The American Old West was a period of history of western North America (usually the Western United States, though many times including the Canadian prairies, northern Mexico, the South and sometimes even the Midwest). Most often the term refers to the late 19th century, between the American Civil War and the 1890 closing of the frontier. Terms Old West and Wild West refer to life beyond the settled frontier. While this terminology could logically place the setting as far back as the American colonial period, it is usually meant to signify, the late 19th century, the area from the "Frontier Strip" (i.e., the six U.S. states from North Dakota south to Texas) west to the Pacific Ocean. Sometimes the tier of states east of the Frontier strip (Minnesota to Louisiana) is also seen as the "Wild West" because of their stance as gateways.
As a setting for works of fiction, the period quickly became so popular as to define its own genre, the "Western." Although such works often put forth a highly romanticized conception of the era, they also promoted great interest in its true history.
The numerous native tribes of North America stretched from coast to coast and from Mexico to the Arctic Regions of Canada and Alaska. In the Great Plains of the United States and Canada, the Blackfeet, Lakota, Sioux, Fox, Sauk, and Comanche lived nomadic lives of hunting and gathering. The Paiute, Nez Perce, Crow, and Flathead lived in the Rocky Mountains of Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana. In the southwest, the Apache and Navajo dominated the stark, unforgiving landscapes for many years. Both tribes incorporated similar methods of survival, including farming. The Navajo were known for being peaceful. The Apache were more war-like, especially when forced into grim situations by the U.S. military. They fought fiercely for their freedom during the mid-late 1800s. The Apaches hold the distinction of being among the last of the Native American tribes to surrender to U.S. expansion. This occurred in 1886, with the surrender of Geronimo.
The first Europeans to visit the American Interior were probably the Spanish. Spanish explorer Francisco Vásquez de Coronado crossed the Arkansas River in 1541 and visited the central part of what is now the United States.
In 1598. Captain General Juan de Oñate brought a group of about 400 soldier-settlers and their families from New Spain (present-day Mexico) across the Rio Bravo del Norte (Rio Grande) north into what is now the state of New Mexico and established a temporary settlement near present day Española, New Mexico. In 1610, these Spanish settlers established the city of Santa Fe, New Mexico, the second oldest continuously inhabited European settlement in what is now the United States.
In 1776, in search of a better way of life, Juan Bautista de Anza led a group of almost 300 settlers, soldiers, and their families on an expedition across the Sonoran and Colorado Deserts along the edge of the Spanish Empire. The path they took is now referred to as the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail.
Another large influence in the "early" west were the French. It was from the French that the United States acquired the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. This significantly expanded the country's borders. The explorations of Lewis and Clark, from 1804-1806, opened the door to new discoveries, but it also brought about conflict with the Spanish, as well as Native Americans.
Mike Fink, a semi-legendary brawler and river-boatman, was an early frontiersman who travelled into the Old West. He supposedly died around 1823 in the Rocky Mountains on a trip scouting, rafting, and trapping. The nature of his death involved an argument over a "cher ami" (sic).
John Charles Frémont assisted and led multiple surveying expeditions through the western territory of the United States from 1838 to 1846.
Pleasant Tackitt (April 22, 1803–February 7, 1886) was a 19th century politician, pioneer minister, stockman, teacher, farmer, Indian fighter and Confederate Officer. He was a key figure in the history of Arkansas and north Texas, including a state representative of the Arkansas General Assembly. Because of his battles with Indians, Tackitt became known as the "fighting parson."
The Oregon Trail was a key overland migration route on which pioneers traveled across the North American continent in wagons. This trail helped the United States implement its cultural goal of Manifest Destiny, that is to build a great nation spanning the North American continent. The Oregon Trail spanned over half the continent as the wagon trail proceeded over 2,000 miles west through territories and land later to become six U.S. states (Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Idaho, and Oregon). Between 1841 and 1869, the Oregon Trail was used by settlers to the Northwest and West Coast areas of what is now the United States. The California Trail, sharing a portion of the Oregon Trails route, was another major overland emigrant route across the American West from Missouri to California in the middle 19th century. It was used by 250,000 farmers and gold-seekers to reach the California gold fields and farm homesteads in California beginning in the late 1840s.
