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1001 Stories From the Old West

Welcome to the new 1001 Stories From the Old West.. Here we offer hand-picked accounts from diaries, historical documents, autobiographies, books of the time period, and historians to bring you the American frontier story directly from the people who lived it. You'll hear actual accounts of Indian battles, pioneer struggles, outlaws, cowboys and Indians, lawmen, and the men and women who took the chance and moved west, many by wagon train, to a largely uncharted and wild territory. Go west, young man, are the words often attributed to Horace Greeley, American author and newspaper editor, but there was more to that quote. He wrote "Washington is not a place to live in- the rents are high, the food is bad, and the morals are deplorable. Go west, young man, go west, and grow up with the country. We invite you to go west with us to another world, another time, another place- and see if you have what it takes to survive and thrive in a world that was much simpler than today's- yet demanded much more of you. Time to mount up-1001 Stories From the Old West is waiting for you. We publish new episodes every other Sunday night at 6pm Eastern Standard Time and you're invited to join us where ever you go for podcasts
- 334 - TRAVESTY and KNOCK-OUT TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
⭐ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers Episodes: "Travesty" & "Knock Out"at 1001 Stories From The Old West Episode 1 — Travesty
"Travesty" opens with a crime that feels senseless at first glance—one of those cases where nothing lines up the way it should. Ranger Jace Pearson is called in to sort through a scene clouded by conflicting accounts, shaky assumptions, and a motive that refuses to surface.
As Pearson digs deeper, he finds himself navigating a web of misdirection, pride, and small‑town pressure, where everyone seems convinced they already know what happened. The real challenge becomes separating fact from rumor and uncovering the quiet detail that turns the entire case on its head.
This episode highlights the Rangers' trademark approach: patience, sharp observation, and the ability to stay steady when everyone else is jumping to conclusions. It's a story about how a single overlooked truth can expose a "travesty" far larger than the crime itself.
Episode 2 — Knock Out"Knock Out" begins with a violent attack that leaves more questions than answers. The victim's injuries suggest a straightforward assault, but the circumstances around it hint at something far more calculated. Ranger Pearson steps into a case where anger, opportunity, and hidden grudges all collide.
The investigation takes him through a series of interviews where every witness has a piece of the puzzle—but none of them fit together cleanly. Pearson must read between the lines, watching for the slip or hesitation that reveals what really happened in those crucial moments before the "knock out."
The tension builds quietly as the Ranger uncovers a motive rooted not in chance, but in long‑simmering resentment. It's a classic example of how the show blends frontier atmosphere with tight detective work, letting the truth emerge one careful step at a time.
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases. The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
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Fri, 12 Jun 2026 - 58min - 333 - SELL-OUT and ILLEGAL ENTRY TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
⭐ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers Episodes: "Sell Out" & "Illegal Entry" at 1001 Stories From The Old West Podcast Episode 1 — Sell Out
This episode opens with a crime that feels personal from the start—one that forces Ranger Jace Pearson to look closely at loyalty, motive, and the quiet pressures that can push a man into dangerous territory. A seemingly straightforward case takes on new weight when it becomes clear that someone on the inside may have helped set the crime in motion.
As Pearson follows the trail, he finds himself navigating a tangle of half‑truths, shifting stories, and the kind of small‑town relationships where everyone knows more than they're willing to say. The tension builds not from gunplay, but from the slow, steady uncovering of a betrayal that cuts deeper than expected.
This is a story about trust, temptation, and the price a person pays when they decide to "sell out"—and the Ranger's calm, methodical approach is what ultimately brings the truth to light.
Episode 2 — Illegal Entry"Illegal Entry" takes Pearson into a case where the border between right and wrong is as thin as the physical border being crossed. What begins as a routine investigation quickly reveals a larger operation built on desperation, exploitation, and the lure of easy money.
Pearson must piece together the movements of men who slip in and out of the country under cover of darkness, guided by handlers who profit from their risk. The episode blends suspense with a strong sense of place—lonely stretches of land, hidden trails, and the uneasy quiet that comes before trouble breaks loose.
What stands out is the human element: people caught in circumstances they can't control, and others willing to take advantage of them. Pearson's job is to cut through the confusion, identify the real criminals, and bring order back to a situation where fear and opportunity collide.
