The Real "Wild West"

The Real "Wild West"

The Wild West most of us inherited is a marketing campaign. The cowboy in the lighter hat, the noble sheriff, the high-noon duel in a dusty street — those came out of dime novels, traveling shows, and ghostwritten biographies, often produced while the events themselves were still unfolding. The actual frontier was something else. It was a continent-sized arena of fraud, racial terror, corruption, hired killing, and government-protected theft, and the men we now call legends had a direct hand in selling us a version of it that left almost all of that out.In this episode we walk out into the real West.

We start with the mythmaking machine itself, Beadle's Dime Novels, Ned Buntline turning William Cody into Buffalo Bill, and the way real frontiersmen quietly cashed in by playing fictional versions of themselves on stage. We reexamine Wild Bill Hickok's so-called battle with the McCanles "gang" at Rock Creek Station in 1861, which wasn't a duel against ten desperados but a debt collection that ended with three men dead, one of them shot through a curtain. We look at the Earps as they actually lived. The brothel arrests in Peoria. The horse theft charge in Indian Territory. The thirty-second gunfight in a vacant lot off Fremont Street that wasn't actually at the OK Corral. The revenge ride Wyatt led under the cover of federal warrants after his brother Morgan was assassinated. And Stuart Lake's 1931 biography, which took Wyatt's preferred version of himself and turned it into the cowboy myth nearly every later movie repeated.

Then we follow the money. We walk through the Great Diamond Hoax of 1872, where two Kentucky cousins named Philip Arnold and John Slack salted a Wyoming mesa with industrial gemstones bought in London and sold the imaginary deposit to some of the wealthiest men in California for a generational fortune, before government geologist Clarence King quietly broke the case apart. We look at the homestead fraud machine that transferred enormous tracts of public land to timber and cattle interests through doghouse-sized "improvements" and signed-in-advance contracts, leading all the way up to Senator John Mitchell's 1905 conviction.

We spend time in Skagway with Soapy Smith, who ran an entire American town as his personal racket, fake telegraph office and paid-off marshal and all, until a robbed miner named John Stewart finally moved the vigilantes against him on July 8, 1898.We reopen the Lincoln County War, which wasn't a moral fable about an outlaw with a heart of gold but a corporate fight over Army supply contracts.

We open the Johnson County War, where Wyoming cattle barons hired a private army of Texas gunmen to ride into the county and kill a list of seventy people. We read Nate Champion's actual journal as he wrote it, alone in a burning cabin, surrounded by fifty hired guns. We walk the Pinkertons out of the detective novels and into their real job as a private violence service for railroads, mines, and cattle barons, and we meet Tom Horn, the stock detective whose signature was a flat rock under the head of the man he'd just shot from a quarter mile away. And we sit with the parts of this history that most school books leave alone. The Bear River Massacre of 1863. Sand Creek in 1864.

The Marias River killings of 1870. Camp Grant in 1871, where a Tucson mob killed more than a hundred surrendered Apaches and sold thirty children into slavery in Sonora. Wounded Knee in 1890. The Los Angeles Chinese Massacre of 1871. The Rock Springs killings in 1885. The Hells Canyon murders in 1887. The long, ongoing campaign of Texas Ranger violence against Mexican-descended people along the border, climaxing with Porvenir in 1918. The sundown towns scattered across nearly every western state. And Mountain Meadows in 1857, where Mormon militiamen disguised as Native attackers slaughtered an Arkansas wagon train and walked off with the surviving children.

We close with what the cowboy myth has actually been doing for the last hundred and fifty years, and with a small museum in Rawlins, Wyoming, where you can still see a pair of shoes made from the skin of an outlaw named George Parrott, worn by John Eugene Osborne to his 1893 inauguration as governor.The frontier that survived in our culture is mostly a story written by the men who came out of it on top. The one underneath it is messier, uglier, more diverse, and a great deal more disturbing. Once you've looked at it carefully, you don't quite hear the word "frontier" the same way again.

Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation?

Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com.

Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past.

Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets.

Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(123)

FDR: The Man Who Could Have Been King

FDR: The Man Who Could Have Been King

He was elected President of the United States 4 times, and a whole generation of Americans grew up unable to remember anyone else in the office. In this episode of Disturbing History, we pull apart th...

17 Juli 1h 23min

The Fair Tax

The Fair Tax

Taxes don't sound like Disturbing History territory, until you learn the trail of blood and power behind them. This episode traces the entire violent history of taxation in America, from the Stamp Act...

15 Juli 1h 15min

The Smithsonian's Strange Phenomena Files

The Smithsonian's Strange Phenomena Files

There's a building in Washington where, for the better part of a century, ordinary Americans mailed in the impossible. Flesh that fell from a clear sky onto a Kentucky farmwife making soap. A swarm of...

12 Juli 1h 1min

Loving the Monster

Loving the Monster

Some nights the well runs dry, and I do what everybody does — I sink into the couch and let Netflix babysit me for a while. That's how I ended up watching The Worst Ex Ever, and that's how I ended up ...

10 Juli 1h 1min

The Rise and Ruin of the FLDS Church

The Rise and Ruin of the FLDS Church

He was the mouthpiece of God to ten thousand followers. To the FBI, he was a face on the Ten Most Wanted list. And to a Nevada state trooper working a dark stretch of Interstate Fifteen, he was just a...

8 Juli 1h 7min

Children Sent Through the Mail

Children Sent Through the Mail

In the winter of nineteen fourteen, a five-year-old girl named May Pierstorff stood on a train platform in Grangeville, Idaho, with fifty-three cents in postage stamps pinned to her coat. Her parents ...

5 Juli 1h 1min

The Poison Bottles America Trusted

The Poison Bottles America Trusted

Before the Food and Drug Administration, before warning labels, before anyone had to prove a medicine was safe or even admit what was inside it, America ran on the bottle.This episode opens the cabine...

3 Juli 59min

Nazi Propaganda & The American Mirror

Nazi Propaganda & The American Mirror

The word propaganda began as something holy. In sixteen twenty-two a committee of cardinals in Rome coined it to mean the spreading of the faith, and in this episode I follow that single word as it cu...

1 Juli 1h 4min

Populärt inom Samhälle & Kultur

podme-dokumentar
aftonbladet-krim
gynning-berg
p3-dokumentar
svenska-fall
en-mork-historia
tv4-nyheterna-story
badfluence
creepypodden-med-jack-werner
killradet
aftonbladet-daily
mardromsgasten
kod-katastrof
hor-har
flashback-forever
skaringer-nessvold
rss-mer-an-bara-morsa
de-fyras-gang
vad-blir-det-for-mord
p3-historia