worksheet8 - Reading
Wild West Readings
Paul Christensen, “The ‘Wild West’: The Life and Death of a Myth”
Kevin Britz, “Boot Hill Burlesque”: The Frontier Cemetery as Tourist Attraction in Tombstone, Arizona and Dodge City, Kansas.”
1. According to Britz, how did the memorializing Dodge City and Tombstone differ? (In other words, how did they differ in recreating their past?) What was the overall goal of these two towns in highlighting their history?
2. Why did Boot Hill hold such significance to these two towns? What were some of the problems with memorializing Boot Hill?
3. How does the “Frontier Myth” relate to the Wild West – according to Christensen?
4. What function do myths provide to a nation and its citizenry? Why are they necessary in other words? How does all this fit into the West being settled?
PAUL CHRISTENSEN
The Wild West: The Life and
Death of a Myth
We all know something about myths, their strange power to
explain events that hardly seem rational; their flight from the literal
world to a kind of dream space in which gods and nature play roles
in an intricate drama of vengeance, conquest, and the creation of
identity. In some myths, girls turn into trees; in others, an ordinary
mortal flnds himself gifted with superhuman powers to lie, escape
from giants, seduce goddesses, and find his way home through a sea
that hates him. Odysseus is at the center of Greek mythology hut, as
is often pointed out, he may not he one person hut rather the whole of
Greek experience from the moment some Persians decided to migrate
south down the Peloponnesian peninsula to found a new country, a
trek that lasted eight or ten centuries that Homer summarizes in the
life of the Wests first hero.
Myth has now taken on the connotation of lying or pretending, an
ahsurd story spun out of ones fantasies. The Greek root of the word is
muthos, meaning mouth, or word of mouth, in other words a folklore,
some sort of informal tale of the trihe passed down the generations.
Why some narratives get elevated to the role of myth over others
remains something of a mystery in their dispersion, their great ap-
peal to people who demand some core of helief in which to identify
themselves, and find their coherence as a trihe or nation.
I want to hazard a very wild guess ahout myth and say that the very
nature of myth is that it tells the story of how a people hecome a na-
tion. Myth is ahout the formation of a national I pitted against a
wilderness that is the national not-I, and the indigenous people rooted
there hefore invasion and usurpation also form the not-I to he over-
come, ahsorhed, used as a kind of fuel in the making of the nations
selfhood. Virgil is eloquent on the nature of the half-human cannihals
and nomads Aeneas found upon entering the uncivilized Italian
peninsula after leaving Troy. This demonized Other was justifiably
Christensen / 311
destroyed to make way for the Roman state, a bringer of culture and
literacy for the good of all. It is little wonder that Virgils epic poem
The Aeneid became a best seller in sixteenth-century Venice, a must-
read for kings wishing to colonize the New World and to crush the
cannibal hordes thought to he living there.
Every nations principal myths are about starting out, meeting the
wilderness head-on and taming it, breaking the spirit of indigenous
enemies and declaring the land and the inhabitants the food of this
new collective self. Myth is a sort of family history, an account of
the migration to a new world, and who the heroes were in the great
struggle to make a home on someone elses property. Myths dont look
for justification; the great thrust of each is the boldness and aggression
needed to turn strange, unknown territory into a collective self.
The making of Englands national self lies in Geoffrey of Monmouths
Historia Regnum Britanniae and Malorys Le Morte dArthur and is
the narrative of Celtic migration and conquest. Every myth has to have
its Caliban, some monster in the way of the peoples progress, some
resistant force that lives deep inside nature and draws strength from
its primal energy. Antaeus leaps to mind as the quintessential monster
here, who when thrown to the ground after losing his breath in the
arms of Heracles, suddenly springs back full of life, until Heracles is
told that Earth is Antaeuss mother, who nurtures him each time he
touches ground.
Myth is history turned into a powerful archetypal dream about
the ego tearing itself from a mother (or mother country) and facing a
series of terrihle ordeals to prove its courage but also to devour the
not-I that will expand its powers and command of the new world.
Its almost as if myth as narrative recapitulates the stages of human
life from infancy to manhood, but only if that passage to manhood
is successful and brings rewards and honors to it. Myth is good news
writ large to include what a whole people does to feather its nest and
crow over its victories. Even with the mythic founding of England
authors eagerly associated the principals with the battle of Troy, that
ultimate source of heroism in which Europe defeats Asia in a war of
continental cultures.
It should also be noted that the body of myth as national histories
includes the caveat that once the not-I of national selfhood is exhausted,
so is the fuel of expansion. Camelot dies when the enemies no Ion-
312 I Southwest Review
ger inspire the knights of the Round Table to action; the court is a
shambles of intrigues and adulterous affairs, a corrupt state that also
ends King Lears reign. Without an adversarial Other, a nation begins
to atrophy from lack of food. A healthy nation must constantly recall
its myth and invent new forms of adversary—foreign wars, wars on
poverty, drugs, illness, terrorism, or any other avatar of the not-I in
order to provoke courage and willingness to risk all—the stakes are
high, but so are the rewards of further expansion, perhaps even to the
creation of an empire.
Richard Slotkin calls this mythological process regeneration
through violence, and in locating the frontier as the source of the
American myth, he also identifies Daniel Boone as our Odysseus in
the struggle for nationhood. Boone is a refined version of Fenimore
Coopers Natty Bumppo, the half-European half-Indian (though of
European parentage) scout and explorer. Boone has all of Bumppos
skills but he is the pure European afoot in a strange new world west of
the colonies, Shawnee territory that later became Kentucky, which he
conquers with a drawknife and the occasional musket ball. He hunts,
he knows his enemy like his own mind, he is sympathetic to the
nature that feeds his adversary and also feeds him, and he possesses a
selfiess devotion to breaking the spirit of wilderness to found a nation.
He established the Wilderness Road through the Cumberland Gap,
through which 200,000 settlers poured, and his spirit was the model
for succeeding generations to emulate. Boone is the collective embodi-
ment of Europeans in the New World, a combination of experience
boiled down into one man whose face could be that of Paul Bunyan,
Ahab, the victorious Union soldiers, a cowboy of the Plains, the dog
soldiers of the world wars, Luke Skywalker, and Rocky Balboa. Boone
is the template of the hero in the American myth, and each generation
projected a new one onto the retreating boundary of the frontier.
Once we reached the Pacific shore, of course, we ran out of untamed
land and human rivals, and the fuel of self-expansion ended. Frederick
Jackson Turner pegged that moment at 1890, based on a Census Bureau
report that found no remaining frontier in its new census, and wrote
about it three years later in his ground-breaking essay, The Signifi-
cance of the Frontier in American History, delivered at the Worlds
Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Jackson was our own Homer, in a
way, outlining the narrative by which we made a nation. He gathered
Christensen / 313
up all the loose strings of two centuries of immigration, colonial or-
ganization, and v êstw ârd movement and located the not-I along that
demarcation between the settlements and the ground lying in someone
elses possession. He thought of our history as a kind of gestation, in
which violence, aggression, and sheer doggedness overwhelmed our
opponents, and in the process we not only made a place for ourselves
hut formed our character as winners, risk takers, opportunists, invad-
ers, and conquerors.