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases. The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
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Wed, 10 Jun 2026 - 1h 00min - 332 - A COWBOY DETECTIVE (CHAP 2) ARCHELETA COUNTY UPRISING
We are celebrating 12 years of bringing you FREE history and literature and vintage radio shows- over 3,000 stories- and we are asking for your support at www.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork.com- Please pledge $5 a month to keep us going against more than 1 million competitors! Thank you! ⭐ **SHOW NOTES — A Cowboy Detective
Chapter 2: "The Archeleta County Uprising"**
Chapter 2 drops us straight into the kind of trouble that made Charles A. Siringo one of the Pinkertons' most valuable undercover men. The so‑called Archeleta County Uprising isn't a full‑blown rebellion so much as a powder keg of local grudges, political resentment, and frontier bravado—and Siringo is sent in to make sense of it before it explodes.
Working quietly and alone, he steps into a community where suspicion runs high and tempers run higher. Ranchers, rustlers, and self‑styled tough men all have their own version of the story, and Siringo has to sift truth from tall talk without revealing who he is or why he's there. Haggling over facts, listening in saloons, and watching the way men size each other up becomes part of the job.
What stands out in this chapter is Siringo's method—patient, observant, and deceptively friendly. He lets the locals underestimate him, and in doing so, he uncovers the real forces stirring up the unrest. The tension is quiet but constant, the kind that comes from knowing one wrong word could blow his cover.
This chapter shows the early shape of Siringo's career: a lone operative walking into a volatile situation, relying on instinct, nerve, and the ability to read men as easily as a trail sign.
⭐ Why This Chapter MattersIt highlights Siringo's undercover skillset—listening more than talking, blending in, and letting others reveal themselves.
It shows how local conflicts on the frontier could escalate quickly without outside intervention.
It sets the tone for the kind of dangerous, politically tangled assignments that would define his Pinkerton years.
Sun, 07 Jun 2026 - 30min - 331 - SMART KILL and JAILBIRD TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers: "Smart Kill" at 1001 Stories From the Old West Podcast
In "Smart Kill," Ranger Jace Pearson is called in to investigate a murder that appears, at first glance, to have been committed by someone with a cool head and a clever plan. The killer has taken pains to cover their tracks, leaving behind a crime scene that looks almost too neat — too calculated — for the average outlaw.
But as Pearson digs deeper, he begins to see the cracks in the killer's strategy. What was meant to be a "smart kill" slowly unravels under the Ranger's steady, methodical approach. The episode highlights the classic strengths of the series: sharp detective work, strong pacing, and the sense that even the most carefully planned crime can't stand up to a Ranger who knows how to read people as well as evidence.
This is a story about overconfidence, motive, and the way a single overlooked detail can bring a criminal's whole plan crashing down.
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers: "Jailbird"1001 Stories From the Old West Podcast
"Jailbird" opens with a jailbreak that sends Ranger Jace Pearson on the trail of an escaped convict determined not to be locked up again. The fugitive's flight sparks a tense manhunt across rural Texas, where every ranch, back road, and abandoned shack becomes a potential hiding place.
As Pearson follows the trail, he uncovers the deeper story behind the escape — a mix of desperation, unfinished business, and the dangerous belief that freedom can be taken by force. The Ranger must move fast, reading tracks and motives alike, before the fugitive's panic turns into violence.
This episode delivers classic Tales of the Texas Rangers energy: a relentless pursuit, a criminal pushed to the edge, and a Ranger who knows that justice sometimes requires understanding the man you're chasing as much as the trail he leaves behind.
❤️ THANK YOU TO OUR LISTENERSTo all of you riding with us at 1001 Stories From the Old West, thank you for your continued support and enthusiasm for these classic radio adventures. Your loyalty keeps these stories alive and helps us bring new episodes to the microphone every week.
And stay tuned — another great Old West classic is already on the way.
Fri, 05 Jun 2026 - 58min - 330 - LITTLE SISTER and UNLEASHED FURY TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers: "Little Sister" at 1001 Stories From The Old West Podcast
1001 Stories From the Old West Podcast
In "Little Sister," Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when a young girl becomes the unexpected key to a violent crime. What begins as a simple missing‑person inquiry quickly turns into a tense manhunt across the Texas backcountry. The episode highlights the emotional stakes that often lay beneath Ranger investigations — especially when the most vulnerable witnesses are the ones who hold the truth.
