Sunday, May 31, 2026

Old West Timeline

 


The Old West was a crazy mishmash of cultures and personalities. Fortunes could be made in a riverbed and lost just as quickly in a gambling hell. Cattle were cash. Keeping them took a certain type of man.

 

Some people headed west looking for gold. Others for land, adventure, or a fresh start. A few were running from the law. More than a few planned on breaking it.

 

The West attracted dreamers, drifters, soldiers, outlaws, gamblers, ranchers, and hustlers. They didn’t always get along. Sometimes they settled their differences with lawyers and judges. Other times with fists, knives, or six-shooters.

 

Everything kicked into high gear in 1848 when gold was discovered in California. News traveled slowly by today’s standards, but fast enough to start a stampede. Men abandoned farms, businesses, and families to chase rumors of easy money in the mountains. Most never struck it rich, but they helped open the door to a new era.

 

Over the next forty-five years, the frontier became one of the most colorful places on earth. Cowboys pushed cattle across hundreds of miles of open prairie. Railroad crews connected the continent. Boomtowns appeared almost overnight. Some became thriving cities. Others barely outlived the mines that created them.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Who Killed Earle Remington in Los Angeles?

 

Map showing where Earle Remington was killed. Mr. & Mrs. Remington

When Earle Remington stepped out of his automobile shortly before midnight on February 15, 1923, two men were waiting for him.

One carried a double-barreled shotgun. The other had a revolver. As he walked toward his home at 1409 South St. Andrew’s Place in Los Angeles, both men opened fire. The medical examiner said Remington was dead before he hit the sidewalk.

The killers disappeared into the darkness.

Remington’s maid, Charity Dawson, found his body lying on the sidewalk the next morning. Neighbors had heard the gunfire the night before, but no one took the time to investigate. They told the police; they assumed it was an automobile backfiring. Nothing to worry about.

Someone heard a door slam. Someone else heard a car race away. Nobody thought much of it until daylight.

The killing looked like an ambush from the beginning.

Monday, September 1, 2025

Bill Doolin - Doolin-Dalton Gang


 
The Doolin-Dalton Gang rose from the ashes of the Dalton Gang’s bloody Coffeyville disaster. When Grat and Bob Dalton fell dead in October 1892, brother Bill Dalton joined forces with Bill Doolin, a seasoned outlaw from Oklahoma Territory.

Their new gang soon struck fear across the frontier. Members included “Bitter Creek” Newcomb, William “Tulsa Jack” Blake, and Charley Pierce. One of their fiercest gunmen was Israel Carr, a black outlaw. Carr was said to have killed more men than the entire gang combined. A lawman called him “one mean son-of-a-bitch.”

Other deadly characters joined the gang. There was Dan “Dynamite Dick” Clifton and “Arkansas Tom” Jones. The law knew them all as hardened killers. “Tulsa Jack” had once worked as a cowboy but preferred robbing trains to riding fence. Dynamite Dick got his name from his favorite tool—he was the gang’s explosives expert, always grinning as he lit the fuse. Arkansas Tom was a brooding, unpredictable sort who claimed he only rode with the gang for the excitement.

Gingerbread, Lies & Murder (Book Trailer)