But he also clarified an important aspect of our national character—
its essentially conservative hias as a glorification of European racial
stock encountering primitive indigenes and an anarchic wilderness.
Male traditions are idealized and the Enlightenment rationality of
Paris and London are compacted into the heros self-reliance, supe-
rior logic, and desire to break nature and rule over it as the apostle of
reason. Turners American is composed of Emersonian self-reliance,
Thoreaus loner following a different drummer, and the plucky hunter
and Indian fighter. Out of such materials rose the image of the stoic,
taciturn adventurer cut off from others, depending on his own instincts
and his compulsion to win. This is not the hero projected out of Greek
or Roman experience, through which hoth Odysseus and Aeneas de-
pended upon others to aid in their common struggle, and who called
upon the help of the gods when the going got really tough. Instead,
the American myth refiected the unassimilated masses of immigrants
living in isolated ethnic enclaves, and crafted its hero out of a lack of
social honds and made him content with his own solitude.
Whitmans Leaves of Grass, self-published in 1855, would have
passed unnoticed had not Ralph Waldo Emerson unwittingly endorsed
it in a private letter to the poet, an excerpt of which was then reprinted
on the spine of the 1856 edition. The original thirteen poems fiy in
the face of the still-forming American myth of the solitary hero on the
frontier. Even Whitmans trapper (in Song of Myself) takes an Indian
squaw for a wife, and everywhere else in these poems Whitman seems
to roll into a ball the multitude of themes and ideas left out of the main
myth: solidarity of workers; equal rights for women,- emancipation of
blacks; concern for failures and cowards; an embrace of death as well
as life; a table set for the diseased and the heroic, the unwanted and
the admired; but above all a very French esteem for fraternity and for
candor in all things sexual, including the young Southern housewife
314 I Southwest Review
whose erotic fantasies involve twenty-eight young male bathers vis-
ihle from her window.
While the book never became a favorite with the common reader,
its great significance lies in its opposition to the myth of origin taking
hold in the American imagination. Whitman had a masterly command
of the language of that myth and how to oppose it from all sides, and
nearly any other discourse that opposed the heroic myth can trace itself
back to ideas in these signal poems, from unionism to equal rights
for women and minorities, to anti-war sentiments, and a reaching
out to the marginalized and the pariahs of American society. Where
the frontier myth is adamantly conservative in politics and vision, a
patriarchal code of power and rewards, Whitmans egalitarian vision is
the language of group esprit and cohesion, a liberal philosophy emerg-
ing alongside the frontier myth like its shadow, its spiritual opponent
in the pendulum swing of political life.
Put another way, Whitmans vision is post-European, and unwit-
tingly anticipates the emergence of an alternative narrative: the return
of the exiled son to his tribe or ethnic group. After 1900, this New
World narrative would come to voice almost every minority cultures
desire for a return to roots, to homelands, to the embrace of the tribe
and its elders. Exile meant living among whites in cities, where alien-
ation, poverty, alcoholism, and dependence were the dark consequence
of being cut off from tribal nurture. By contrast, the frontier myth
spoke to. the desire of the European settler to break out of the group
and distinguish oneself through ordeals of courage and self-initiative,
a drive away from family and kinship toward wilderness, where op-
portunity lay in some unbounded form.
If the frontier myth, soon to evolve into the myth of the Wild
West, glorified aggression and racial supremacy. Whitmans counter
mythology could be boiled down to three words: reconciliation of op-
posites. Driving the frontier myth toward greater militancy and the
emergence of the cowboy as gunfighter, toward the absolute of vio-
lence, was the Souths quest for a heroic ideal after its surrender to the
North. Southern adult males inherited a taint upon their masculinity
for being born on the losing side of Americas Civil War, the confiict
that shattered national unity for a century and a half. The South had
lost its participation in the frontier myth, which had passed it by on
its way west, leaving writers and cartoonists the opportunity to malign
Chiistensen /31s
the white-haired colonel, the Southern belle, silver-tongued corrupt
lawyers, and politicians of a fading order. Only the Souths youths could
fashion a new way of participating in American mythology by new
ordeals of courage played out on the unpaved Main Streets of mining
camps and frontier settlements. The gunfighter replaced almost every
other stereotype of the cowboy era, except for the cattleman and the
local sheriff, a corrupt official who is the extension of the Southern
lawyer and ex-slave holder of a generation before.
Youth redeemed the South and won back its badge of courage through
lawlessness and an all-male anarchic rebuke to the encroachment of
civilization, signaled by the arrival of circuit-riding preachers and their
congregations, followed by mail-ordered brides, and the presence of
school marms and war widows, the arts matrons of the bigger ranches.
The gunfighter was the fraying ends of the Daniel Boone prototype, a
decadent figure marred by excess and romantic hyperbole. He was a
little too fast with his gun, too reckless with the women he deserted,
and too eager to down his whiskey and ride all night to the next gun
fight or Indian raid. As the frontier died out, his fictional character
was infiated into a desperate fantasy of the pioneer spirit, with only
the towns to pester with his futile search for an edge of wilderness in
which to demonstrate his skills as a killer.
His glorification occurred first in the dime Westerns, which ran
from the 1860s to the 1900s. The last publisher cancelled his series
in 1919, at about the time Western film fastens onto his image and
propels him to mass audiences on the wings of Buffalo Bill and Kit
Carson, and such villain archetypes as Billy the Kid and Jesse James.
Film as a medium bore its own implicit romantic prejudices against
the city as a corrupting influence on human nature. Its proclivities as
a visual medium were to lavish attention on the epic landscapes of
Utahs Monument Valley, the Grand Canyon, the vast grasslands and
deserts of the Southwest, with the towns pockmarking the otherwise
pure desolation, with a graveyard full of slow draws and executed bad
men. The town was the vortex of human failings while the ranches
were centers of power created by kingpins of the meat industry, who
ruled their outfits like medieval lords and bullied the wayward, unreli-
able help that drifted into its perimeters for temporary work.
By 1880, a decade before the Census Bureau declared the frontier
closed, the Wild West was disappearing in the last buffalo kills, the
I Southwest Review
resettlement of Native Americans, and the arrival of photographers
and writers exploiting its mystique as the ground where America
completed its territorial conquests. Charles Lummis, the regions first
travel agent and hooster, began advertising the Southwest as a place
of romance and sightseeing. Lummis credited himself with heing the
first to call the region the American Southwest, and sold its charms
through photographs and tour books like A Tramp across the Continent
(1892) and Some Strange Corners of Our Country: The Wonderland of
the Southwest {1892). Buffalo Bill Codys Wild West show debuted in
1883 as a circus act that later included Sitting Bull and twenty braves,
reenactments of Indian raids on pioneer wagon trains, the rifle skills
of Annie Oakley and her husband Frank Butler, and a dramatization of
Custers Last Stand with Cody serving as General Custer. In an ironic
commentary on Turners Frontier essay, Codys Wild West show
performed at the same Chicago Worlds Fair in 1893, within earshot
of his lecture.
