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When George Custer went on a buffalo hunt with Buffalo Bill Cody and Russia’s Grand Duke Alexis in 1872, he looked handsome and dashing in his fringed buckskins and trademark red kerchief.
– True West Archives –
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Lawrence Kreger
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Glenn Chartrand Custer cut a dashing figure alright but he was a fool.... The Indians called him "Squaw Killer" if I remember correctly!
LikeReply851 mins
Genell Cheek Ah, Gen. George A. Custer, Oh his yellow hair had luster, But the General he don't ride well anymore" from Johnny Cash album
LikeReply7 mins
When were boots made specifically for right and left feet?
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Lawrence Kreger
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Ron Armstrong If you had a professional boot maker do that,, it would be very expensive!
LikeReply1 hr
Emilie Klein When folks kept walking into the wall.
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Who could imagine Calamity Jane without her buckskins? In fact, this image of her, originally taken around 1876 in Deadwood, South Dakota, is so often the one most folks conjure when they hear her name, that seeing her in a dress (and she has worn them in plenty of photos) seems strange! 
– Courtesy Robert G. McCubbin Collection –
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Lawrence Kreger
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Peter Agriostathes Wild Bill Hickock coild not stand being near Camity Jane , she idolized him and would not leave him alone , So After Hickok died then when Jane died they Buried her right next to him as a joke to aggrivate him! if you are in Deadwood SD go up the hill and where they are Buried!
LikeReply3617 hrs
Bill Lindsay Interestingly, Calamity Jane loved to take care of sick and injured people, and from the I've read, she was good at it
LikeReply2518 hrs
Looking typical of wealthy Californio landowners in the 1800s, this meticulously dressed gentleman wears a white suit with natty touches that include his pristine sombrero charro, a pinned cravat, watch fob and pearl-handled pistol in its embellished holster.
– Courtesy Robert G. McCubbin Collection –
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Lawrence Kreger
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Christopher Kilbride He looks a lot like Christopher Lee as Fu Manchu.

I do like his suit and boots, but he really should've been careful where his pistol was pointing.
LikeReply1323 hrs
Glenn Chartrand He would've been one of the last Spanish/Castilian landed gentry dandys.... By the time of "Forty Niners" all of old Spanish/Mexican land grants wouldn't of been worth the paper they were written on.
Rodeo cowgirl Vera McGinnis’s photo album includes this rare photo of a young John Ford (seated fourth from left, with cowboy hat) and Harry Carey Sr. (seated third from right). Harry Carey Jr., who died on December 27, 2012, said the photo looked to be taken in 1917, in Placerita Canyon near Newhall, California, where the duo had filmed many of their early films. Carey Sr. and Ford made 26 silent Westerns, but only three have survived. Sadly, the rest “rotted in the cans,” Carey Jr. told True West. “Nobody bothered to even try and save ’em.”
– Courtesy Jendreau Family Collection –
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Lawrence Kreger
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Dave Patterson That's one sweet saddle in the background; can't really expand the zoom enough to tell without it going pixalated, but the skirt shape appears to be a Visalia pattern.
Kris Stewart I love this shot. Great pic. I love the fact that real hands back then didn't shape/ crease their hats based on what the latest country music singers or western fashion catalogs did with their hats. 
They were their own men and their gear was as unique to their own styles and ways of do'n their jobs.