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Joseph Reddeford Walker looms large in the lore of the early West.
From the Missouri to the San Joaquin, from the Gila to the
Yellowstone, Walker spent more than thirty years - from the 1830s
to the Civil War - trapping beaver in the Rockies, bartering with
the Crow, Ute, Cheyenne, Arapahoe, and Shoshone Indians, droving
cattle and horses, and guiding emigrants and explorers. Walker was
associated with Captain Bonneville in the fur trade from 1832 to
1835, but we have only an incomplete account these years in
Washington Irving's, The Adventures of Captain Bonneville and Zenas
Leonards, Narrative. But the twist of fate that threw Daniel Ellis
Conner into Walker's party, en route from Colorado to explore
Arizona in 1861, affords us several hundred manuscript pages,
Conner's four-year travel diary, relating his hair-raising
adventures with this great mountain man. Joseph Reddeford Walker
and the Arizona Adventure offers a superb chapter in the history of
the West. Included are tales of the early Apache wars in New Mexico
and Arizona; ""The Betrayal of Mangas Coloradas,"" with Conner's
eyewitness account of the Apache chief's death; the emigrant trains
to California; early settlement; mining operations, in ""The Perils
of Prospecting,"" and countless episodes of action and violence
that make fictional accounts pale in comparison.
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