Michael King/Brad Smalley

Wild West Podcast

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...

Author

Michael King/Brad Smalley

Category

Education

Latest episode

Jul 9, 2026

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Episodes

Cinders and Sovereign Dreams: Part 1 SWEDISH BUFFALO HUNTER 09.07.2026

Send us Fan Mail The story opens in the waning light of 1872, as Carl Ludvig Hendricks boards a steamship in Liverpool, the salt air thick with anticipation and the sharp tang of coal smoke. The decks soon fill with a raucous knot of Irish travelers, their laughter rising above the groan of the engines. For twenty-four days, Hendricks and his companions endure the relentless pitch and roll of the...

A Promise Across The Plains 22.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail 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....

Fanning The Hammer Is A Great Way To Lose 15.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail 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 Master...

A Punitive March Turns Into A Saber Charge On The Kansas Frontier 13.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail 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 C...

"Jeb" Stuart's Letter About The Battle of Solomon’s Fork 12.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A 17-day march ends with a shock of movement on the open Plains: roughly 300 Cheyenne warriors in line of battle and the US cavalry scrambling to form up before the infantry can even arrive. That’s the doorstep of the Battle of Solomon Fork, the 1857 Cheyenne Campaign, and the third chapter in our five-part series on the early Cheyenne Indian Wars leading toward the Sheridan Winte...

A Handful Of Men Mark The Gateway West 10.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail Mud, rain, and a riverbank so soft every step sinks, that’s where Fort Dodge begins. We rewind to April 10, 1865, and follow Captain Henry Pearce and a tired group of soldiers as they plant a military post on the Arkansas River while most of the country’s attention is fixed on the war’s end in Virginia. This is Kansas frontier history at ground level, where “progress” sounds like...

The Killing Of Ed: April 9, 1878 09.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail Dodge City doesn’t just welcome the cattle drives; it feeds on them. When the herds arrive, so do the wages, the whiskey, the gambling, and the dance halls, and the town’s “wide open” side of the tracks turns into a nightly test of nerve for anyone wearing a badge. We tell the story of one of those nights, when Deputy Marshal Ed Masterson and Assistant Marshal Nat Haywood walk the...

What Does It Take To Turn Chaos Into Law 09.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A county doesn’t feel “real” until paperwork can beat chaos, and Ford County’s origin story proves it. We head back to April 5, 1873, when Kansas Governor Thomas Osborne signs the proclamation that creates Ford County and forces Dodge City to start acting like a place with a future, not just a boomtown with a rail line and a trail of grudges. We walk through why that signature mat...

We’ve got some big news from the frontier! 06.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail We are absolutely thrilled to announce that Wild West Podcast has been ranked #3 on PodRanker’s list of the Top 15 Best Western Podcasts of 2026!   A huge thank you to our incredible listeners for riding along with us every week. Whether we’re diving into the legends of outlaws, the grit of the prairie, or the hidden history of the Old West, your support is what keeps our spurs ji...

Iron Deadline 03.04.2026

Send us Fan Mail A railroad can feel inevitable when you see it on a map. Up close, it’s a gamble with a hard deadline, exhausted men, and miles of empty country that refuse to cooperate. We pick up the Santa Fe’s high-stakes race across the Arkansas Valley, where March 3, 1873 hangs over every hammer swing. Miss the Colorado border and the land grants that bankroll the dream can disappear, taking...

April 1, 1939 Turns Dodge City Into Hollywood 31.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail April 1 in the Great Plains isn’t just a punchline. We start with the kind of frontier humor that could make or break you: trail-boss tricks like sending a newcomer for a bucket of steam, and Dodge City stunts so convincing they leave bystanders sure they’ve witnessed a killing. Those pranks weren’t random cruelty. They were a social code, a way to build community fast, measure gr...

Boot Hill Unmasked: The Real People Behind Dodge City’s Deadliest Year 15.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail Boot Hill gets talked about like a legend, but legends get lazy. We wanted the names, the dates, and the ugly little details that show how Dodge City earned its reputation before the “classic” era of Wyatt Earp and Bat Masterson even settles in. We walk through the earliest Boot Hill burials starting in 1872, when the railroad, soldiers from Fort Dodge, gamblers, buffalo hunters,...

Iron Trail Across Kansas 12.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail A railroad with no rails, no spikes, and barely any money somehow convinces a frontier to bet on its future. We tell the origin story of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe as Cyrus Kurtz Holliday tries to turn Kansas from a bruised battleground into a connected, growing state, using a charter, political leverage, and sheer persistence to keep the dream alive through drought and th...

