Wild West

Sarah the Survivor

y life’s end Sarah Creath McSherry Hibbins Stinnett Howard could claim five surnames, one from her birth and one each from her four husbands. Along the way she had suffered more hardship on the Texas frontier than most pioneers, man or woman. Described in her youth as “a beautiful blonde…graceful in manner and pure of heart,” she had watched as two of her husbands, her only brother and one of her children were killed in front of her and had lost a third husband in mysterious circumstances. She herself had been captured by Comanches and escaped, making a perilous and painful journey before stumbling bruised

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Wild West

Wild West2 min read
Hard as Butteri
Italy’s answer to the American cowboy, the buttero is the traditional horseback wrangler of horses or cattle from the west-central coast, stretching from Rome and the surrounding Lazio region north into Tuscany. The buttero sits a broad wooden saddle
Wild West1 min read
Mescal, Arizona
Tombstone, Ariz., has never looked so good. Or is this Cheyenne, Wyo., or Langtry, Texas? In fact, the movie set of Mescal, 45 miles southeast of Tucson, has doubled for all three real-life towns and played wild and woolly fictional ones in such West
Wild West11 min read
The Harsh Glare of the Footlights
The California Gold Rush. The very words evoked the strong reaction of an American populace driven by adventure and a lust for easy riches. Drawn inexorably west in the wake of the Jan. 24, 1848, strike at Sutter’s Mill were argonauts from every walk

Related Books & Audiobooks