As Audrey Coodman argues in Translating Southwestern Land-
scapes: The Making of an Anglo Literary Tradition, the moment the
Wild West disappeared, imperial aggression turned into nostalgia, a
longing for a raw edge on which to reinvigorate the American soul.
The West was no longer wild but a vast psychological longing. Indians
were made up and posed for Edward Curtiss studio cameras, often
with the wrong tribal gear, including makeup and phony bead ware.
A recent biography of Curtis by Laurie Lawlor, Shadow Catcher: The
Life and Work of Edward S. Curtis, explores his thirty-year obsession
with capturing Native Americans at the point of what many feared was
their extinction. All things to do with the buffalo were now charged
with totemic powers—even Theodore Roosevelt ordered a small herd
to be corralled in front of the Smithsonian Institute,- he was not alone
in fearing that the demise of the buffalo had diminished American
masculinity. The buffalo nickel, also called the Indian head nickel,
was minted from 1913 to 1938, and served to remind those paying for
a shave or a cup of coffee of Americas symbol of wilderness and male
courage. It went out of circulation just as Hitler annexed Austria into
Greater Germany, stirring up American war passions that no longer
needed the buffalo totem for solace.
The significance of the cowboy may well be the fact that the frontier
myth had leapt over its own extinction by attaching itself to a new
Christensen / 31J
figure and a new career in the last leg of the westward iourney. If it
could leap one gap, it could leap another, and by this means achieve
immortality by acquiring a power to change shapes and faces, and
find itself carried forward in time by presidents Theodore Roosevelt,
John F. Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan; by inventors like Henry Ford
and Thomas Edison; by oil pioneers like John Rockefeller; and football
coaches like Knute Rockne and Ara Parseghian; by Audie Murphy
and anyone who could be characterized as fighting a vast enemy or
opposition that he overcame by pluck, self-reliance, and his zeal to
spread American civilization into the unknown. And so long as the
world supplied new forms of the national not-I to oppose and conquer.
Behind all such heroes was the uninterrupted rise of Americas for-
tunes, which sanctioned and validated the successful struggle of the
lone individual out on the raw edge.
But with every new permutation of the mythical hero came counter-
myths of the hero as ioiner and unifier. Two legs of the three legged
stool of myth-making were a constant supply of enemies to conquer
and Americas juggernaut of economic and military expansion. Should
one or the other leg buckle, the hero myth process stalled, or let in
the opposing argument for solidarity and reconciliation. One such
instance of momentary stalling occurred in the Great Depression,
when the usual values of enterprise and expansion were halted by
economic collapse. An anti-hero suddenly veered into focus in the
form of Steinbecks Joad family, and other collective heroes like the
Bundrens of Faulkners As I Lay Dying, the renewal of socialism and
populism and the demonization of tycoons and bankers, as in Erskine
Caldwells Gods Little Acre (1933), when mill workers laid off at the
local mill riot against the owners. The film version in 1958 stresses
the Marxist implications of the riot and of Ty Ty Waldens futile search
for gold on his farm.
Economic crises halted the progress of the hero machine; Holly-
woods new matinee idols of the 1930s were singers with tenor voices,
slender epicene dancers like Fred Astaire, and singing cowboys like
John Wayne, whose character Singin Sandy Saunders appeared in
Riders of Destiny in 1933, his one and only singing role (with voice
dubbed) but nonetheless the first such film presentation of a minstrel
herdsman. He was followed shortly after by Gene Autry in 1935 and
Roy Rogers two years later, along with Tex Ritter. The minstrels
I Southwest Review
of the plains softened the predatory, solitary heros image during the
Depression, hut with the advent of World War II, new heroes turned
dark, driven hy enmity with Indians and eager to claim land hy open
conflict.
The cowhoy hero, emhodying the history of American conquest as far
hack as the colonial era, could now serve as an allegorical mouthpiece
for almost any event hefalling the nation. His mythical character could
he plugged into any emergency and he would emerge victorious, on
the march to greater things. As early as 1948, Howard Hawkss Red
River, starring John Wayne, consciously sets out the terms of empire
huilding for a newly victorious America after World War IL Waynes
character, Tom Dunson, wants to go it alone and leave behind a long
caravan of settlers coming into Indian territory. The winning of the
West, he soon learns, is more important than one mans amhitions,
even though he remains the hard-nosed individual as others work to
sustain a communal effort at cattle ranching. Hawks was the first di-
rector to seize upon the macho huhris of the returning veteran and to
slip a thin skin of cowhoy costume over him and set him down in an
arena where he holdly conquers the Indians who oppose him. America,
Dunson declares, must now feed the world from its heef herds, and
nothing can stop it from growing into a full-fledged empire.
Hollywood inherited a sense of the West that was made amhiguous
hy the very fact that it was not only the place where westward expan-
sion ended; it was also the arena in which competing ideologies came
to fight it out. One side saw itself as victorious over Catholicism and
lingering resentments over the Mexican War of 1836, and over the
indigenous life of the Plains. The other West appeared to plead for
preservation of its ethnic diversity and customs, its languages and
tribal gods. The West was not one thing hut two, and hoth versions
of its meaning lay in the hedrock of myth formation in the eighteenth
century and during the American literary renaissance. Conquest and
the remorse and longing for wilderness arose in the same moment.
One could read the West from two sides, hut not simultaneously.
Their signs were mutually exclusive, and would figure prominently in
the great pendulum swings of political life—a Wild West that meant
victory over aliens, and a tragedy of violence and waste of Americans
great native heritage.
The vast majority of the films produced since the 1930s have stressed
.Christensen / 319
the heroic qualities of the cowboy—his boundless energy and obsessive
emotions, his resilience in the face of adversity, his loyalty to a cause
greater than himself. His character is stretched thin carrying out the
Anglo cause, but after 1938 the softer features of the celluloid hero
disappear, to be replaced by a brasher, more war-like and intemper-
ate soldier and law and order champion. The Indian and the indolent
Mexican subtly alter their characters to become a new menace of
yelling, screaming, ruthless mobs descending from the hills to raid
innocent pioneers new to dry-land farming. Their behavior takes on
the qualities of the Japanese enemy, when the winning of the West
becomes an international struggle.
But the counter mythology was not far behind in expressing itself
on film on a broad range of issues including racism, Native Ameri-
can abuses, land seizures, and lynchings, the latter condemned in
the 1943 film The Oxbow Incident, considered by some as the first
anti-Western filin to come out of Hollywood. Native Americans who
fought in World War II returned to find their reservations in tatters
and a federal government eager to pursue a policy of termination of
reservation life altogether in the name of assimilation. Some 25,000
Native Americans fought in the war; another 40,000 left home to work
in war-related factories. In 1950, two films tackle the plight of Native
Americans, Delmer Daves Devils Doorway and Anthony Manns
Broken Arrow. Both films follow the lives of decorated Civil War
veterans returning home to find whites bearing homestead claims
against their property, allusions to the disenfranchisment felt by Indians
returning from World War II.