Listeners will appreciate how this story blends suspense with genuine heart. The young girl at the center of the case is frightened, determined, and far braver than she realizes, and her courage becomes the turning point in the investigation. As always, Pearson's steady presence and methodical approach guide the story toward justice, reminding us why the Rangers earned their legendary reputation.
Followed by Tales of the Texas Rangers: "Unleashed Fury"1001 Stories From the Old West Podcast
"Unleashed Fury" opens with a burst of violence that sends Ranger Jace Pearson into one of the most dangerous pursuits of the series. A sudden act of rage leaves a community shaken, and Pearson must track a fugitive whose anger has spiraled far beyond reason. The chase takes listeners across rugged terrain, isolated ranches, and the unforgiving Texas brush — the kind of landscape where a desperate man can vanish in minutes.
This episode showcases the Rangers' ability to read people as well as tracks. Pearson must understand what drives the fugitive before he can stop him, and the story builds toward a tense, emotionally charged confrontation. It's a classic example of how Tales of the Texas Rangers combined action, psychology, and frontier atmosphere into a single, gripping half hour.
❤️ THANK YOU TO OUR LISTENERSTo all of you riding with us at 1001 Stories From the Old West, thank you for your continued support and enthusiasm for these classic radio adventures. Your loyalty keeps these stories alive and helps us bring new episodes to the microphone every week.
And stay tuned — another great Old West classic is already on the way.
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Wed, 03 Jun 2026 - 58min - 329 - A COWBOY DETECTIVE (CHAP 1) AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF LEGENDARY PINKERTON AGENT CHARLIE SIRINGO
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — A Cowboy Detective, Chapter 1
1001 Stories From the Old West Podcast By Charles A. Siringo — Pinkerton Detective, Cowboy, and Frontier Legend
The Book: A cowboy detective : a true story of twenty-two years with a world-famous detective agency; giving the inside facts of the bloody Coeur d'Alene labor riots, and the many ups and downs of the author throughout the United States, Alaska, British Columbia and Old Mexico, also exciting scenes among the moonshiners of Kentucky and Virginia
Chapter 1 of A Cowboy Detective opens the door on one of the most remarkable lives ever recorded from the American West. Charles A. Siringo — cowboy, trail driver, undercover operative, and eventually one of the Pinkerton Agency's most valuable field men — begins his story in the plainspoken, unvarnished style that made this autobiography a classic. Narrated by master storyteller and son of the West Jon Hagadorn.
🤠 What Chapter 1 CoversSiringo starts by grounding us in his early years on the Texas frontier, where he learned the skills and instincts that would later make him a natural undercover man. He writes about the rough‑and‑ready world of cow camps, long cattle drives, and the kind of hard lessons only the open range could teach. From there to Chicago, where a series of events leads to his making an application for detective work at the Pinkerton Agency. (He has to use a different name for the agency and its staff.)
Listeners will notice how quickly he draws you in. There's no romanticizing here — just the truth as he saw it, told by a man who spent his life walking the line between law and lawlessness.
🔍 Why This Book MattersA rare firsthand account from a real Pinkerton detective who worked undercover in some of the West's most dangerous corners.
Authentic cowboy storytelling — Siringo's voice is pure frontier, honest and unpolished in the best way.
A bridge between eras — from the open range to the rise of organized law enforcement.
A foundational Old West memoir that influenced generations of writers and historians.
✍️ About Charles A. SiringoBorn in 1855, Siringo lived the West from the saddle up. He rode the great cattle trails, worked alongside some of the toughest men on the frontier, and later joined the Pinkertons, where he infiltrated rustler gangs, tracked outlaws across state lines, and lived undercover for months at a time.
His autobiography remains one of the most vivid, firsthand portraits of the Old West ever written — not fiction, not legend, but lived experience.
Sun, 31 May 2026 - 28min - 328 - TROOP TRAIN and UNCERTAIN DEATH TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
⭐ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers at 1001 Stories From The Old West "Troop Train" — Summary
In "Troop Train," Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when a routine military transport becomes the scene of a baffling and dangerous crime. What begins as a simple security concern quickly escalates into a high‑stakes investigation involving sabotage, hidden motives, and a criminal willing to risk dozens of lives to achieve his goal.
As Jace works alongside military authorities, he must piece together a trail that runs through rail yards, supply depots, and the tight‑knit world of enlisted men — a world where loyalty runs deep and secrets can be hard to pry loose. The episode blends procedural detective work with the tension of a moving train and the urgency of preventing a disaster before it happens.
