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  2. Cowboy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowboy

    The English word cowboy has an origin from several earlier terms that referred to both age and to cattle or cattle-tending work. The English word cowboy was derived from vaquero, a Spanish word for an individual who managed cattle while mounted on horseback. Vaquero was derived from vaca, meaning "cow", [3] which came from the Latin word vacca.

  3. National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Cowboy_&_Western...

    The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum is a museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States, with more than 28,000 Western and Native American art works and artifacts. The facility also has the world's most extensive collection of American rodeo photographs , barbed wire , saddlery , and early rodeo trophies.

  4. 7 True Facts About Bass Reeves, a Legendary Cowboy of the ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/7-true-facts-bass-reeves...

    According to historians, Bass Reeves was the first black deputy U.S. marshal and captured 3,000 outlaws. Learn more facts ahead of 1883: The Bass Reeves Story.

  5. Texas Jack Omohundro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Jack_Omohundro

    After the Civil War, Omohundro left Virginia at age 19 for Florida. After a short time, he moved on to Texas, arriving at the Taylor Ranch near Brazos, where he began working as a cowboy participating in cattle drives, notably on the Chisholm Trail. After one drive across Arkansas to a meat-poor Tennessee, he was given nickname "Texas Jack" by ...

  6. Nat Love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nat_Love

    Love left the cowboy life before he settled down, and married a woman named Alice Owens, in Denver, Colorado, on August 2, 1888. They lived in Denver initially. He then took a job in 1890 as a Pullman porter, which involved overseeing sleeping cars on the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad. While working for the railroad, he and his family resided ...

  7. Timeline of the American Old West - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_American...

    Rarely, events significant to the history of the West but which occurred within the modern boundaries of Canada and Mexico are included as well. Western North America was inhabited for millennia by various groups of Native Americans and later served as a frontier to the Spanish Empire , which began colonizing the region starting in the 16th ...

  8. Top 20 Old Western Towns You Can Still Visit

    www.aol.com/finance/18-towns-where-still...

    3. Bandera, Texas. Nicknamed the "Cowboy Capital of the World," this Wild West town in southern Texas was a staging ground for the last cattle drives of the 1800s.

  9. Cochise County Cowboys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochise_County_Cowboys

    The word cowboy did not begin to come into wider usage until the 1870s. The men who drove cattle for a living were usually called cowhands, drovers, or stockmen. [4] While cowhands were still respected in West Texas, [5] in Cochise County the outlaws' crimes and their notoriety grew such that during the 1880s it was an insult to call a legitimate cattleman a "cowboy."