Crockett took part in the Battle of the Alamo (February 23 - March 6, 1836) and was assigned to defend the south palisade in front of the chapel. The Texas forces of 180-250 were overwhelmed by the 1,300-1,600 Mexican soldiers. Tradition has it that Crockett went down fighting inside the Alamo. Controversial evidence has come to light since 1955 (Jose Enrique De la Pena diary) indicating that there may have been a half dozen or so survivors, with Crockett perhaps among them, taken prisoner by Mexican General Manuel Fernandez Castrillon after the battle and summarily executed on orders by General and President of Mexico Antonio López de Santa Anna. Both views enjoy support among historians. Another conflicting issue with the Battle of the Alamo concerns the number of Mexicans casualties. Santa Anna reported that only 250 of his men had been wounded or killed. While a few historians claim that Santa Anna was telling the truth, some others believe the number of Mexican casualities exceeded 1,000. Most historians, however, put the number of Mexican casualities somewhere in between, with about 600 to 700 wounded or dead.
Despite the defeat at the Alamo, the fighting continued and Texas won its independence at the Battle of San Jacinto that spring.
Texas eventually applied for admission as a U.S. state, a situation that the Mexican government called an act of war. After a gunbattle in the Rio Grande Valley between Mexican troops and a U.S. scouting party (Most historians agree that the battle took place on the Mexican side of the border), it was declared that "American blood has been shed on American soil," and the Mexican-American War began. Winfield Scott and Zachary Taylor led full-scale campaigns deep into Mexico. Americans in California revolted and set up the short-lived California Republic. The end result of the controversial war was that a vast new swath of land became U.S. territory, open for Anglo settlements.
In 1852, the Mormon practice of plural marriage was publicly announced. Congress quickly moved to outlaw polygamy, beginning a conflict between Mormons and the U.S. government that would last for 40 years. Tensions reached their highest in 1857 during the Utah War, when President Buchanan sent an army led by Albert Sidney Johnston to remove Brigham Young from office and install a new governor. Mormons, including Porter Rockwell and Lot Smith, fought a bloodless war, stalling the army and damaging their supplies, which forced them to spend the winter in present-day Wyoming. When spring arrived, the army entered Salt Lake and Young stepped down. Unfortunately, during the period of confusion and heightened tensions, Mormons and Ute Indians attacked a California bound wagon train in what would come to be known as the Mountain Meadows massacre.
The California Gold Rush was the 1848-1858 gold rush, a type of mass hysteria, sparked by the discovery of gold in the millrace at Sutter's Mill near Coloma, California, northeast of Sacramento. Ex-Mormon pioneer Sam Brannan delivered the news to the world. The period is marked by mass migrations across the old west into Northern California. It was among the most important eras of migration in American history, and led to statehood for California. The peak of the rush was 1849, and immigrants of this period became known as '49ers. His Imperial Majesty Emperor Norton I, was a celebrated citizen of San Francisco who famously proclaimed himself "Emperor of these United States and Protector of Mexico" in 1859. Although he had no political power, and his influence extended only so far as he was humored by those around him, he was treated deferentially in San Francisco, and currency issued in his name was honored in the establishments he frequented.
Wild Bill Hickok, in 1855, was a stagecoach driver on the Santa Fe route and Oregon Trail. His gunfighting skills led to his nickname. He lived a while in Johnson County, Kansas and later was a town constable in Nebraska. He became well-known for single-handedly capturing the McCanles gang, through the use of a ruse. On several other occasions, Hickok confronted and killed several men while fighting alone. The Pony Express Trail from St. Joseph, Missouri, to Sacramento, California, was also in use around this time. It was 1840 miles in length. The Pony Express Trail traversed the states of Missouri and California and the intrevening Utah Territory, Nebraska Territory, and Kansas Territory lands (the present day states include: Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, and California). It only stayed in operation for 18 months, between April 1860 and October 1861, being replaced by the telegraph..
When the Civil War erupted in April of 1861, Kit Carson resigned his post as federal Indian agent for northern New Mexico Territory and offered to help organize the New Mexico volunteer infantry. Although New Mexico Territory officially allowed slavery, geography and economics made the institution so impractical that there were only a handful of slaves within its boundaries. The territorial government and the leaders of opinion all threw their support to the the Union. Carson participated in the Battle of Valverde (February 20–21, 1862), fought in and around the town of Valverde in the New Mexico Territory. It was a major Confederate success in the New Mexico Campaign of the American Civil War, despite having to leave later after the Battle of Glorieta Pass, which was a major Union victory. In the 1850s, Henry Hopkins Sibley invented the "Sibley tent", which was later widely used in the frontier.
