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Jesse James was really not a good guy and; more fascinating facts about the Wild West
When
asked to picture the Wild West, most people are likely to call up a
scene from a Hollywood movie—gun-slinging cowboys, crazy shootouts, and
nefarious villains. The real American West, however, was not nearly so
exciting or violent as the big screen portrayal. In fact, there are many
facets of the Wild West that are incorrectly represented in our media.
Below are ten such facets that many of you may have misconceptions
about.
There
was a massive influx of settlers into the Wild West, so it makes sense
that one of the biggest issues they had to deal with was traffic. People
would often travel in large groups—packs of wagons would stretch as far
as the eye could see. If you were at the front of the pack, it wasn’t a
problem, but the people in the back had to deal with several obstacles.
The Plains were dusty, and the front wagons would kick up this dust.
This was such a problem that people in the back wagons had to wear
special goggles to protect their eyes. Another issue was grazing. The
animals located in the front could graze freely, but by the time the
animals in the back got to the same area, all the plants would have been
eaten. Thus, the horses and livestock had nothing to eat. Lastly, the
people in the front would set up latrines—everyone has to go at some
point—but these were often poorly constructed and would contaminate the
water supply of those who followed.
California was not the site of the first Gold Rush.
Most
history books will claim that 1848 and 1849 are the years that the Gold
Rush started, but in fact, gold had already caused a stir elsewhere.
Large gold deposits had been found in North Carolina and Georgia several
years prior to the ones found in California. In 1799, a young North
Carolina boy found a seventeen-pound gold nugget.
Interestingly, neither
he nor his family knew that it was gold and used the nugget as a
doorstop until someone bought it for $3.60. A gold rush in 1828 occurred
in the hills of Georgia. When gold was discovered in California, people
who had struck out in North Carolina and Georgia made their way West
for another chance.
Camels
are probably not the first thing to come to mind when thinking about
the Wild West, but there were hundreds of feral camels wandering around
the Southwest United States. The reason for their presence was an
experiment conducted by the U.S. government in the 1850’s. In 1855,
Congress gave $30,000 to the Army so that they could buy and ship camels
from Egypt to the U.S.
The idea was that the camels would do better
than horses in the hot desert climate. The experiment was actually
pretty successful—until the Civil War broke out. After the start of the
war, many of the camels escaped and started breeding. They were
incorporated into the wild landscape. Then, in the 1940’s, the camels
population dwindled out, which is why we don’t see them today.
In
his time, Jesse James was heralded by the newspapers as a Robin Hood
type figure who robbed the rich and gave to the poor. This is largely
contrary to the truth. The reality is that Jesse James was friends with
John Newman Edwards. The two exchanged letters frequently and became
close friends. Edwards wrote for the pro-Confederate paper in Missouri
and would defend James, claiming he was a hero and painting him in a
more positive light.
There were relatively low rates of violence.
This
might disillusion some people, but it is true. Despite Hollywood using
violence as a common thread in almost all Western movies, the Wild West
wasn’t really that wild. Bank robberies were basically unheard of.
Most
Western communities were tightly knit, and since there were so few laws
in place, people were more inclined to make friends with their neighbors
than make enemies of them. The homicide rate was fairly low—large areas
such as Dodge City and Wichita had a murder rate of 0.6 per year, for
example. Many historians actually believe that the world today is much
more violent than it was back then.
While
braving the Wild West, a gun was pretty much a necessity. Wild animals
and lawless bandits could be fought off with a gun, so many people
carried. That being said, however, the gun control laws of the time were
much stricter than they are today.
In many cities, people were
encouraged to leave their gun with the sheriff in return for a check.
People were allowed to have guns, but it was highly discouraged for
people to bring them out in public. Interestingly, one of the first laws
passed in Dodge City was a gun control law, while several other
frontier towns simply banned carrying guns openly.
Many
of us are familiar with the names Billy the Kid or Wild Bill Hickok and
most of us know the incredible stories that they feature in. But that’s
the thing—they are just stories. Many of these outlaws shaped their
reputations with fiction. Buffalo Bill, for example, when he started
touring the Wild West, performing plays, he hired Wild Bill—only to
promptly fire him for talking in a feminine voice.
Jesse James used
press releases that he left at the scenes of his robberies to establish
his reputation, and Billy the Kid’s body count was much lower in
reality. He might claim to have killed twenty people, but only killed
four.
In
the movies, there are two staples in the Old West wardrobe: cowboy
boots and cowboy hats. They really did wear the boots, but the cowboy
hats we associate with the Wild West didn’t come into style until 1865
when John Stetson invented them.
Cowboys actually wore bowler hats. This
type of hat was considered the most appropriate and versatile hat for
all kinds of social situations. Although common, bowler hats weren’t the
only style to be worn. Other popular hats were the wide-brimmed pancake
hats and the floppy top hats.
9. Prostitutes were shunned.
Hollywood
movies often depict saloons full of working girls who all seem to have
been accepted into the society of the time. The music would be playing
loudly while men and women flirt at the bar. Sadly, this was hardly the
case in reality. Prostitutes in the Old West were considered to be on
the very bottom rung of society. Photos of the working girls would be
printed in local papers in order to shame them, and editorials sometimes
suggested that the girls should commit suicide by taking morphine or
strychnine. This belief was so rampant that at one time, suicide was
thought to be the only way out of prostitution in the West. Frontier
communities, being isolated and mostly self-sufficient, didn’t offer any
type of social services. Usually the church was the only source of
charity in a town, and they certainly did not want anything to do with
prostitutes.
10. Water was almost as valuable as gold.
sourceFor
travelers in the West, water was a valuable commodity. Whereas bacon
cost a measly penny, water cost between one dollar and 100 dollars.
Californian businessmen would even travel out to points on the Oregon
Trail and sell overpriced water to desperate settlers. At times, this
meant that water was sold at the same price as gold. This lack of water
not only affected people’s thirst. the lack of water meant that few
people could afford to take a bath. This is the reason that cowboys and
frontiersmen became known for being extremely smelly. When first contact
between the settlers and the Native Americans occurred, the tribes were
often shocked and appalled by how uncivilized and smelly the settlers
appeared.
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