from "Why the West
Was Wild"
Nyle H. Miller and Joseph W. Snell's "Why the West Was Wild" is
the unabridged and unsurpassed collection of material assembled on
the famous and infamous personalities of Kansas cowtowns, including
legendary figures such as "Wild Bill" Hickok, Bat Masterson, and
Doc Holliday, and such locales as Abilene, Wichita, Caldwell, and
Dodge City. First published in the "Kansas Historical Quarterly, "
these portraits are based on research in newspapers, legal records,
letters, and diaries contemporary to these legendary figures.
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