Broken Arrow tries to imagine a dual system of assimilation and
of reservation culture, but Devils Doorway rejects assimilation and
explores the corruption and greed of settler society, thus reversing
long-held stereotypes of the bad Indian and good settler in film
tradition. Native Americans are depicted as noble warriors with
superior vision and fighting skills, and whites come across as small-
minded opportunists and thugs. The release of Devils Doorway was
delayed because MGM feared the pro-Indian theme would put off
audiences. Its financial success, however, prompted the release of
Broken Arrow shortly after. The romances of both films promised
interracial marriages that were foiled in the end, at which point the
historic camoufiage of the Western evaporated into a direct com-
320 I Southwest Review
mentary on civil rights four years before the Supreme Courts call for
desegregation in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka.
The Searchers, with John Wayne, goes a step further in 1956 by
reversing the entrenched values of the captivity narrative. Such narra-
tives borrowed from myth to suggest a descent into an underworld of
savage devils in order to rescue a white woman, a kind of heroic ordeal
in which paradise is the white settlement to which she is returned.
In this film, Ethan Edwards sets out to rescue his nine-year-old niece
from Chief Scar, whose party killed his brothers family. But the search
goes on so long that the niece, Debbie, eventually marries Chief Scar,
a nice parallel with the real-life captivity of Cynthia Ann Parker and
her marriage to Nocona. Both women assimilated into Indian society
and were happy in their marriages. But in this rescue, the mission
turns murderous when Edwardss hatred of miscegenation consumes
him in general rage. The film is one of the darkest commentaries on
racism in the era.
Other films delivered left-wing assaults on the House Un-American
Activities Committee and rampant McCarthyism of the early 1950s.
fohnny Guitar (1954) is ahout a suspicious community that forces
townspeople to testify against one another. Sterling Hayden, the films
star, had earlier named names hefore HUAC, and as one critic of the
film remarks it must have been cathartic for Hayden to play the
role of a man running away from his sordid past only to reconcile with
who he really was. High Noon from 1952, finds a community unwill-
ing to aid the marshal (Gary Cooper) in stopping a returning criminal
bent on vengeance for his prison time. The left, as Tom Wolfe once
remarked, controlled the scripts and shooting of Westerns during the
1940s and 1950s, and got its digs in when Carl Foreman, blacklisted
from Hollywood, co-wrote the screenplay for High Noon and produced
it anonymously. The Cold War comes in for general condemnation in
William Wylers 1958 film The Big Country. Gregory Peck plays a sea
captain, James McCay, betrothed to a wealthy ranchers daughter. Patsy
Terrill, played by Carroll Baker. Like her powerful, feuding father, she
favors confiict over reconciliation and is ashamed when Peck refuses
a fight with the ranch foreman. The feud is between the Terrills and
the Hennessys, and only when both patriarchs are killed can there be
peace in the region. As Peck later observed of the film, it was intended
as a left-wing allegory of the Cold War.
Christensen / 321
Vietnam was treated from a variety of antiwar perspectives beginning
as early as 1972 with Clint Eastwoods High Plains Drifter, in which
a stranger comes to the rescue of the town of Lago, only to find the
citizens as corrupt as the gang who menaced it. Once he kills the gang,
he fills the office of mayor and sheriff with a midget and torments the
very people he saved. The Vietnam eras brutal cynicism about good
and evil is writ large in a film in which the westward movement ends
in hypocrisy and moral indifference. Sam Peckinpahs The Wild Bunch
thinly disguises the massacre of My Lai a year before in a vengeance
plot of a gang shooting up a Mexican village until outnumbered and
slaughtered by Mexican regulars. There are no heroes on the Anglo
side, only bloodlust and a broken moral system spreading anarchy as
they move south. And on the Mexican side, the general and his soldiers
are portrayed as worthless drunks and murderers.
Demonizing Mexicans, especially as soldiers and roving gangs of
banditos, had more to do with justifications for usurping their land
than it did with reality. Pancho Villa and Zapata were more often
given heroic treatment by European and Mexican films than they
received in Hollywood Westerns. The Latinos were accorded less
worth than Native Americans, and their association with revolu-
tion and civil war made them the enemies of order in their own
land. Rarely if ever has reconciliation been stressed between Anglos
and Latinos in Western films. As far back as 1927, when B. Travens
novel The Treasure of Sierra Madre appeared with a bloody tale of
gold lust and murder, the federales aie portrayed as a lawless band
of robbers; John Hustons 1948 film of that title takes pains to de-
humanize them still further.
Latinos were demonized and associated with the post-revolutionary
chaos of the 1920s. Pancho …
Arizona Historical Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Journal of Arizona
History.
http://www.jstor.org
BOOT HILL BURLESQUE: The Frontier Cemetery as Tourist Attraction in Tombstone, Arizona,
and Dodge City, Kansas
Author(s): Kevin Britz
Source: The Journal of Arizona History, Vol. 44, No. 3 (autumn 2003), pp. 211-242
Published by: Arizona Historical Society
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41696788
Accessed: 14-08-2015 22:56 UTC
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/
info/about/policies/terms.jsp
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content
in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship.
For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org
http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=azhs
http://www.jstor.org/stable/41696788
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
BOOT HILL BURLESQUE
The Frontier Cemetery as Tourist
Attraction in
Tombstone, Arizona, and Dodge City,
Kansas
by
Kevin Britz
IN The
one
Magnificent
of the early
Seven
scenes
two unemployed
of John Sturgess
Tombstone
1960 epic
and
Western
Dodge The Magnificent Seven , two unemployed Tombstone and Dodge
City gunfighters played by Steve McQueen and Yul Brynner drive
a hearse containing an Indian corpse to a boothill cemetery over
the objections of the towns civilized element. The puzzled trav-
eling salesman who hires them to forcibly deliver the body points
out that boothill is the traditional final resting place of murder-
ers, cutthroats, and derelict old barflies. As such, boothill ceme-
teries have become testimonials to the violent nature of the Old
West. At least, thats the way it is in the movies. A close look at two
of the frontiers most famous cemeteries - in Tombstone, Arizona,
and Dodge City, Kansas - reveals a different story.
As towns with long-established Old West reputations, Tomb-
stone and Dodge City in the 1920s were prime candidates for the
national spotlight. Their histories were deeply intertwined, as the
former southern Arizona bonanza camp and the Kansas cattle cap-
ital shared similar origins, lurid media images, and famous charac-
ters. And both communities experienced the rapid growth and
inherent instability that characterized nineteenth-century boom-
towns. Dodge City was established in 1872 as a center for the buf-
falo hide trade, then rose quickly from 1876 until the adoption of
Kevin Britz holds MA. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Arizona. He
teaches in the American Studies Department at Kenyon College in Cambier, Ohio.
[211]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
THE JOURNAL OF ARIZONA HISTORY
quarantine laws in 1885 as a major shipping center for Texas cattle.