It's a gripping story of timing, teamwork, and the Rangers' steady resolve to protect the innocent, even when the danger is rolling down the tracks at full speed.
⭐ "Uncertain Death" — Summary"Uncertain Death" opens with a mysterious disappearance that leaves more questions than answers — and a community caught between fear, rumor, and the grim possibility that a crime has been committed. Ranger Jace Pearson is brought in to determine whether the missing man is the victim of foul play, an accident, or something even more complicated.
The investigation leads Jace through isolated ranchland, tense interviews, and a trail of clues that seem to contradict one another at every turn. As he digs deeper, he uncovers hidden relationships, buried motives, and a truth that refuses to come into focus until the very end.
The strength of the episode lies in its atmosphere — the uncertainty, the quiet dread, the sense that danger may be lurking just beyond the next bend in the road. It's a classic Rangers mystery built on patience, persistence, and the careful unraveling of a case where nothing is quite what it seems.
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Fri, 29 May 2026 - 57min - 327 - PRELUDE TO FELONY and NIGHT HAWK TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS⭐ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers at 1001 Stories From The Old West Podcast "Prelude to Felony" — Summary
In "Prelude to Felony," a seemingly minor crime becomes the spark that ignites a much larger and more dangerous investigation. Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when a routine break‑in shows signs of something more deliberate — a pattern that suggests the offender isn't just dabbling in trouble, but warming up for something far worse.
As Jace follows the trail, the case widens into a study of criminal escalation: how a small act, left unchecked, can grow into a full‑blown felony. The episode blends methodical detective work with rising tension as Jace pieces together the suspect's motives and movements, racing to stop a crime that hasn't happened yet — but is coming fast.
It's a classic Rangers story about instinct, patience, and the importance of catching danger early, before it grows teeth.
⭐ "Nighthawk" — Summary"Nighthawk" opens with a chilling nighttime crime that leaves a community shaken and the Rangers on high alert. Ranger Jace Pearson arrives to find a case marked by secrecy, fear, and a criminal who moves under cover of darkness — striking quickly, vanishing just as fast, and leaving almost nothing behind.
As Jace digs deeper, he uncovers a web of motives and opportunities that point in several directions at once. The investigation becomes a tense cat‑and‑mouse pursuit, with Jace relying on sharp observation, local insight, and the Rangers' trademark persistence to close in on a suspect who believes the night will always hide him.
The episode captures the eerie atmosphere of rural Texas after dark — isolated roads, quiet houses, and the sense that danger can be just beyond the lantern light. It's a gripping story of patience, pressure, and the Ranger's steady resolve to bring justice into the shadows.
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SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated).
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Wed, 27 May 2026 - 54min - 326 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAPS 24-27 ) FINAL CHAPTERS
We have left out chapters 24-26 which Parkmen added to illutrate the details of killing buffalo. We begin with the final chapter, 27, THE SETTLEMENT. You can find them at www.gutenberg.org (search The Oregon Trail)
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — The Oregon Trail, Chapter 27 1001 Stories From the Old WestChapter 27 finds Parkman nearing the end of his long journey, and the tone shifts noticeably from adventure to reflection. After months on the Plains—living with the Oglala, hunting buffalo, enduring sickness, storms, and the daily grind of frontier travel—Parkman begins to look back on the trail with a mixture of fatigue, gratitude, and sharpened perspective.
In this chapter, he describes the final stages of his return eastward, where the wild openness of the prairie slowly gives way to the more settled regions of the frontier. Parkman's observations become more introspective. He contrasts the raw freedom of the Plains with the encroaching signs of civilization, and he senses—correctly—that the world he has just witnessed is already beginning to change.
There's a quiet melancholy running through the chapter. Parkman knows he has seen something rare: a landscape and a way of life that few Americans of his generation would ever experience firsthand. His descriptions of the people he met, the hardships he endured, and the vastness of the country he crossed carry a tone of farewell—not just to the trail, but to an era.
Chapter 27 serves as a bridge between the immediacy of Parkman's travels and the legacy he would leave behind. It's the moment where the journey becomes memory, and memory becomes history.
⭐ RECAP: The Success and Historical Importance of The Oregon TrailWhen The Oregon Trail was published in 1849, it struck a chord with readers across the United States and Europe. Parkman's vivid storytelling, sharp eye for detail, and willingness to portray both the beauty and brutality of frontier life made the book an instant success.