In 1862, Cochise and Mangas Coloradas, with 500 fighters, fought against a force of 3000 California volunteers under Carleton until howitzer artillery fire was brought to bear on their position. This was part of a series of conflicts between the encroaching Americans and the Apache. Cochise and the Apache continued their raids against American and Mexican settlements and military positions throughout the 1860s. The Colorado War (1864–1865) were clashes centered on the Colorado Eastern Plains between the U.S. Army and an alliance consisting largely of the Cheyenne and Arapaho. The Sioux Uprising (1862) unleashed a series of skirmishes in the southwestern quadrant of Minnesota which resulted in hundreds of dead. In the largest mass execution in U.S. history, 38 Lakota were hung. About 1,600 others were soon sent to a reservation in present-day South Dakota.
In the cities, business houses, dance halls and saloons catered to the Texas cattle drive trade. The historic Chisholm Trail was used for cattle drives. The trail ran for 800 miles from South Texas to Abilene, Kansas and was used from 1867 to 1887 to drive cattle northward to the railhead of the Kansas Pacific Railway, where they were shipped eastward. The trail was named after Jesse Chisholm who had built a number of trading posts. Cattle rustling was a sometimes serious offense and was always a hazard for the expeditions. It could result in the rustler's lynching by vigilantes (but most stories of this type are fictional). Mexican rustlers were a major issue during the American Civil War, with the Mexican government being accused of supporting the habit. Texans likewise stole cattle from Mexico, swimming them across the Rio Grande.
The Apache and Navajo Wars (1861–1886) had Col. Christopher "Kit" Carson fighting the Apache around the reservations in 1862. Skirmishes between the U.S. and Apaches continue until 1886, when Geronimo surrenders to U.S. forces. Kit Carson used a scorched earth policy in the Navajo campaign, burning Navajo fields and homes, and stealing or killing their livestock. He was aided by other Indian tribes with long-standing enmity toward the Navajos, chiefly the Utes. He later fought a combined force of Kiowa, Comanche and Cheyenne to a draw at the First Battle of Adobe Walls, but managed to destroy the Indian village and winter supplies. On June 27 1874 'Bat' Masterson and a small group of buffalo hunters fought much larger Indian force at the Second Battle of Adobe Walls.
Red Cloud's War (1866–1868) was lead by the Lakota chief Makhpyia luta (Red Cloud) and was the most successful war against the U.S. during the Indian Wars. By the Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868), the U.S. granted a large reservation to the Lakota, without military presence or oversight, no settlements, and no reserved road building rights. The reservation included the entire Black Hills.
Captain Jack, was a chief of the Native American Modoc tribe of California and Oregon, and was their leader during the Modoc War (1872–1873). With 53 Modoc warriors, under Captain Jack held off 1000 men of the U.S. Army for 7 months. Captain Jack killed Edward Canby, who was the only general killed during the Indian Wars (contrary to the occasional impression that Custer ranked higher than lieutenant colonel).
The Black Hills War (1876–1877) was conducted by the Lakota under Tatanka Iyotake (Sitting Bull) and Tasunka witko (Crazy Horse). The conflict began after repeated violations of the Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868). One of its famous battles was the Battle of the Little Bighorn (1876) – Sioux and Cheyenne under the leadership of Tatanka Iyotake (Sitting Bull) and Tasunka witko (Crazy Horse) defeat the 7th Cavalry under George Armstrong Custer.
The end of the Indian Wars came at the Massacre of Wounded Knee (December 28, 1890) where Tatanka Iyotake's half-brother, Big Foot, and some 200 Sioux are killed by the U.S. 7th Cavalry. (Only thirteen days before, Tatanka Iyotake had been killed with his son Crow Foot in a gun battle with a group of Indian police that had been sent by the American government to arrest him.)
In 1899, Nikola Tesla moved and began research with his "Magnifying transmitter" in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he could have room for his high-voltage high-frequency experiments. Upon his arrival he told reporters that he was conducting wireless telegraphy experiments transmitting signals from Pikes Peak to Paris. Tesla's diary contains explanations of his experiments concerning the ionosphere and the ground's telluric currents via transverse waves and longitudinal waves.
