Essayer OR - Gratuit
Spark on the Prairie
True West
|September 2021
Hit the road across Oklahoma and Texas to discover the history behind the Warren Wagon Train Raid and the Kiowa Indian Trial of 1871.
It started out as a run-of-the-mill job. Capt. Henry Warren had a contract to deliver supplies to the forts on the Texas frontier, and in the spring of 1871, Warren and his teamsters left Mansfield, Texas, with five wagons loaded with cornmeal and flour.
Mansfield had been a mill mecca since before the Civil War, when Ralph S. Man and Julian Feild built the Man and Feild Mill—the first in North Texas to use steam power. The town that grew up around it became Mansfield because people just weren’t used to spelling F-E-I-L-D. (Today, that mill heritage is showcased at the Man House Museum and the Mansfield Historical Museum & Heritage Center.)
The wagons crossed the Trinity River at Fort Worth (Texas Civil War Museum, Log Cabin Village) and rolled into Weatherford (Doss Heritage and Culture Center), where Warren’s crew joined seven other wagons. Now numbering 12 wagons and 12 men, the train reached Fort Richardson in Jacksboro and continued for Fort Griffin.
What the teamsters had no way of knowing was that a party of Kiowa Indians waited up the trail at Salt Creek Prairie.
Earlier on the reservation near present-day Lawton, Oklahoma, a prophet and medicine man named Maman-ti had talked an estimated 150 Indians into following him on a raid. Among those joining the prophet were the bragging Satanta, young Big Tree and embittered Satank, who had spoken eloquently at the Medicine Lodge treaty negotiations in 1867 but now carried the bones of a son who had been killed in Texas in 1870.
On May 17, a military ambulance and mounted riders passed the Kiowas. But Maman-ti said his vision forbade attacking. Had the prophet said otherwise, history might have been significantly altered, for in the ambulance rode William T. Sherman, bound for Fort Richardson.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition September 2021 de True West.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE True West
True West
Hucklebearer Baloney
And formal ties to Bonney, we Kid you not.
3 mins
January - February 2026
True West
A YEAR OF WESTERNS ON HOLD
The year 2025 was a placeholder for Westerns. The most anticipated Western of the year, Kevin Costner's Horizon: An American Saga, Chapter 2, has yet to arrive.
5 mins
January - February 2026
True West
What HISTORY HAS TAUGHT ME
For my money the best Western movie is The Searchers. John Ford's masterpiece perfected nearly everything the genre had been to that point and shaped nearly everything that came after. That is true greatness.
2 mins
January - February 2026
True West
THE SPIRIT OF THE WEST LIVES ON
OUR ANNUAL CELEBRATION OF DESTINATIONS ACROSS THE WEST SHINES A LIGHT ON THE PLACES THAT KEEP THE FLAME OF HERITAGE ALIVE.
8 mins
January - February 2026
True West
HOW THE WEST WAS WON
PUBLISHERS IN 2025 PLAY TO WIN WITH A FULL HOUSE OF WESTERN HISTORY ROYALTY.
7 mins
January - February 2026
True West
THE FRONTIER SPIRIT LIVES ON
Across the vast, storied landscapes of the American West, there are towns that don't just honor their pasts, they live them.
12 mins
January - February 2026
True West
ART COLLECTIBLES AND THINGS THAT MAKE US WESTERN
Collectors love the Old West, and Western art, firearms and collectibles remain popular coast to coast.
2 mins
January - February 2026
True West
The Dubious and Popular Rock and Rye
Was it liquor or a health tonic?
3 mins
January - February 2026
True West
It's True that True is a True Westerner
True that and all crazy true.
1 min
January - February 2026
True West
THE SEARCHERS
THE MAKING OF AN AMERICAN LEGEND
9 mins
January - February 2026
Translate
Change font size