Several factors fueled its popularity:
It offered a firsthand look at the West at a time when most Americans knew it only through rumor and imagination.
Parkman's writing was unusually cinematic for the era—full of color, movement, and personality.
His encounters with Plains tribes gave Eastern readers a rare, if imperfect, window into cultures they had never seen.
The timing was perfect: the nation was in the midst of westward expansion, and curiosity about the frontier was at its peak.
But the book's lasting importance goes beyond popularity.
Parkman unintentionally created one of the earliest literary time capsules of the American West. His descriptions of buffalo herds, nomadic camps, hunting practices, and the rhythms of life on the Plains preserve details that would soon vanish under the pressure of settlement, railroads, and government policy.
Though shaped by the biases of his era, Parkman's account remains a foundational document for historians, anthropologists, and anyone interested in the cultural and environmental history of the West. It captures a world on the brink of irreversible change—and does so with the immediacy of someone who lived it, not someone looking back decades later.
Sun, 24 May 2026 - 24min - 325 - ICE MAN and DREAM FARM TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "Ice Man" at 1001 Stories From The Old West Podcast A Frozen Trail and a Killer Without Emotion
"Ice Man" opens with a crime that feels as cold as its title — a killing carried out with no hesitation, no remorse, and no clear motive. Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when a seemingly ordinary situation turns deadly, leaving behind a victim and a trail that's chilling in more ways than one.
As Jace digs deeper, he encounters a suspect whose calm exterior masks something far more dangerous. The investigation becomes a study in emotional detachment, where the killer's ability to stay cool under pressure makes the case unusually difficult to crack.
The episode builds tension through small clues, sharp interrogations, and the unsettling sense that the murderer is always watching, always calculating.
Atmosphere: stark, psychological, slow‑burn tension Themes: emotional coldness, hidden motives, the Ranger's instinct for reading people
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "Dream Farm" A Family's Hope — and a Crime That Shatters ItIn "Dream Farm," the story begins with optimism: a family working toward a better life on a small Texas homestead. But that dream collapses when violence strikes without warning, leaving Jace Pearson to untangle a case rooted in desperation, jealousy, and broken promises.
The episode blends domestic drama with frontier crime, showing how quickly hope can turn to tragedy when money, land, and pride collide. Jace's investigation leads him through emotional terrain as he interviews neighbors, follows financial leads, and uncovers the tensions simmering beneath the surface of rural life.
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases.The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored by Wheaties
Get all of our shows at one website: www.bestof1001stories.com
My email works as well for comments: 1001storiespodcast@gmail.com
SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated).
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Fri, 22 May 2026 - 52min - 324 - COLD BLOOD and BRIGHT BOY TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ SHOW NOTES at 1001 Stories From The Old West — "Cold Blood" Tales of the Texas Rangers A Calculated Killing and a Trail That Refuses to Cool
"Cold Blood" opens with a crime committed with chilling precision — the kind of act that leaves a community stunned and law enforcement scrambling for answers. Ranger Jace Pearson steps into a case where the killer's motive is anything but obvious, and the clues are scattered like dust across the Texas plains.
As Jace works the investigation, he encounters a mix of misleading leads, conflicting witness accounts, and a suspect who seems to stay one step ahead. The tension builds as the Rangers piece together a pattern that reveals a crime driven not by impulse, but by something far darker and more deliberate.
This is a story about methodical police work, the psychology of a cold‑blooded killer, and the way a single overlooked detail can turn the entire case.
Atmosphere: stark, tense, procedural Themes: motive hidden beneath calm surfaces, the danger of underestimating a calculated criminal
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "Bright Boy" A Clever Criminal — and a Game of Wits Across TexasIn "Bright Boy," Ranger Jace Pearson faces a very different kind of adversary: a smooth‑talking, quick‑thinking young man whose intelligence becomes both his greatest asset and his downfall. The episode begins with a crime that seems almost too neatly executed, and Jace quickly realizes he's dealing with someone who enjoys staying just out of reach.
The chase leads through small towns, roadside stops, and tense encounters where charm and deception blur together. "Bright Boy" is less about brute force and more about matching wits — a duel between a seasoned Ranger and a criminal who thinks he's smarter than everyone around him.
