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The War on Powder River

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

$10.09
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Book Overview

On a blizzardy morning in 1892, fifty armed men surrounded the cabin on Powder River where two cattle rustlers had spent the night. The first rustler was shot as he came down the path for a bucket of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

The way it was back then.

This is a great book, well written, accurate,and easy to read. I was raised and cut my teeth on "The Johnson County War" as my Great Grandmother, FAIRY FLAGG (Maria Imogene Spang Taylor Flagg)was Jack Flagg's wife and I could be just a tiny bit prejudice.Alonzo Taylor ( Jack Flagg's stepson) was my mothers uncle. This book is part of our family history. Of all the books that I have read on what happened there in Wyoming in 1892, this one seems to be the fairest on all counts. Maybe its because it comes from a woman's point of view. I would recommend it to anyone interested in "The Johnson County War>". Nathelle Stollens

One of the best...

If you only read one book about the Cattlemen's War in Wyoming, this should be the one. This is the most thoroughly researched book on the subject I have read to date. It is also very interesting to read and hard to put down. The author does an excellant job of presenting the events leading up to (causing) the invasion. Each chapter is accompanied by the author's extensive notes detailing her research (at the back of the book). Although much of the book contains the author's opinion, those opinions are credible and backed up by her extensive research. This author portrays the Cattlemen unfavorably. Until this book, I have always leaned toward the Cattlemen's cause. This author's thorough research and presentation have changed my POV. I will humbly point out a possible minor error on page 283. The author writes "A daughter of the lively rustler Lee Moore... married a son of W.C. Irvine." I think it is the other way around. W.C. Irvine, an invader, owned the Ogallala ranch. The Ogallala Ranch is still in operation today, but it is owned by the Moore family. History is written by the victors, and the Johnson County War is no exception. There are plenty of books available, written by both sides, and I have read several. I feel this one is the most thorough presentation.

A must read for Western lovers

On July 20, 1899, a robust hog farmer-prostitute and her innkeeper friend were strung up on a stunted pine overlooking Spring Creek Gulch. A detective working for the Wyoming Stockgrowers Association led the gang of lynchers. Johnson County's hard-up cowboys turned homesteaders, whom the cattlemen labeled cow "rustlers," reacted with anger and fear and began arming themselves for the pending invasion of gunslingers hired by the cattle barons. This true crime story --- if the West could have true crime before it actually had much law --- is recounted in wonderful detail by Helena Huntington Smith. Smith tells this story with an engaging true to life flavor. To accomplish this she uses letters written by the cattlemen themselves, an abundance of not-quite-objective but many sided accounts by writers from the East and by Wyoming's country editors at the time. All this is supplemented with information from a few books and "confessions" produced by participants. For anyone who has been fascinated by Westerns in film and on TV, this book should become a must read. It is as close as anyone is likely to come to "the true story" behind the myth that underlies the West.

It's a Wyoming thing....

I had the privilege of living in Wyoming for seven years. If you want to spark a LIVELY discussion,bring up the Johnson County War(which is the subject of this fine book) anywhere in Johnson or Sheridan counties. Decendents of both factions still live there & continue to have strong opinions on this event. Cutting to the chase,this was nothing other than an armed invasion of a U.S. territory by a mercenary army of gunmen hired by The Wyoming Stockgrowers Association with the express purpose of killing aproximately 125 people on a (very real) hit list & seizing control of established local government. The enormity of the conspiracy far exceeded any of the various western range wars of the period-even though the total body count was fairly minimal. Fortunately for the residents of Johnson county,these Texas thugs were about as adept at the blitz invasion business as were the ATF incompetents when attempting to enter the Branch Dravidian compound in Waco. It would be gratifying to say that these hired murderers were repulsed,arrested & punished. Unfortunately,that didn't happen. Cavalry from nearby Fort Kinney saved their bacon by rescuing the invaders from the furious residents & whisking them away to Cheyenne where the the entire matter finally fizzled out with no charges or trial. It did,however,effectively blunt the unchallenged power of the monopoly WSGA. Internecene sniping continued until 1902 with the hanging of their hireling Tom Horn. As Ms. Smith amply points out,however,Wyoming justice has rarely been a polished or unambiguous affair. I would say that this is the classic & most even handed account of a most extraordinary event even by Wyoming standards.

More like a 4 1/2 star book

This is a very fine, well-written book, and it has become pretty much a standard text in the history of the West. Though the setting is by and large eastern Wyoming of the late nineteenth century, and the subject matter is cattle ranching, this book will be much more satisfying to liberal-minded historians and populists than typical cattle ranchers. Anyone who appreciates or sympathizes with the underdogs in SHANE but would like a more historically accurate picture of the struggles for land and cattle in the West might want to give this a look. It is wholly satisfying from expository, sociopolitical, and historical standpoints.
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