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The History of the American West Collection is a unique project
that provides opportunities for researchers and new readers to
easily access and explore works which have previously only been
available on library shelves. The Collection brings to life
pre-1923 titles focusing on a wide range of topics and experiences
in US Western history. From the initial westward migration, to
exploration and development of the American West to daily life in
the West and intimate pictures of the people who inhabited it, this
collection offers American West enthusiasts a new glimpse at some
forgotten treasures of American culture. Encompassing genres such
as poetry, fiction, nonfiction, tourist guides, biographies and
drama, this collection provides a new window to the legend and
realities of the American West.
This is a new release of the original 1926 edition.
GUNPOWDER TREASON AND PLOT And Other Stories for Boys BY HAROLD
AVERY, FRED WHISHAW, AND R. B. TOWNSHEND WITH FOURTEEN
ILLUSTRATIONS
Britishers were not uncommon on the frontier of the American
Southwest. Most of them, well-financed, came to acquire land and
purchase cattle, intending to make their fortunes at ranching. But
almost all were lured to America's Wild West as much by its
romantic image as by the opportunity to grow rich. One of the
younger members of that breed of Englishmen was Richard Baxter
Townshend, hungry for adventure and prosperity, who landed at the
foot of the Colorado Rockies in 1869, just four years after the end
of the Civil War. Townshend, born in 1846, was then 23 years old
and was captivated by cowboys and Indians. He would rub shoulders
with innumerable examples of both during his time in Colorado and
New Mexico. Over his years in the West he gained some seasoning and
became a rancher and a successful merchant. Once when Townshend and
his men were making a harrowing cattle drive, they narrowly missed
having the valuable livestock stolen by Billy the Kid and his
outlaw pals. Later in his life, back in England, Townshend pulled
together his first book, "A Tenderfoot in Colorado." It was
published in February 1923. The following April 23 he died at
Oxford in his 77th year. The second volume, "The Tenderfoot in New
Mexico," was completed by his wife Dorothea, using notes left by
her husband. It saw publication at the end of 1923. It proved to be
the most popular, with its descriptions of Townshend's experiences
among the Pueblo and Navajo Indians, and his adventures on desert
and mountain trails. Although Townshend gained a wide audience in
his day among both Englishmen and Americans, by the mid 20th
century he had slipped from public view. This reprinting of "The
Tenderfoot in New Mexico" by Sunstone Press will serve to
re-introduce him to a new generation of readers.
The History of the American West Collection is a unique project
that provides opportunities for researchers and new readers to
easily access and explore works which have previously only been
available on library shelves. The Collection brings to life
pre-1923 titles focusing on a wide range of topics and experiences
in US Western history. From the initial westward migration, to
exploration and development of the American West to daily life in
the West and intimate pictures of the people who inhabited it, this
collection offers American West enthusiasts a new glimpse at some
forgotten treasures of American culture. Encompassing genres such
as poetry, fiction, nonfiction, tourist guides, biographies and
drama, this collection provides a new window to the legend and
realities of the American West.
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