The story builds toward a confrontation where cleverness alone won't be enough, and where Jace's patience and instincts prove just as important as his badge.
Atmosphere: sharp, character‑driven, cat‑and‑mouse Themes: arrogance vs. experience, the thin line between intelligence and recklessness
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Wed, 20 May 2026 - 50min - 323 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 23) INDIAN ALARMS
🎙️ SHOW NOTES The Oregon Trail — Chapter 23: "Indian Alarms"
Chapter 23 drops listeners into a stretch of the journey where tension hangs over the prairie like heat in the air. Parkman and his companions are traveling through country where signs of nearby Native groups appear suddenly and ambiguously — footprints, smoke on the horizon, a stray horse, a shadow on a ridge. None of it confirms danger, but none of it can be ignored. A visit to a large Arapaho camp provides a good example of the tension.
Tete Rouge, their unwanted companion on this journey, continues to be a hindrance.
This chapter is less about direct confrontation and more about the psychology of the frontier: the way uncertainty sharpens every sound, every movement, every instinct. Parkman captures the mood of a camp where men try to sleep with rifles close at hand, where a snapped twig can send the whole party upright, and where rumor spreads faster than fact.
⭐ Key Elements for ListenersA landscape full of signals — Parkman describes tracks, distant figures, and shifting signs that may or may not indicate hostile intent.
The emotional strain of vigilance — the men are worn thin by nights of interrupted sleep and days of scanning the horizon.
Cultural misunderstandings — Parkman reflects on how fear and unfamiliarity can magnify perceived threats, even when no attack comes.
Moments of dark humor — the party's nerves sometimes lead to overreactions that Parkman recounts with a wry edge.
A study in frontier psychology — this chapter shows how the West tested not just endurance, but imagination.
🎧 Tone & Takeaway"Indian Alarms" is less an action chapter and more a mood piece — a portrait of the West as a place where danger could be real or imagined, and where the line between the two was razor thin. It's a reminder that the trail wasn't only a physical journey; it was a mental one, shaped by uncertainty, rumor, and the vastness of the plains.
Sun, 17 May 2026 - 24min - 322 - THE RUB OUT and THE HITCHHIKER TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ "Rub Out" Tales of the Texas Rangers at 1001 Stories From The Old West
Podcast Show Notes (Atmospheric, Crime‑Driven) A quiet Texas town is shaken when a man with no known enemies is gunned down in what appears to be a cold, calculated ambush. Ranger Jace Pearson is called in to determine whether the killing was a personal vendetta, a professional "rub out," or something far more tangled.
As Jace digs into the victim's background, he uncovers a trail of hidden dealings, uneasy partnerships, and a past that refuses to stay buried. Witnesses are nervous, motives are murky, and the deeper the Rangers look, the clearer it becomes that the killer struck with purpose — and with confidence.
The investigation hinges on a small but telling detail that exposes the truth behind the attack. When Jace finally pieces it together, the motive reveals the darker side of frontier justice: debts unpaid, loyalties broken, and the lengths some will go to settle a score.
A tense, methodical episode that showcases the Rangers' ability to cut through fear and deception to find the truth.
🎙️ "The Hitchhiker"Podcast Show Notes (Suspenseful, Character‑Focused) A routine drive turns deadly when a motorist picks up a hitchhiker who vanishes shortly before the driver is found murdered. Ranger Jace Pearson steps into a case where the suspect seems to have melted into the Texas landscape, leaving behind only fragments of a trail.
Jace interviews travelers, gas‑station attendants, and roadside witnesses, slowly assembling a picture of a dangerous drifter with a shifting story and a talent for disappearing. The episode builds tension through the uncertainty of the open road — long stretches of highway, isolated stops, and the uneasy knowledge that the killer could be anywhere.
The breakthrough comes when Jace identifies a behavioral pattern that the hitchhiker repeats without realizing it, allowing the Rangers to close in before he strikes again.
A gripping blend of mobility, mystery, and the unpredictable danger of trusting the wrong stranger.
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases.The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
Get all of our shows at one website: www.bestof1001stories.com
My email works as well for comments: 1001storiespodcast@gmail.com
SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated).
YOUR REVIEWS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED!
