Founded in 1893, the 101 Ranch was famous across the country for its touring Wild West shows, which featured countless cowboys and cowgirls, including Buffalo Bill, Geronimo, and Bill Pickett. Playing to packed arenas from coast to coast, and even in Europe, the 101 Ranch show came to embody the spirit of the frontier for the entire nation.
Michael Wallis is the bestselling author of Route 66, Billy the Kid, Pretty Boy, and David Crockett. He hosts the PBS series American Roads. He voiced The Sheriff in the animated Pixar feature Cars. He lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
I enjoyed this book and am thankful Michael Wallis took the time to research and write it. It is a long book. Wallis includes many bit characters and details which is nice if you want to know about them which I did. It started out slowl as the author laid the foundation. The sheer breadth of the family’s influence, actions, and doings is amazing and what is more surprising is that they are little discussed today. A must-read for students of the West and the early history of American film.
Got bogged down in minutia sometimes, but the broad coverage of the origins of our fascination with the American West and the Cowboy image was interesting. Little is known, in general, of this Oklahoma ranch that was part of the great cattle drives, the wild west shows that toured the world, and the making of early Western movies. Interesting.
Very long book, on a very specific, arcane subject. Nonetheless, good insight on this huge ranch which defined the 'cowboy' way of life and made it popular through road shows and the first western movies.