wild women of the west

Wild Women Of The West: Madam Mollie Johnson

April 26, 2023
Among the spectators attending the baseball game at Fort Meade in mid-June 1879 between the Hard Scrabbles and the Never Sweats was brothel owner and operator Mollie Johnson and three of her best employees. All wore burgundy or emerald-green, silk taffeta and velvet dresses, and their blond curls dangled haphazardly from beneath the fancy bonnets...

Wild Women Of The West: Prairie Rose Henderson

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April 19, 2023
On March 1, 1933, four men left Casper, Wyoming, to search for a woman that had been missing since mid-February.  Mrs. Rose Coleman was reported missing by her husband, the reputed cattle rustler Charles W. Coleman.  Charles wrote his brother-in-law Ernest Gale from jail informing him that he’d not heard from his wife for more...

Wild Women Of The West: Madam Dora DuFran

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April 12, 2023
Judge Harold R. Hanley hammered the striking block with his gavel after announcing the verdict the jury had rendered against one of the Black Hills most well-known madams, Dora DuFran. It was 1928, and the Rapid City, South Dakota, courtroom was filled with curious onlookers eager to learn the specifics in the case against the...

Wild Women Of The West: Frieda Fligelman & Belle Fligelman Winestine

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March 29, 2023
Jeannette Rankin has a statue in Montana’s capitol and in Washington D.C.’s Statuary Hall, but two young suffragists from Helena, Montana, stand as boldly in history as champions for the cause of women’s rights. Frieda Fligelman, born in 1890, and her one-year-younger sister, Belle, were the only children in a prosperous, well-educated, Jewish household, who...

Wild Women Of The West: Mary Pennington

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March 22, 2023
“Underfeeding will make a coward of a nation,” Dr. Mary Pennington announced at the National Poultry, Butter and Egg Association conference in Chicago in October 1917.  “A hungry man may rise to a moment of valor, but when a whole people are hungry, they become moral and physical weaklings.”  At the time Dr. Pennington made...

Wild Women Of The West: Lillian Smith

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March 8, 2023
The polite but enthusiastic applause from 40,000 Londoners brought a huge smile to fifteen-year-old Lillian Smith’s face.  Her performance before England’s Queen Victoria was the highlight of her early time with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. It was the fiftieth anniversary of the queen’s rule, and the stands were filled with royalty from across Europe. ...

Wild Women Of The West: Fox Hastings

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March 1, 2023
Cowboy Bill Pickett is credited with introducing the sport of bulldogging to rodeos in 1907.  In bulldogging, the rider dashes after a mad, fleeing steer; leans out from the saddle; throws himself onto the steer’s horns; and bringing the beast to the ground in a swirling scramble of dust and a half a pound of...

Wild Women Of The West: Prairie Rose Henderson

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February 22, 2023
On March 1, 1933, four men left Casper, Wyoming, to search for a woman that had been missing since mid-February.  Mrs. Rose Coleman was reported missing by her husband, the reputed cattle rustler Charles W. Coleman.  Charles wrote his brother-in-law Ernest Gale from jail informing him that he’d not heard from his wife for more...

Wild Women Of The West: Lulu Bell Parr

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February 15, 2023
An angry chestnut mare dashed out of the wire enclosure, bucking and twisting.  The rider on its back gripped the reins with all her strength.  The horse pitched, whirled, and kicked in an attempt to eject the passenger.  Lulu Bell Parr, the tenacious cowgirl atop the animal, held on tightly, determined not to be thrown. ...
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