Tombstone grew into a town overnight, following the discovery of
silver in 1878, and flourished until its mines flooded in 1887. Much
to the chagrin of local boosters who desperately wanted their com-
munities to be seen as pious, stable, and law-abiding, journalists
and dime novelists painted lurid portraits of Tombstone and its
Kansas cousin as western Sodoms. Despite the sanitizing efforts of
turn-of-the-century promoters, dime novels and pulp magazines,
the recollections of Bat Masterson and other gunmen, and the
novels of Alfred Henry Lewis kept alive Tombstone and Dodge
Citys wild-and-wooly reputations.
Masterson s and Lewiss accounts of famous Tombstone and
Dodge City characters provided rich sources for Old West chron-
iclers. The series of popular books about Tombstone and the Earp
brothers began with Frederick Bechdolts When the West was Young
in 1922, followed by Walter Noble Burnss bestselling Tombstone:
An Iliad of the Southwest in 1927. Dodge City acquired similar promi-
nence in the popular imagination with the 1931 publication of
Stuart Lakes Wyatt Earp , Frontier Marshal William MacLeod
Rainess Famous Sheriffs and Western Outlaws , published in 1929,
featured chapters on both towns. A parade of memoirs accompa-
nied these popular chronicles. Robert Wrights 1913 recollection,
Dodge City , the Cowboy Capital ; retired Tombstone lawman William
Breakenridges 1928 autobiography, Helldorado: Bringing Law to the
Mesquite, ; and former vaudevillian Eddie Foys 1928 reminiscence,
Clowning Through Life , highlighted Tombstone and Dodge Citys
wild heydays. William S. Harts 1923 film Wild Bill Hickok, along
with Law and Order (1932), Frontier Marshal (Fox, 1934, and Twen-
tieth-Century Fox, 1939), and Dodge City (Warner Bros., 1939),
paralleled the historic works.
These popular books and movies provided readers and view-
ers with graphic images of the Old West that included swaggering
gunslingers, stalwart lawmen, gamblers, painted women, lynchings,
stage robberies, ramshackle buildings, and assorted vice and may-
hem. Twentieth-century tourists expecting to encounter this ver-
sion of the West, however, found a much different scene. Writer
James Flagg, who drove to Dodge City in 1925 hoping to experi-
ence the fierce romance of the old cow days - where so many
herds were driven to and where so many cowpunchers raised their
[212]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
Boot Hill Burlesque
simple hell until their pay gave out, instead discovered nothing
but a litde town populated by lots of cowboys walking the streets
in blue overalls. A New York Sun reporter was saddened to find
that Dodge City had no landmarks of the brief era which fur-
nished much of the material, real or imaginary, of the dime novel
period of . . . American literature.1
The same was true of Tombstone. Journalist Charles Finger
arrived in southern Arizona in 1931, expecting to enjoy life in a
rollicking Wild West town. He found instead a placid little com-
munity where an indubitable cowboy leaned against a drugstore
wall while licking an ice cream cone. The first two hours in Tomb-
stone, Finger confessed, proved beyond doubt, that this town,
once so boisterous, has passed from its vivid youth to an age of
repose and contentment. A New York Times correspondent shared
the impression. Nowadays the citizens devote only an occasional
reminiscent thought to the men who were laid to rest with their
boots on in Boot Hill cemetery, he observed. Real Tombstoners
are now more interested in paving bonds.2
In laying the foundations for their respective tourist indus-
tries, Tombstone and Dodge City promoters recognized the impor-
tance of satisfying visitor expectations, even if it meant dramatically
stretching the truth. Tombstone enjoyed the advantage of retain-
ing a large number of vintage buildings in various states of preser-
vation. F. M. Loomis, the editor of Motor World and Motor Age, and
Robert Manger, the field secretary of the National Automobile
Dealers Association, were impressed in 1920 by the quaint
appearance of the many old landmarks of pioneer days and
expressed their satisfaction of a visit to the historic mining camp
of which they had heard so many stirring tales. Dodge City, with
few architectural remnants of its romantic past, was scarcely dis-
tinguishable from a typical Kansas farm town. One visiting news-
paper editor was surprised at how much Dodge City differed from
the images created by blood and thunder stories that were told
of the town. Only the street that fronted the railroad - lined
with cafes and billiard parlors - and the crowded business district
contained relics of the past. Aging residents in both towns, how-
ever, remembered the frontier period and recalled especially the
first improvised cemeteries. Increasingly, pilgrims sought out
these boot hill graveyards for authentic relics of the Wild West.3
[213]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
THE JOURNAL OF ARIZONA HISTORY
The name boot hill may have originated in Dodge City,
where it first appeared in print in the May 6, 1877, issue of the
Dodge City Times. According to local historian Robert Eagan, who
conducted extensive research on Dodge Citys original cemetery, the
term frequently appeared in railroad cowtowns, where it referred
to improvised municipal graveyards that ultimately became pot-
ters fields. One of the first national uses of boot hill appeared in
an article on New Sharon - a euphemism for Dodge City - in
the March 1880 issue of Scribners Monthly . Unlike their Dodge City
counterparts, who actually used boot hill to describe their orig-
inal cemetery, Tombstone locals simply called their first graveyard
the old city cemetery. In a 1926 speech, longtime Tombstone
resident and former judge John C. Hancock attributed the use of
the term to tenderfoot journalists who started to write up the
west. Another Tombstonian, when asked about the origin of the
term boothill, answered that the name probably was imported
from Dodge City, which in its heyday . . . was fully as wicked as
the southern Arizona silver camp.4
Like most boomtowns, Dodge City created its first civic ceme-
tery as an ad hoc response to the need in 1872 to find a final rest-
ing place for a dead transient. As the town expanded around it,
the improvised burial ground quickly became prime real estate.
In 1878, the Dodge City Townsite Company sold it to developers
who planned to subdivide the plot into residential lots. To dispel
the fears of potential homeowners who might object to living atop
a graveyard, the owners persuaded the city to move the bodies to
a new cemetery, called Prairie Grove, northwest of town. The coro-
ner who disinterred the coffins in 1879 found the corpses resting
quietly with boots on. The headboards, if ever there were any,
had long wasted away, however. Consequently, he was able to iden-
tify only a few individuals. The city, hoping to distance itself from
its unsavory past, purchased a lot on Boot Hill and built a school-
house. The Hays Sentinel hailed it as the proudest evidence of
enlightenment upon the one surviving relic of barbarism. The
building was razed in 1890 and replaced by a larger, three-story
structure popularly known as the Boot Hill School, which func-
tioned effectively for thirty-five years.5
Because the name probably originated in Dodge City, it was
fitting that the reinvention of Boot Hill as a historic tourist attrac-
[214]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
Boot Hill Burlesque
tion was the pivotal event as the former cattle town looked for
ways to commemorate its past. In large part because of a strong
post-boom economy, Dodge City lagged behind other Old West
towns in developing its tourist trade. By the 1890s, the town had
shrugged off its boomtown trappings, and by the First World War,
it had evolved into a staid Midwestern community with a growing
economy. As the hub of railroad commerce, agriculture, and live-
stock, it was the political and mercantile center of western Kansas.
