It's amazing to this time capsule of the old West and how it really was, as opposed to the slick Hollywood's depictions. Thanks always for sharing with us this amazing historic treasure. 👍
When I watch the photos and see some of life in California from that era, I think about them of today. Santa Barbara is now one of California’s more elite cities to live in, very expensive, tourist attractions.
I love this. Thank you. But hahaha😂 I can’t read all that and have enough time to have a good look at the photos. Can you take longer to move on the photo? Or can you narrate it please. Thank you 😅🙏
Guns were expensive for people in those days most needed a shotgun or rifle more than a handgun for hunting and defense. When I inherited my family's old guns from Texas they were all double barrel shotguns and hunting rifles. My father did have one pocket pistol that he always carried. He was a WWII veteran flying 52 missions in B17 bombers.
Fort Worth was incorporated in 1874 and so by the time this photo was taken (1899) large brick/stone buildings had been built. But even in 1899 Fort Worth was still an influential part of the wild west, for example the famous "Fort Worth Five" photograph of the Wild Bunch was taken in Fort Worth in 1900.
It's amazing to this time capsule of the old West and how it really was, as opposed to the slick Hollywood's depictions. Thanks always for sharing with us this amazing historic treasure. 👍
great photos and music
The Union Hotel in Occidental California is still there. My grandma Elsie Steen was a waitress there in the late 60s or early 70s ☮️
When I watch the photos and see some of life in California from that era, I think about them of today. Santa Barbara is now one of California’s more elite cities to live in, very expensive, tourist attractions.
Good background music!
I love this. Thank you.
But hahaha😂 I can’t read all that and have enough time to have a good look at the photos. Can you take longer to move on the photo? Or can you narrate it please. Thank you 😅🙏
The great fascination of the west from no.1 the pistol!
Opposed to the Holly wood westerns I haven,t seen any revolver and pistol in the belts of any depicted cowboy.
Guns were expensive for people in those days most needed a shotgun or rifle more than a handgun for hunting and defense. When I inherited my family's old guns from Texas they were all double barrel shotguns and hunting rifles. My father did have one pocket pistol that he always carried. He was a WWII veteran flying 52 missions in B17 bombers.
I can't read the captions and look at the pictures at the same time!
Calistoga, California still looks pretty much the same ☮️
Trip seeing there log cabins out in the prairie and not a tree in sight
1:14 that intricate brick building is kinda out of place. is it a government building?
Fort Worth was incorporated in 1874 and so by the time this photo was taken (1899) large brick/stone buildings had been built. But even in 1899 Fort Worth was still an influential part of the wild west, for example the famous "Fort Worth Five" photograph of the Wild Bunch was taken in Fort Worth in 1900.
@@legacyofthewest ahh, so it is a famous building at that time, no wonder. thanks for the info!
Old west
Hollywood westerns never dressed as these real photos. In the movies everyone was a gun toting tough guy in vest and Stetson. Not authentic at all.
How can I know if they’re wearing guns, they’re all sitting down? Dah😮
Well ive got 99 didn't know that their are a hundred