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Fri, 15 May 2026 - 57min - 321 - PAID IN FULL and SQUARE DANCE TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ "Paid in Full" Tales of the Texas Rangers at 1001 Stories From The Old West Podcast
Podcast Show Notes (Atmospheric, Spoiler‑Safe) A routine business transaction turns deadly when a man who's just settled an old debt is found murdered shortly afterward. Ranger Jace Pearson is called in to untangle a case where the motive seems obvious—until it isn't.
The investigation leads Jace through a trail of false assumptions, hidden grudges, and a financial dispute that masks something far more personal. Witnesses contradict one another, alibis shift, and the victim's past begins to cast a long shadow over the present.
As Jace digs deeper, he uncovers a pattern of behavior that suggests the killer may have acted out of something more complicated than money. The tension builds as the Rangers close in on a suspect who believes they've covered their tracks completely.
A story of debt, pride, and the price of settling scores, this episode showcases the Rangers' methodical approach to justice on the Texas frontier.
🎙️ "Square Dance"Podcast Show Notes (Atmospheric, Character‑Driven) What begins as a lively country square dance ends in chaos when a local man is shot during the festivities. With half the town present—and music, noise, and movement masking the moment of the crime—Ranger Jace Pearson faces a case where everyone saw something, but no one saw enough.
The episode blends small‑town dynamics with classic frontier tension: jealousies, rivalries, and long‑standing feuds simmer beneath the surface. As Jace interviews dancers, musicians, and bystanders, he pieces together a timeline that reveals how carefully the killer used the crowded event as cover.
The investigation turns on a single overlooked detail, something hidden in plain sight amid the laughter, boots, and fiddle music. When Jace finally connects the dots, the motive proves to be as old as the West itself—emotion, impulse, and a moment of opportunity.
A strong mix of community color and sharp detective work, this episode highlights how even the most innocent gatherings can conceal deadly intent.
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Wed, 13 May 2026 - 1h 00min - 320 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAPS 21-22) THE PUEBLO AND BENTS FORT and TETE ROUGE
🎙️ Chapter 21 — "The Pueblo and Bent's Fort"at 1001 Stories From The Old West (reviews at end)
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Podcast Show Notes (Atmospheric, Listener‑Focused) In this chapter, Parkman reaches one of the most important crossroads of the mid‑19th‑century frontier: the region around Bent's Fort and the nearby Pueblo settlements along the Arkansas River. After weeks of wilderness travel, the sudden appearance of adobe walls, bustling trade yards, and a mix of cultures feels almost surreal.
Parkman paints Bent's Fort as a lively hub where trappers, traders, Mexicans, French Canadians, and Plains tribes all intersect. The fort becomes a snapshot of the West in transition—commerce, diplomacy, and survival all happening under one roof. Parkman observes the rhythms of daily life there: the trading of buffalo robes, the mingling of languages, the uneasy alliances, and the constant movement of people heading toward Santa Fe, the mountains, or the northern plains.
The nearby Pueblo settlement adds another layer—rough‑hewn, multicultural, and shaped by men who have chosen to live between worlds. Parkman's descriptions give listeners a sense of the frontier as a living crossroads, not just a wilderness.
This chapter offers a rare pause in the journey: a moment of community, color, and cultural complexity before the trail turns rugged again.
🎙️ Chapter 22 — "Tête Rouge"Podcast Show Notes (Character‑Driven, Atmospheric) Chapter 22 introduces one of Parkman's most memorable frontier characters: Tête Rouge, a red‑haired, sharp‑tongued Canadian whose personality is as bold as his nickname. He's a mix of humor, bravado, and unpredictability—the kind of figure who could only have come from the rough edges of the fur‑trade world.
Parkman's encounters with Tête Rouge reveal the man's contradictions: boastful yet capable, reckless yet resourceful, irritating yet strangely endearing. Through him, Parkman gives listeners a glimpse into the lives of the independent trappers and wanderers who roamed the plains long before wagon trains became common.
The chapter blends character study with frontier color—campfire stories, tall tales, and the kind of rough camaraderie that forms when travelers meet in the middle of nowhere. Tête Rouge becomes a symbol of the old mountain‑man era, already fading by the time Parkman rode the trail.
For your audience, this episode delivers personality, humor, and a welcome break from the harsher chapters—while still deepening the human tapestry of the West.