Lacking the economic imperative that drove faded mining towns
like Tombstone or Deadwood, South Dakota, to market themselves
as tourist attractions, Dodge City hesitated to embrace any form
of civic commemoration that even hinted at its sordid past. This
attitude changed in 1927, when pioneer lawman, mayor, and auto-
mobile dealer Hamilton Bell joined fellow business owners in
prompting the city to purchase the long-abandoned Boot Hill.
The transaction ignited a public debate over how the city should
remember its past.
When the Dodge City Board of Education announced in 1925
that it would close the outmoded Boot Hill School and sell the
property, Bell and other business leaders, who were already
involved in a project to mark historic sites in order to lure tourists
to the old Santa Fe Trail, saw the opportunity to create an entic-
ing local attraction. Boot Hill is known coast to coast and could
be converted into one of the showplaces of the city, the Dodge City
Daily Globe reported, there is a sentiment here that the historical
value of the tract should be capitalized [on]. Kiwanis, Rotary,
American Legion, Real Estate Mens Organization, and chamber
of commerce representatives petitioned the Dodge City Commis-
sion to call for a special election to purchase Boot Hill. Unfortu-
nately, the community did not share their enthusiasm. On August
20, 1925, voters defeated the measure by a two-to-one margin.
Subsequently, the city sold the site to the Presbyterian Hospital
Association, who hoped to convert the old schoolhouse into a hos-
pital. Interest in commemorating the site resurfaced two years
later, however, when the Presbyterians abandoned their plans for
the building and expressed their willingness to sell the Boot Hill
parcel at public auction.6
The Dodge City Real Estate Board quickly launched a new
campaign to save the old cemetery. Within hours of the hospital
[215]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
Hamilton B. Bell.
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
Boot Hill Burlesque
associations announcement, a petition circulated among business
leaders urging the city to purchase Boot Hill. The realtors suc-
ceeded in postponing the sale until a $12,000 bond election could
be held. In a newspaper ad that ran a week before the election,
they reminded voters that to preserve this historic point is an
investment that will return to the taxpayers much more than it
will cost. Do not hold Dodge City back. Help push forward. Vote
to save Boot Hill. Their tactic paid off. Voters endorsed the res-
olution, and on April 20, 1927, Boot Hill became city property.7
Although the city now held the deed to Boot Hill, it remained
unclear how the site would be preserved. Opinions divided sharply
over how much of the valuable real estate should be allotted to
historic commemoration and how much should be set aside for
other use. Following eight months of discussion, in December 1927
the city passed a resolution supporting a pro bono proposal from
longtime resident Dr. Oscar H. Simpson, a retired dentist and
amateur sculptor, to install a large figure of a western cowboy
at a commanding position on Boot Hill. The statue would
adorn the entrance to a new city hall that also would be con-
structed on the site. The buildings Spanish-style architecture
would serve as a tribute to Dodge Citys location on the Santa Fe
Trail and the towns heritage as a former outpost of the Spanish
empire.8
The selection of Simpsons plan underscored the growing
influence of the Boot Hill preservation movement. Like his friend
Hamilton Bell, Simpson was a prominent Dodge City resident with
a new-found interest in the towns early history. Following his
retirement from dentistry in 1922, Simpson took up concrete
sculpture and historical research, publishing several articles in
local newspapers. He believed that Dodge Citys affiliation with
the Old West gave the town great historical significance. It was
unquestionably the most typically western in habits and customs
of any town that ever existed, Simpson once told a reporter. In
his opinion, it produced more national characters and notorious
gunmen than all the rest of the wild towns of the turbulent west
combined, and was longer passing through the gun age. Simp-
sons romantic vision of Dodge Citys wild past had an ironic
twist - he was a longtime prohibitionist who, in the 1880s, had
strongly supported closing down the towns saloons.9
[217]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
THE JOURNAL OF ARIZONA HISTORY
As the first step in memorializing Dodge Citys controversial
past, local businessmen encouraged Simpson to commemorate the
cowboy, whose activities greatly influenced and colored the early
day history of Dodge City. As the model for his reinforced con-
crete statue, Simpson selected Dodge City chief of police Joe
Sughrue. The Dodge City Journal described the completed artwork,
which Simpson presented to the city in 1928, as a long, gaunt,
rangy cowboy brandishing a trusty six shooter. In the newspa-
pers eyes, it truly described the real cowboy as he was known in
the early days. An inscription on the base proudly proclaimed:
On the ashes of my campfire, this city is built. The statue was
formally dedicated on November 4, 1929, as part of a larger cele-
bration that included the laying of the cornerstone for the city hall.
Members of the local preservation group scattered rocks, sage,
cactus, and soapweed around the site to heighten the Old West
atmosphere. The city commission, however, balked at covering the
entire hill with native flora.10
Simpsons statue symbolized a confident and prosperous town
ready to embrace its past. Boosters like Simpson and Bell wanted
to claim Dodge Citys prominent role on the American frontier -
a role that an increasing number of popular historians and film-
makers were glorifying. By the late 1920s, Dodge City business
leaders were flush with pride over their communitys commercial
and political leadership. The construction of a new Santa Fe Rail-
way terminal and Fred Harvey Hotel, combined with the WWI
boom in wheat and livestock production transformed Dodge City
into the shipping and financial center of western Kansas. Its popu-
lation of 6,039 in 1921 represented a 17 percent increase over the
previous year, making Dodge City the fastest-growing city in the
state. By the end of the decade, the population reached 10,000,
prompting the Kansas State Board of Agriculture and Editor and
Publisher magazine to proclaim Dodge City the capital of Southwest
Kansas. Many local boosters saw the towns triumphs as rewards
for the pioneering values of perseverance and steadfastness.11
A decade later, commemoration of the past became an eco-
nomic necessity. As the twenties ended, Dodge City reeled from
the effects of the national depression even as it found itself at the
center of the dust bowl disaster that destabilized the regions agri-
cultural economy throughout the 1930s. The impact of the great
[218]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
The Simpson cowboy statue.