There is a nonfiction side of the American West, too, as in, for example, Robert Laxalt's memoir Sweet Promised Land, in which Dominique Laxalt, his father, a Basque sheepherder, revisits the old country. The book ends with Laxalt's desire to return to his home in Nevada: "... and he saw the mountains of the West rise up ...". Nevertheless, the untamable mystique of the Wild West lives on with fascination with a simpler world of salt of the Earth values. Of note, Cowboy Action Shooting is one of the fastest growing American sports today, combining marksmanship with the theatricality of a historical reenacting of the gunslinging Wild West days.
Western movie locations usually form the backdrop that identifies the genre. Tom Mix, Hopalong Cassidy, Gene Autry and The Lone Ranger films were usually shot near Lone Pine, California, where since the early 1920s, over 300 movies have been filmed. It was director John Ford who first pioneered the "out of California" on-location western, when he began packing up the crew and heading out to Monument Valley, Arizona to film big budget movies like Stagecoach (1939). Starting in the 50's and 60's, Southern Arizona became the hot new location for Westerns to be filmed. Hundreds of Westerns were filmed in and near the expansive Old Tucson studio in Tucson, Arizona.
While many Westerns were filmed in California and Arizona, an overwhelming amount of them depicted Texas. This was done consistently, despite the fact that the landscapes of Arizona and California have distinguishing traits that make them very different from Texas. For example, the famous Saguaro cactus, with its characteristic "arms", is found only in the Sonoran Desert of Southern Arizona and Mexico. Also, many westerns set in Texas show landscapes with Joshua trees in the background. Joshua trees only grow in California and Arizona.
Proving the timelessness of the best stories, one of the most famous and popular Western films of all time, The Magnificent Seven, was actually a Westernized remake of a Japanese film, The Seven Samurai.
Western films, until recent times, were loaded with anachronisms, especially in such things as firearms, with Winchester 1894-model rifles being used in movies set in the 1870s. One reason for this was that many actors portraying cowboys in cheaply-made, early films were hired with their own horses and gear. The Model 94 was far more popular in the early 20th century than were earlier repeating and single-shot rifles which would have been more appropriate, and this is what they brought to the set. A few moviemakers preferred accuracy and realism, but until audiences began to demand this in the late 1960s, the Winchester 94 was the rifle of choice in Hollywood, and the Colt's Single Action Army-type revolver is known worldwide as the "cowboy pistol," despite the fact that the vast majority of revolvers carried in the Old West were of the cap-and-ball type. Since the late 1960s, however, films have shown more of the wide variety of arms used during the period. For instance, Jack Elam carries a revolving rifle during part of Rio Lobo (1970).
Cowboy poetry is a form of poetry that focuses on the culture, features and lifestyle of the West, both the Old West and its modern equivalents. It is not defined by any particular scheme or structure, but by subject matter. Western novels, or cowboy novels, portrayed the west as both a barren landscape and a romanticized idealistic way of living.
It is a common misconception that Akira Kurosawa's film Yojimbo was influenced by certain spaghetti westerns, though quite the reverse is true. A Fistful of Dollars, starring Clint Eastwood, was a remake of Yojimbo in a western setting, as was Kurosawa's The Seven Samurai, which became The Magnificent Seven.
In a mix of Western and modern societies, the 1950s radio and television series Sky King covered the exploits of "America's favorite flying cowboy." Skyler King, who owned the Flying Crown Ranch, his niece Penny, nephew Clipper, and various townspeople of Grover City, Arizona, lived in the post-World War II transitional period of the American West, and dressed in the appropriate Western garb of the time. In some episodes, Sky was shown using his airplane, Songbird, to perform some ranch chore. Sky generally did not wear a pistol, but kept one in his plane, and when needed would take a long gun from the rack near the door to his home. The series plots were generally some form of the classis Western theme of "making the wrong things right."
Some "Westerns" are not set in the West at all (such as most of those involving riverboats, which were rare west of the Missouri River), or even in North America. The 1990 film Quigley Down Under is the tale of a cowboy who goes to Australia. Though not set in the American West, MGM includes this in their "Western Legends" line of videos.
History
Media and literature
American folklore | History of the American West
Wilder Westen | Conquête de l'Ouest | המערב הישן של אמריקה | Wilde Westen | Ville Vesten | Dziki Zachód | Дикий Запад | Villi länsi | Vilda Västern
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"American Old West".
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