I listened to all 5 episodes and I learned a lot about the Texas Rangers and was very impressed and entertained with the way you presented it, Well Done Sir. 👍
I’m from former Indian territory, you know.. Oklahoma, and my grandad actually was born in Brooksville, Oklahoma. One of the 13 only black towns in America. He tells me all the time how His dad would tell him the stories his grandad would tell him about the history of Brooksville. There’s also lots of abandoned towns in Oklahoma that were built in the 19th and early 20th century
Can't miss with stories about Texas Rangers. Stuff that sounds ridiculous, nothing that could ever possibly happen, except that it did. One riot, one Ranger
These stories are very well done. Informative and entertaining as well. It should be noted that iron jacket the Comanche leader killed at the battle of antelope hills and featured in episode #4 is the father in law to cynthia ann parker
Great Podcast. You did a very good job. About to start your series on Deadwood. It is my second favorite show. Justified will always be number one. I also listened to your Battle of little bighorn series. You have a new fan. Keep up the great work
The battle at the end of "The Searchers" might have been inspired by events later and the battle which discovered Cynthia Ann but Wayne's character and story is more inspired by the black Texan Britt Johnson who tirelessly pursued the Comanche searching for his family after a raid which was also later made into a TV movie called "Black Fox"
The life pf Charles Goodnight is pretty interesting in its own right. If you ever do the history of Texas cattle drives, you will find that Goodnight created the first cattle trail, the Goodnight-Loving Trail to circumvent Comanche country. He led the way in gathering up loose cattle after the War of Northern Aggression, founded a major ranch, saved a bison herd, and invented the chuck wagon. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Goodnight
I'm a custom knife maker by trade. And have a customer who wants to do a knife in memory of Jack Hays. And I need to know what company was Jack Coffee Hays in so I can get a Texas Ranger badge made with his company name on it.
Should've never brought her back. She was "Naduah", a Quahadi war chiefs squaw, mother of three Quahadi Nermernuh children. Returning Naduah to civilisation was similar to caging a wild-caught she-wolf; cruel and utterly stupid. Taking the life of his father, taking away his mother and sister served only to make her eldest sons hatred and revenge a lethal living thing. Yes, in the end Quanah walked 'The White Man's path', but at what cost to life before such time?
I agree. Just let her live her life. She may have been captured, but she found a better life there. As fierce as they were, the Commanches weren't "savages"; they were just people defending their land and families. That's the mistake the white man made.
Of course in any other circumstance people would call this "Stockholm syndrome". Like far to many situations in life there was no "right" answer. Only less bad ones. In this case they might have failed in selecting the "less bad" option, but the choice they made wasn't entirely unreasonable.
@@ChibiPanda8888wym they weren't savages? They brutalized other Indian tribes as well..stop the bs narratives that they were peace pipe smoking hippies
I used to mow around Cynthia's original grave in Tennessee Colony, Texas. Though I'm kin to them through marriage back in the 1850's and went to school with them, they were all friends to this day
I listened to all 5 episodes and I learned a lot about the Texas Rangers and was very impressed and entertained with the way you presented it, Well Done Sir. 👍
I sure am glad i found this channel. Sitting here for hours listening to tales of the old West. Thanks Pardner.
I’m from former Indian territory, you know.. Oklahoma, and my grandad actually was born in Brooksville, Oklahoma. One of the 13 only black towns in America.
He tells me all the time how His dad would tell him the stories his grandad would tell him about the history of Brooksville. There’s also lots of abandoned towns in Oklahoma that were built in the 19th and early 20th century
Thank you. Fantastic!!! New places to go on vacation.
Excellent story teller. You can close your eyes and imagine being there….
I really love this series about the rangers I just found it and I am solidly hooked on it it's great thank you
Can't miss with stories about Texas Rangers. Stuff that sounds ridiculous, nothing that could ever possibly happen, except that it did. One riot, one Ranger
Long live Judge Wise. He is a wonderful man and a wonderful Texan.
Very interesting series, thank you.
These stories are very well done. Informative and entertaining as well.
It should be noted that iron jacket the Comanche leader killed at the battle of antelope hills and featured in episode #4 is the father in law to cynthia ann parker
Great Podcast. You did a very good job. About to start your series on Deadwood. It is my second favorite show. Justified will always be number one. I also listened to your Battle of little bighorn series. You have a new fan. Keep up the great work
Awesome podcast man keep up the good work!
great series....subscribed
The battle at the end of "The Searchers" might have been inspired by events later and the battle which discovered Cynthia Ann but Wayne's character and story is more inspired by the black Texan Britt Johnson who tirelessly pursued the Comanche searching for his family after a raid which was also later made into a TV movie called "Black Fox"
The life pf Charles Goodnight is pretty interesting in its own right. If you ever do the history of Texas cattle drives, you will find that Goodnight created the first cattle trail, the Goodnight-Loving Trail to circumvent Comanche country. He led the way in gathering up loose cattle after the War of Northern Aggression, founded a major ranch, saved a bison herd, and invented the chuck wagon.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Goodnight
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How boring would life be without Comanche!! No John Ford or John Wayne
You should do series on the civil war, bring out the real truth about the war.
What was the real truth?
I'm a custom knife maker by trade. And have a customer who wants to do a knife in memory of Jack Hays. And I need to know what company was Jack Coffee Hays in so I can get a Texas Ranger badge made with his company name on it.
Native Texan n kin in Arizona we got History too from Kim
Shout out to Sealy lol
Should've never brought her back. She was "Naduah", a Quahadi war chiefs squaw, mother of three Quahadi Nermernuh children. Returning Naduah to civilisation was similar to caging a wild-caught she-wolf; cruel and utterly stupid. Taking the life of his father, taking away his mother and sister served only to make her eldest sons hatred and revenge a lethal living thing. Yes, in the end Quanah walked 'The White Man's path', but at what cost to life before such time?
I agree. Just let her live her life. She may have been captured, but she found a better life there. As fierce as they were, the Commanches weren't "savages"; they were just people defending their land and families. That's the mistake the white man made.
Of course in any other circumstance people would call this "Stockholm syndrome". Like far to many situations in life there was no "right" answer. Only less bad ones. In this case they might have failed in selecting the "less bad" option, but the choice they made wasn't entirely unreasonable.
@@ChibiPanda8888tHe wHiTe mAn.."
@@ChibiPanda8888wym they weren't savages? They brutalized other Indian tribes as well..stop the bs narratives that they were peace pipe smoking hippies
...dob1945usa..
Quit
I used to mow around Cynthia's original grave in Tennessee Colony, Texas. Though I'm kin to them through marriage back in the 1850's and went to school with them, they were all friends to this day
If you hired an artist to add animated maps and images for a video these videos would be insanely cool