dust-out was reflected in population figures - by 1940, the city
had lost nearly one fifth of its residents, with only 8,222 remain-
ing behind.12
Community remembrance took on a new meaning. The line
between commemoration as a means of establishing historic iden-
tity and as a commercial venture became indistinguishable as
Dodge Citys economy eroded. How history would be memorial-
ized in Dodge City was the subject of a decade-long public debate
centered on Boot Hill. Spurred by a sense of economic urgency,
the local preservation group formally incorporated as the South-
west Historical Society in 1931. Hamilton Bell was the first presi-
dent and Oscar Simpson served as a charter officer. Aware that
Dodge City had been slow to capitalize on its history, Society
members put atop their agenda the creation of a Boot Hill
museum that they hoped would someday be known throughout
the nation. The group was confident that the museum would
appeal to a new generation of Americans who had succeeded the
actual participants in episodes of those history making days. As
evidence of this interest, they pointed out that the question most
frequently asked by visitors was: Where is Boot Hill?13
[219]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
THE JOURNAL OF ARIZONA HISTORY
Even local businessmen who did not necessarily believe that
a museum was the best approach to luring tourists agreed that it
was time for the city to set aside any lingering reservations about
its wild-and-wooly reputation and capitalize on Boot Hills notori-
ety. Why should Dodge City be ashamed of Boot Hill, the Dodge
City Globe asked. Have we become so goody goody that the days
of the primitive, elemental west offends our fine sense of right
and wrong? In a long letter to the Globe, prominent local banker
C. C. Sales wondered why have newspaper men written story after
story about Dodge City? Why do magazine writers continue to fea-
ture Dodge City in stories which always go over big? In Saless
eyes, the answer was obvious: It is because of historic Old Boot
Hill. Unless the site was preserved, the inevitable march of
progress would make old Dodge City a thing of the past. Sales
recommended erecting a simple granite monument, so that a
stranger visiting Dodge City may know he is standing on the site of
the Old Boot Hill cemetery; and so future generations may not
forget Boot Hill was a very important part of the stage on which
was enacted that great melodrama, the Early Life of Dodge City.14
Furniture owner Joe Hulpieu, also a member of the preser-
vation committee, set off a storm of controversy when he proposed
installing metal sculptures of wagon trains, buffalo, Indians, and
Wyatt Earp to line walkways replicating the Santa Fe Trail and the
old-time cattle trails. The project addressed two of Dodge Citys
pressing problems: providing work for the unemployed and attract-
ing tourists.15
Hulpieu introduced his plan to the city commission in Feb-
ruary of 1931, only to discover that another local organization felt
that the Boot Hill site would better serve the community as tennis
courts. The commission members tabled both proposals. When
landscaping commenced on Boot Hill a few weeks later, however,
rumors spread that the city was in fact levelling the hill in order
to install the tennis courts. A rash of telephone calls to newspa-
pers and a new Save Boot Hill campaign culminated in a large
rally at the Lions Club. Forty club members volunteered to attend
the next city commission meeting and protest any attempt to level
the site they now referred to as the center of historical interest in
the southwest. Mayor Harry Hart reacted quickly to squelch the
rumors, reassuring the Lions Club and the historical society that
[220]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
Boot Hill Burlesque
the city was only tidying up the hill. To avoid future misunder-
standing, Hart created a special committee of Lions Club, Kiwanis,
and Southwest Historical Society members to consult with the city
park board and draft an official plan for the old cemetery.16
With the promise of attracting tourism revenue to the dust-
choked town, the new committee enjoyed a surprising level of pub-
lic support for a formal Boot Hill commemoration. A random
telephone poll conducted by the Dodge City Globe in March of 1932
found that local sentiment strongly favored preserving the grave-
yard site as a historic park. Although one respondent proclaimed
Boot Hill the greatest asset Dodge City has as a tourist attraction,
no one ventured a specific plan for the proposed park. A few weeks
after the poll, the Southwest Historical Society offered a recom-
mendation that set the tone for future discussion. The society envi-
sioned erecting on Boot Hill a six-foot replica of a cowboy boot,
including spurs.17
Although the historical societys proposal was never adopted,
the shape of Boot Hills first commemoration took on the exag-
gerated Old West symbolism that the giant boot represented.
Paraphrasing the local Rotary Club motto with their slogan he
profits most who shoots first, Oscar Simpson and Dodge City
Rotarians - including Dodge City Globe publisher Jess C. Denious -
constructed a parody of the Boot Hill graveyard, on the actual
site, to entertain attendees at the state Rotary convention in May
of 1932. Their whimsical recreation included fifteen concrete-cast
faces and boots sticking out of mounds formed to resemble graves.
Clever hand-painted epitaphs, some of them referring to actual
persons, topped each burial plot. Among the more memorable
epitaphs were:
Shoot-em up Jake
Run for sheriff in 1872
Ran from Sheriff 1876
Buried 1876
* * * *
One Eyed Joe was Slow on the Draw
He played five aces and now he plays the harp
* * * *
The Bones of Hiram Burr, who mistook a he-cow for a her.
[221]
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
THE JOURNAL OF ARIZONA HISTORY
The graves were haphazardly arranged to recreate the impro-
vised nature of the original cemetery. Some were open to expose
fake backbones, ribs, skulls, and other skeletal remains. As proof
of Boot Hills authenticity, one grave featured an actual skeleton.
A large dead tree, with a rope dangling from an overhanging
branch, towered over the scene. A sign nailed to the trunk
announced: Horse Thief Pete was hung on this tree in 1873.
Although a Globe reporter found the scene all very sad, Simp-
sons creation was so popular with visitors that the city allowed it
to remain in place after the Rotary convention adjourned. It
quickly became Dodge Citys main tourist attraction.18
For a Lions convention in June, Simpson dedicated at Boot
Hill an officially sanctioned sculpture of a set of longhorn steer
heads. Unlike his earlier graveyard parody, the concrete busts were
the center of public fanfare that included a mounted parade of
Dodge City Lions Club members dressed in cowboy costumes, a
drum-and-bugle corps, and marching bands. The event indicated
the communitys new willingness to officially embrace its wild-
and-wooly past. To add authenticity, the base of the monument
Dodge City Boot Hill .
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
Oscar H. Simpson and steer-head sculpture.
This content downloaded from 150.135.135.70 on Fri, 14 Aug 2015 22:56:50 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
THE JOURNAL OF ARIZONA HISTORY
was constructed of rock from the old county jail and bore the
inscription: My trails become your highways. In his dedication
speech, Southwest Historical Society spokesman C. C. Isley placed
the monument within the context of national interest in the Old
West. Dozens of magazines for sale in New York and Philadel-
phia, Isley reminded his audience, reaffirmed the need to pre-
serve a fragment of the Old West for our children.19
For the next decade and a half, Simpsons Boot Hill statues -
sanctioned and satirical - were Dodge Citys only monuments to
its past. Lack of money and failure to agree on a specific plan
were to blame. Ideas for a Boot Hill memorial ranged from Joe
Hulpieus miniature reproduction of the Santa Fe Trail to a two-
room sodhouse, a diorama of old Front Street, and a brass buffalo.
