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Wild West Podcast

Wild West Podcast

By: Michael King/Brad Smalley
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About this listen

Welcome to the Wild West Podcast, winner of the 2026 Best of Western Podcast award, where fact and legend merge. We present the true accounts of individuals who settled in towns built out of hunger for money, regulated by fast guns, who walked on both sides of the law, patrolling, investing in, and regulating the brothels, saloons, and gambling houses. These are stories of the men who made the history of the Old West come alive - bringing with them the birth of legends, brought to order by a six-gun and laid to rest with their boots on. Join us as we take you back in history to the legends of the Wild West. You can support our show by subscribing to Exclusive access to premium content at Wild West Podcast + https://www.buzzsprout.com/64094/subscribe or just buy us a cup of coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/wildwestpodcast


© 2026 Wild West Podcast
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Episodes
  • A Promise Across The Plains
    Apr 22 2026

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    A man rides east through New Mexico with a coffin in his wagon, charcoal packed tight to fight decay, because his dying friend asked for one last mercy: don’t bury me in a foreign place. That single promise opens the door to the full, complicated life of Charles Goodnight, one of the most important names in Texas Panhandle history and a key figure of the American cattle frontier.

    We trace Goodnight’s rise from a hard-schooled teenager on the edge of the Brazos Bottoms to a Texas Ranger who knows the plains so well he claims he barely needs a compass. The story runs straight through the Goodnight-Loving Trail, the post-Civil War cattle boom, and the brutal reality of pushing 2,000 longhorns across the Llano Estacado to reach markets and government contracts. You’ll also hear how pure necessity sparks a lasting invention: the chuck wagon, built from a surplus military wagon into the rolling heart of a trail outfit.

    Then the narrative turns where most Western myths don’t. Molly Goodnight’s compassion leads to the rescue of Southern Plains bison calves and the creation of a herd that becomes a conservation landmark. And in a twist that still feels unreal, Goodnight forms a brotherly friendship with Quanah Parker, the Comanche leader whose family story intersects with Goodnight’s Ranger past. If you care about Wild West history, Texas ranching, frontier survival, and how reconciliation can emerge from violence, this one stays with you.

    Subscribe for more true frontier stories, share the episode with a history-loving friend, and leave a review with the moment that hit you hardest.

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    24 mins
  • Fanning The Hammer Is A Great Way To Lose
    Apr 15 2026

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    The Wild West didn’t run on courage alone. It ran on nerve, repetition, and a cold understanding that “the law” often arrived as a Colt revolver, not a badge. We take you into the real world behind the legends of Old West gunfighters, using sharp stories and historical color drawn from Wyatt Earp, Frontier Marshal by Stuart M. Lake, plus hard-edged accounts connected to Bat Masterson and Wild Bill Hickok.

    We start with the famous Hickok vs Tutt gunfight in Springfield, Missouri, then pull apart the movie version of Western duels. Most fights weren’t staged showdowns with one heroic shot. They were sudden, messy, close, and dangerous to everyone nearby, with black powder smoke hanging in the air and outcomes unclear until the shooting stopped. From there, we zero in on what serious gunmen actually practiced: how they wore their six-shooters, how they tuned their triggers, and why “fast” only matters when it stays accurate.

    Wyatt Earp’s most surprising lesson drives the heart of the conversation: the winner usually took his time. Not slow time, but a calm mind in a split fraction of a second. We also explain why fanning the hammer and shooting from the hip earned contempt from proficient gunfighters, how two-gun carry was more about a reserve than a stunt, why notched guns are largely a myth that spread through storytelling, and how safety habits like keeping an empty chamber under the hammer saved lives.

    If you love Western history, Dodge City legends, and the true tactics behind frontier gunfights, subscribe, share the show with a fellow history fan, and leave a review with your biggest “Hollywood got it wrong” moment.

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    If you'd like to buy one or more of our fully illustrated dime novel publications, you can click the link I've included.

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    24 mins
  • A Punitive March Turns Into A Saber Charge On The Kansas Frontier
    Apr 13 2026

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    A river can look calm and still be a trap. We drop into the Solomon River valley in 1857, where the U.S. Army launches what many consider the first true campaign against the Plains Indians in this series: the Cheyenne Campaign of 1857, better known as the Battle of Solomon Fork in northwest Kansas. The stakes are bigger than a single clash. This is the collision between a mobile Cheyenne world built on buffalo hunting, raiding, and shifting boundaries and a United States determined to impose fixed lines, enforce policy, and protect overland migration routes.

    We walk through the pressure cooker that builds after the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851, when rising immigrant traffic and wagon-train attacks trigger reprisals and then retaliation. With Secretary of War Jefferson Davis demanding punishment, Colonel Edwin V. “Bull” Sumner takes a stripped-down “scout in force” into Cheyenne country, leaning on speed, discipline, and a mix of units that includes 1st Cavalry, infantry support, prairie howitzers, and Indigenous scouts like Pawnee and Delaware trackers.

    The heart of the story comes from soldier Robert E. Peck, whose eyewitness detail turns a textbook campaign into a lived experience: night fires, exhausting trails past abandoned villages, and the moment Cheyenne warriors mount and form a bold line across the valley. Then Sumner makes the choice that defines the fight, ordering a saber charge that stuns opponents who expected a gun battle at distance. We end with the brutal intimacy of close-quarters combat and the unanswered question of what “success” even means in a frontier war built to terrify and control.

    If you care about U.S. Army history, the Cheyenne Indian Wars, and the real mechanics of conflict on the Great Plains, listen now, then subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review. What part of Peck’s account changed how you picture the Plains wars?

    Support the show

    If you'd like to buy one or more of our fully illustrated dime novel publications, you can click the link I've included.

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    17 mins
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