The Day Dodge City Declared War 11.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail A town can look calm on a map and still be one bad decision away from open conflict. We step onto Front Street in Dodge City on March 19, 1883, where the air feels heavy with coal smoke, cheap whiskey, and the kind of tension you can taste. What follows isn’t a shootout at first. It’s something sneakier and, in its own way, more dangerous: a political war fought with ballots, back...

August Heat, Newton’s Bloody Night: Part 3 07.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail Heat pressed down on Newton in August 1871 like a hand over a mouth, and by midnight the town was a fuse. We open on a drought-stricken railhead where class divides sharpened nerves, the dance band was sent home, and the room held its breath. Then everything snapped. Hugh Anderson strode into Perry Tuttle’s hall and dropped lawman Mike McCluskey with a shot that turned a tense cro...

Blood, Whiskey, & The Split Town of Newton: Part 2 06.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail Heat shimmers above the Santa Fe tracks as Newton, Kansas splits in two: polished mahogany and temperance to the north, canvas alleys and all-night revelry to the south. We guide you through the second act of a borderland drama where the railroad doesn’t just deliver cattle and cash—it redraws morals, loyalties, and the limits of law. Perry Tuttle’s roaring dancehall, the Gold Roo...

How A Kansas Post Office Sparked A Town’s Rise And Quiet Fall 04.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail A town can rise on paper before it stands in wood and stone. We follow Wilburn, a near-forgotten settlement in south central Ford County, from the bright moment it earned a federal post office in 1885 to the slow fade that followed when the railroad curved away. With clear eyes and a storyteller’s care, we piece together how a petition by Charles P. Brown and the steady hands of p...

Railroads, Longhorns, & The Making of Bloody Newton: Part 1 03.03.2026

Send us Fan Mail Smoke curls over the Kansas plains as a newborn railhead meets a river of longhorns and the town of Newton explodes into life. We follow the ATSF’s breakneck push toward land grants, Boston capital’s cold calculations, and the way a 300-foot stockyard turned steers into hard cash while turning streets into a pressure cooker. Along the boardwalks and within twenty-seven saloons, ga...

Birth Of Ford County 25.02.2026

Send us Fan Mail A county can be born without a single shot fired. We travel back to February 26, 1867, when lawmakers in Topeka drew the first boundaries of Ford County and set a quiet revolution in motion. Out on the wind-cut Kansas prairie, the scene looked unchanged—buffalo grass, open sky, no fences—but a pen stroke had already begun to rearrange lives, routes, and destinies. We unpack why th...

James H. Ford: The Soldier Behind Ford County 24.02.2026

Send us Fan Mail A county’s name hides a better story than any barroom legend. We pull back the curtain on Colonel James Hobart Ford—the Union officer whose grit, speed, and stubborn discipline shaped the ground beneath Dodge City long before gunfighters made it famous. From Ohio roots to the Colorado Territory, Ford rose fast, helped raise the 2nd Colorado Infantry, and proved himself at Glorieta...

Fireside Truths In The Midnight Sun 16.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail Cold bites, a promise binds, and a furnace roars—this is the Yukon at human scale. We start with a candid look at why facing reality beats denial, then follow the trail into Robert Service’s world, where men who moil for gold wrestle with fear, loyalty, and the math of survival. Our reading of The Cremation of Sam McGee sets the pace: a vow made on a brutal Christmas run, a body l...

John Brown’s Gallows, A Nation’s Reckoning 05.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail A cold morning, a fortified town, and a scaffold placed just out of earshot—Charleston, Virginia tried to choreograph John Brown’s end and, with it, the story the country would remember. What they could not contain was a single handwritten note that slipped past the rope and into the bloodstream of a nation already splitting at the seams. We walk the final hours with four witnesse...

Night The Prairie Burned 03.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail A single word—fire—ripped through a quiet winter night and changed Dodge City forever. We travel back to late 1885 as flames burst from the Junction Saloon, raced down Front Street, and turned landmark businesses into a corridor of embers. With no pressurized water system and winter winds pushing the blaze, neighbors hacked at ice for bucket brigades while heat made even brick bui...

A Frontier Christmas, A Stranger’s Song, And The Night The Miners Remembered Home 02.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail A coffin rattles into a mining camp and turns out to be a piano—an unlikely miracle for a saloon that runs on cards, noise, and stubborn pride. We set the scene in a winter-struck gulch where 300 miners live by the hour and try not to think about the lives they left behind. Goskin, the gambler who owns the hall, wants one thing for Christmas: someone brave enough to bring that sil...

How The Old West Shaped American Christmas Traditions 01.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail Snow that bites, winds that snap, and a cabin lit by a single candle—yet the room still fills with carols and the smell of plum pudding. We journey across the Old West to uncover how pioneers forged the Christmas we recognize today, transforming scarcity into ritual and distance into community. From homestead kitchens humming weeks in advance to stockings hung by a hard‑won fire,...

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