Most serious discussions involved Hamilton Bells museum idea,
which city …
CATEGORIES
Economics
Nursing
Applied Sciences
Psychology
Science
Management
Computer Science
Human Resource Management
Accounting
Information Systems
English
Anatomy
Operations Management
Sociology
Literature
Education
Business & Finance
Marketing
Engineering
Statistics
Biology
Political Science
Reading
History
Financial markets
Philosophy
Mathematics
Law
Criminal
Architecture and Design
Government
Social Science
World history
Chemistry
Humanities
Business Finance
Writing
Programming
Telecommunications Engineering
Geography
Physics
Spanish
ach
e. Embedded Entrepreneurship
f. Three Social Entrepreneurship Models
g. Social-Founder Identity
h. Micros-enterprise Development
Outcomes
Subset 2. Indigenous Entrepreneurship Approaches (Outside of Canada)
a. Indigenous Australian Entrepreneurs Exami
Calculus
(people influence of
others) processes that you perceived occurs in this specific Institution Select one of the forms of stratification highlighted (focus on inter the intersectionalities
of these three) to reflect and analyze the potential ways these (
American history
Pharmacology
Ancient history
. Also
Numerical analysis
Environmental science
Electrical Engineering
Precalculus
Physiology
Civil Engineering
Electronic Engineering
ness Horizons
Algebra
Geology
Physical chemistry
nt
When considering both O
lassrooms
Civil
Probability
ions
Identify a specific consumer product that you or your family have used for quite some time. This might be a branded smartphone (if you have used several versions over the years)
or the court to consider in its deliberations. Locard’s exchange principle argues that during the commission of a crime
Chemical Engineering
Ecology
aragraphs (meaning 25 sentences or more). Your assignment may be more than 5 paragraphs but not less.
INSTRUCTIONS:
To access the FNU Online Library for journals and articles you can go the FNU library link here:
https://www.fnu.edu/library/
In order to
n that draws upon the theoretical reading to explain and contextualize the design choices. Be sure to directly quote or paraphrase the reading
ce to the vaccine. Your campaign must educate and inform the audience on the benefits but also create for safe and open dialogue. A key metric of your campaign will be the direct increase in numbers.
Key outcomes: The approach that you take must be clear
Mechanical Engineering
Organic chemistry
Geometry
nment
Topic
You will need to pick one topic for your project (5 pts)
Literature search
You will need to perform a literature search for your topic
Geophysics
you been involved with a company doing a redesign of business processes
Communication on Customer Relations. Discuss how two-way communication on social media channels impacts businesses both positively and negatively. Provide any personal examples from your experience
od pressure and hypertension via a community-wide intervention that targets the problem across the lifespan (i.e. includes all ages).
Develop a community-wide intervention to reduce elevated blood pressure and hypertension in the State of Alabama that in
in body of the report
Conclusions
References (8 References Minimum)
*** Words count = 2000 words.
*** In-Text Citations and References using Harvard style.
*** In Task section I’ve chose (Economic issues in overseas contracting)"
Electromagnetism
w or quality improvement; it was just all part of good nursing care. The goal for quality improvement is to monitor patient outcomes using statistics for comparison to standards of care for different diseases
e a 1 to 2 slide Microsoft PowerPoint presentation on the different models of case management. Include speaker notes... .....Describe three different models of case management.
visual representations of information. They can include numbers
SSAY
ame workbook for all 3 milestones. You do not need to download a new copy for Milestones 2 or 3. When you submit Milestone 3
pages):
Provide a description of an existing intervention in Canada
making the appropriate buying decisions in an ethical and professional manner.
Topic: Purchasing and Technology
You read about blockchain ledger technology. Now do some additional research out on the Internet and share your URL with the rest of the class
be aware of which features their competitors are opting to include so the product development teams can design similar or enhanced features to attract more of the market. The more unique
low (The Top Health Industry Trends to Watch in 2015) to assist you with this discussion.
https://youtu.be/fRym_jyuBc0
Next year the $2.8 trillion U.S. healthcare industry will finally begin to look and feel more like the rest of the business wo
evidence-based primary care curriculum. Throughout your nurse practitioner program
Vignette
Understanding Gender Fluidity
Providing Inclusive Quality Care
Affirming Clinical Encounters
Conclusion
References
Nurse Practitioner Knowledge
Mechanics
and word limit is unit as a guide only.
The assessment may be re-attempted on two further occasions (maximum three attempts in total). All assessments must be resubmitted 3 days within receiving your unsatisfactory grade. You must clearly indicate “Re-su
Trigonometry
Article writing
Other
5. June 29
After the components sending to the manufacturing house
1. In 1972 the Furman v. Georgia case resulted in a decision that would put action into motion. Furman was originally sentenced to death because of a murder he committed in Georgia but the court debated whether or not this was a violation of his 8th amend
One of the first conflicts that would need to be investigated would be whether the human service professional followed the responsibility to client ethical standard. While developing a relationship with client it is important to clarify that if danger or
Ethical behavior is a critical topic in the workplace because the impact of it can make or break a business
No matter which type of health care organization
With a direct sale
During the pandemic
Computers are being used to monitor the spread of outbreaks in different areas of the world and with this record
3. Furman v. Georgia is a U.S Supreme Court case that resolves around the Eighth Amendments ban on cruel and unsual punishment in death penalty cases. The Furman v. Georgia case was based on Furman being convicted of murder in Georgia. Furman was caught i
One major ethical conflict that may arise in my investigation is the Responsibility to Client in both Standard 3 and Standard 4 of the Ethical Standards for Human Service Professionals (2015). Making sure we do not disclose information without consent ev
4. Identify two examples of real world problems that you have observed in your personal
Summary & Evaluation: Reference & 188. Academic Search Ultimate
Ethics
We can mention at least one example of how the violation of ethical standards can be prevented. Many organizations promote ethical self-regulation by creating moral codes to help direct their business activities
*DDB is used for the first three years
For example
The inbound logistics for William Instrument refer to purchase components from various electronic firms. During the purchase process William need to consider the quality and price of the components. In this case
4. A U.S. Supreme Court case known as Furman v. Georgia (1972) is a landmark case that involved Eighth Amendment’s ban of unusual and cruel punishment in death penalty cases (Furman v. Georgia (1972)
With covid coming into place
In my opinion
with
Not necessarily all home buyers are the same! When you choose to work with we buy ugly houses Baltimore & nationwide USA
The ability to view ourselves from an unbiased perspective allows us to critically assess our personal strengths and weaknesses. This is an important step in the process of finding the right resources for our personal learning style. Ego and pride can be
· By Day 1 of this week
While you must form your answers to the questions below from our assigned reading material
CliftonLarsonAllen LLP (2013)
5 The family dynamic is awkward at first since the most outgoing and straight forward person in the family in Linda
Urien
The most important benefit of my statistical analysis would be the accuracy with which I interpret the data. The greatest obstacle
From a similar but larger point of view
4 In order to get the entire family to come back for another session I would suggest coming in on a day the restaurant is not open
When seeking to identify a patient’s health condition
After viewing the you tube videos on prayer
Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages)
The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
Data collection
Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an
I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option. I would want to find out what she is afraid of. I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an
Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych
Identify the type of research used in a chosen study
Compose a 1
Optics
effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte
I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources
Be 4 pages in length
soft MB-920 dumps review and documentation and high-quality listing pdf MB-920 braindumps also recommended and approved by Microsoft experts. The practical test
g
One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research
Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti
3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. After establishing where each member is in relation to the family
A Health in All Policies approach
Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum
Chen
Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change
Read Reflections on Cultural Humility
Read A Basic Guide to ABCD Community Organizing
Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section
Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident