A Tenderfoot Bride: Tales from an Old Ranch

A Tenderfoot Bride: Tales from an Old Ranch
Author: Clarice E. Richards
Publisher: DigiCat
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2022-06-03
Genre: History
ISBN:

"A Tenderfoot Bride" is a memoir by Clarice E. Richards of Dayton, Ohio, who moved to a ranch in Elbert County, Colorado, east of Pikes Peak, in 1900. She was a bride of Jarvis Richards, a former Congregational minister from Vermont. It was an unlikely landing spot for these two educated easterners, but Clarice, with her inquisitiveness and lively sense of humor, became extensively westernized as she witnessed the high tide of the wild, lawless days, followed by much more grazing eras of the sheepman and farmer. Excerpt: "When our train left Colorado Springs and headed out into those vast stretches of the prairie, which spread East like a great green ocean from the foot of Pike's Peak, all the sensations of Christopher Columbus setting sail for a new world, and a few peculiarly my own, mingled in my breast. As the train pounded along I stole a look at Owen. He was absorbed in the contemplation of a map of our new holdings. Under that calm exterior I suspected hidden attributes of the primitive man. Certainly, there was some reason why Western life was to his liking, having had the chance to choose."

A Tenderfoot in Montana

A Tenderfoot in Montana
Author: Francis McGee Thompson
Publisher: Montana Historical Society
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2004
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780972152228

Frank Thompson vividly recalls his experiences in gold-rush era Montana, where sought his fortune, served in the first territorial legislature, and met some of the territory's most notorious road agents.

A Tenderfoot In Colorado

A Tenderfoot In Colorado
Author: Richard Baxter Townshend
Publisher: University Press of Colorado
Total Pages: 301
Release: 2011-05-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 1457109387

Now back in print, A Tenderfoot in Colorado is R. B. Townshend's classic account of his time in the wild frontier territory known as Colorado. Townshend arrived in the Rockies in 1869, fresh from Cambridge, England, with $300 in his pockets. He found friends among some of Colorado's more colorful characters, people who taught him much about life on the frontier. Jake Chisolm taught him how to shoot after rescuing him from two men preparing to skin him at poker. Wild Bill of Colorado taught him the meaning of "the drop" and warned him against wearing a gun in town unless he wanted trouble. Capturing the Western vernacular more accurately than any other writer, Townshend includes vivid details of life in the West, where he killed a buffalo, prospected for gold, and was present for the official government conference with the Ute Indians after gold was discovered on their lands.

A Tenderfoot in Southern California

A Tenderfoot in Southern California
Author: Mina Deane Halsey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 162
Release: 1908
Genre: California, Southern
ISBN:

Written as a letter to "Bill." Author's spoof of accounts of California travel and recounts a "tenderfoot's" rail journey west, stays in Los Angeles and Pasadena, Mount Lowe, Hollywood, and Catalina.

A Tenderfoot Kid on Gyp Water

A Tenderfoot Kid on Gyp Water
Author: Carl Peters Benedict
Publisher: Pickle Partners Publishing
Total Pages: 147
Release: 2018-03-12
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1789121027

Still wet behind the ears in 1894, Carl Benedict was “crazy to get away and work on the range.” In the summer, he hooked up with a big outfit called the Figure 8 to round up cattle in the Texas Panhandle. Out of that experience came this book, published fifty years later, about what it was really like to be a cowboy in some ornery country checkered by canyons and gyp water springs. A Tenderfoot Kid on Gyp Water is all the more engaging for being unpretentious. During daily drives, the Kid learns how to ride, rope, brand, and hobble cattle and horses. The cowboys who teach him are not stereotyped or romanticized. Life on the range is too immediate and real to require Hollywood heroics. But every day brings drama: blockbuster fights of fierce wild bulls, treacherous river crossings with thousands of cattle in the water at once. Some nights bring thunderstorms and stampedes. And through it all those “cattle, horses, and also men who were not physically fit and healthy soon died or disappeared.” “One of the best books ever written on the Texas range.”—William S. Reese, Six Score: The 120 Best Books on the Range Cattle Industry. “Intelligence, [a] sense of humor, rightness of heart, observant sympathy for nature, and gentle sensitiveness [are] manifest throughout A Tenderfoot Kid on Gyp Water.”—J. Frank Dobie.