She Wore A Yellow Ribbon Winner

CowgirlDancing

And the winner is…

I’m pleased and proud to announce the winner of this month’s book giveaway. Angie McDowell will be receiving a copy of She Wore A Yellow Ribbon: Women Soldiers and Patriots of the Western Frontier.

Next month’s giveaway promises to be the biggest giveaway yet. Those that register will get the chance to win a library of books about women of the Old West. Such titles will include Hearts West, Frontier Teachers, Love Untamed, and The Doctor Wore Petticoats.

Visit www.chrisenss.com for more information.

The Lighthouse Keeper

Last chance to enter to win a copy of

She Wore a Yellow Ribbon: Women Soldiers and Patriots of the Western Frontier.

AngelIsland

Thick, damp, and cold fog pressed against the windows of the small house at Point Knox, condensed in a muted bronze gleam on the huge bell, and slipped clammy fingers inside the cloak of the woman shivering on the small platform. Waves splashed and foamed against the rocks far below the wet planks where Juliet Fish Nichols listened tensely for the creak of rigging or the dull thunder of a steamship’s engine. She hoped she heard something before the she saw it, because any ship close enough to see was doomed.

Automatically, her throbbing arm lifted and she rapped the small hammer twice against the side of the 3,000-pound bell. Fifteen seconds later she struck the bell again. Then, after counting off another fifteen seconds, she elevated the hammer and banged twice more on the great bell. Again and again, four times each minute, Juliet lifted her aching arm and rang the bell, warning ships away from Angel Island in fogbound San Francisco Bay.

At least four ships were due in port that first week of July 1906: the Capac, City of Topeka, and Sea Foam, all of which plied the California coast, as well as the transpacific steamer Mongolia loaded with passengers from the Far East. Unfortunately, the crystal-clear atmosphere of July 1 had deteriorated rapidly in the following few days. Visibility was often no more than a few yards. Impenetrable fog concealed every landmark.

To learn more about Juliet Fish Nichols and other women soldiers and patriots of the Western Frontier read

She Wore A Yellow Ribbon.

 

 

Angel of Goliad

Enter to win a copy of

She Wore a Yellow Ribbon:

Women Soldiers and Patriots of the Western Frontier.

FrancitaAlavez

A slim shadow darted toward the old church at the ruined fortress of Goliad. The smell of smoke stained the night air as the figure picked a careful path through the rubble inside the fortress walls. Moonlight starkly displayed the damage caused by the retreating forces of Col. James Fannin’s command. Hundreds of Fannin’s men now lay on the hard ground, prisoners of Gen. Jose de Urrea, one of Supreme Commandment Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna’s best commanders.

Pausing in a dark corner, Francita Alavez gazed toward the southwest gate and the dull gleam of a cannon positioned to fire on anyone who might attempt a rescue of the American. She shivered in the warm night as the knowledge of their fate bowed her shoulders. She knew what the captives did not. They believed they would be returned to the United States as prisoners of war. Francita had seen the order sent by Santa Anna to execute them all.

To learn more about Francita Alavez and other women soldiers and patriots of the Western Frontier read She Wore A Yellow Ribbon.

 

Tribute to Western Movies Day

Montrose

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Richard Fike

(970) 240-3400

“SIXTH ANNUAL TRIBUTE TO WESTERN MOVIES DAY”

The Museum of the Mountain West announced the Sixth Annual Tribute to Western Movies Day event for Saturday, June 13, 2015, from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. The theme of “Women of the Old West & in Western Film” will feature New York Times best selling author, scriptwriter and comedienne Chris Enss. Her passion for telling the stories of the men and women who shaped the history and mythology of the American West is sure to entertain and delight attendees of all ages.

Gunfights, souvenirs, strollers in period dress, food, a working blacksmith, numerous musical entertainers, and many more attractions too numerous to list, will be on hand to entertain, excite and educate. These are all in addition to the Museum’s regular displays of 25 original buildings, over 500,000 original relics, artifacts, and items of historical significance. Housed in the 10,000 square foot main building is an historic post office, doctor’s and dentist’s offices, drug store, saloon, dry goods store and many more fascinating displays from the past. From the 1913 German Lutheran Church to the 1890 school to the 1882 Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Section House, you will be captivated at life as it was over a century ago.

Come and spend a fun-filled leisurely day learning more about this wonderful area in beautiful southwestern Colorado. Admission is only $10 for the entire day for adults, $5 for school age children and $25 for an immediate family. Better than a television documentary, it is real live history in our own backyard.

Step back in time into the real history of the “Old West” and Western Colorado with a visit to the Museum of the Mountain West in Montrose, Colorado. Food and craft vendor applications available AND volunteers needed. Major sponsors include Montrose County, City of Montrose Office of Business and Tourism, and Alpine Bank.

For additional details, visit www.museumofthemountainwest.org or call 970-240-3400.

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Midwest Book Review of Wicked Women

wicked-women

Midwest Book Review by D. Donovan, Senior Reviewer

Wicked Women: Notorious, Mischievous, and Wayward Ladies from the Old West isn’t about your usual Western woman’s pilgrimage across the plains: it’s a randy, rowdy survey of less-well-behaved female outlaws, gamblers, and other wicked women, and it provides a lively alternative to the usual focus on pioneer homemakers.

During the late nineteenth century, while men were settling the frontier, such women led ‘wicked’ lives when they followed fortune seekers. Their stories have been widely scattered under various headings, so it’s refreshing to find a collection of short, action-packed stories of the Old West here, offering biographical sketches paired with Western history and spiced with insights on purposes and people.

Speaking of ‘spice’, fun black and white vintage photos and illustrations from the author’s own historic collection of images and historical libraries enhances the value and appeal of her coverage, making it a recommendation for collections ranging from women’s history and issues to Western frontier sagas.

Buffalo Soldier

BuffaloSoldierEnter to win a copy of

She Wore a Yellow Ribbon: Women Soldiers and Patriots of the Western Frontier.

A cold sunrise greeted the soldiers stationed at Fort Cummings, New Mexico, on the first day of 1868. An eager bugler sounded a call to arms, and members of the Thirty-eighth Infantry hurried out of their barracks to line up in formation, their rifles perched over their shoulders. The enlisted African-American men who made up the regiment pulled their army-issued jackets tight around their necks in an effort to protect themselves from a bitter winter wind. Among the troops falling into place was Pvt. William Cathay. Cathay proudly stood at attention, willing and ready to do battle with the Apache who were raiding villages and wagon trains heading west. The determined expression the private wore was not unlike the look the other members of the outfit possessed.

The Thirty-eighth Infantry was just one of many black units known as the Buffalo Soldiers, a dedicated division of the U.S. Army that seemed to consistently wear a determined expression. Cathay was not unique in that manner. By all appearances Private Cathay was like the other 134 men who made up Company A. What set this soldier apart from the others, however, was her gender. Cathay was a woman disguised as a man-anxious to follow orders to overtake the Chiricahua Apache warriors.

To learn more about William Cathay and other women soldiers and patriots of the Western Frontier read She Wore A Yellow Ribbon.