Sun, 10 May 2026 - 25min - 319 - BIRDS OF A FEATHER and CLIP JOB TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "Birds of a Feather" at 1001 Stories From The Old West A Crime Bound by Loyalty — and Betrayal
In "Birds of a Feather," Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when a robbery spirals into violence, leaving local authorities scrambling for answers. What looks at first like a simple holdup quickly reveals deeper ties between the suspects — bonds of friendship, shared history, and a dangerous willingness to protect one another at any cost.
As Jace follows the trail, he uncovers a pattern of behavior that suggests the criminals aren't just working together — they're thinking alike, moving alike, and making the same mistakes. The episode builds its tension on the idea that people who flock together often fall together, and Jace uses that insight to close in on the truth.
Without giving away the final turn, this is a story about loyalty twisted into criminal partnership, and how a Ranger's steady reading of human nature can break a case wide open.
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "Clip Job" A Routine Stop Turns Into a Deadly Puzzle"Clip Job" begins with what seems like a minor incident — a traffic stop, a suspicious vehicle, and a driver whose story doesn't quite add up. But when the situation escalates into violence, Ranger Jace Pearson is brought in to unravel a case that stretches far beyond the roadside.
Piece by piece, Jace reconstructs the chain of events, following clues that lead through stolen goods, forged identities, and a criminal operation hiding behind an ordinary façade. The title hints at the heart of the mystery: a "clip job" — a fast, dirty crime meant to leave little trace. But even the quickest job leaves a trail for someone who knows how to look.
The episode blends procedural detail with rising tension as Jace closes in on suspects who believe they've covered their tracks.
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Fri, 08 May 2026 - 59min - 318 - FUGITIVE'S TRAIL and THE WHITE ELEPHANT TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "Fugitive's Trail" at 1001 Stories From The Old West A Desperate Manhunt Across the Texas Backcountry
In "Fugitive's Trail," Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when a dangerous prisoner escapes custody and vanishes into the rugged Texas countryside. What begins as a routine pursuit quickly turns into a tense, high‑stakes chase as Jace pieces together the fugitive's movements through scattered clues, frightened witnesses, and the harsh realities of the terrain.
The episode builds its suspense on the uncertainty of the trail — a man with nothing to lose can be unpredictable, and every lead Jace uncovers hints at a growing desperation. As the chase stretches across lonely roads, isolated ranches, and open country, the Rangers must rely on patience, instinct, and the ability to read the land as well as the man they're hunting.
Without revealing the final confrontation, this is a story about pressure, persistence, and the razor‑thin line between escape and capture on the Texas frontier.
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "The White Elephant" A Strange Clue and a Crime That Doesn't Add Up"The White Elephant" opens with a crime that seems almost too odd to be real — a theft involving an unusual object that leaves local authorities baffled. Ranger Jace Pearson steps in to untangle the mystery, and what begins as a quirky case quickly reveals deeper motives beneath the surface.
As Jace interviews townspeople and follows a trail of conflicting stories, the so‑called "white elephant" becomes the key to understanding a crime driven by pride, deception, and a surprising personal twist. The episode blends light humor with classic Ranger methodical investigation, giving listeners a mix of curiosity and tension as the truth slowly comes into focus.
The payoff is pure Tales of the Texas Rangers: a seemingly simple case that turns out to be anything but.
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases.The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
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Wed, 06 May 2026 - 59min - 317 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 20) THE LONELY JOURNEY
The Oregon Trail Chap 20 The Lonely Journey Summary
In this chapter, Parkman and his companions press deeper into the wilderness as their long westward trek enters a new phase. The open prairie begins to fall away behind them, replaced by rougher country that demands more from both men and horses. The days grow more strenuous, the nights colder, and the sense of isolation more profound.
Parkman captures the rhythm of frontier travel with vivid detail — the early starts, the steady plodding of the animals, the constant search for water, and the small but essential routines that keep a party moving through unforgiving terrain. Along the way, they encounter traces of earlier travelers, signs of wildlife, and the ever‑present reminder that the West is vast, indifferent, and beautiful.
What stands out in this chapter is the growing contrast between hardship and wonder. The men face fatigue, unpredictable weather, and the strain of navigating unfamiliar ground, yet Parkman never loses sight of the grandeur around them. The sweeping views, the changing light, and the sheer scale of the landscape give the journey a sense of purpose that goes beyond miles traveled.
Without revealing the chapter's final moments, this is a story of endurance, adaptation, and the quiet determination required to keep moving when the trail grows long.
Sun, 03 May 2026 - 41min - 316 - THE WHEELCHAIR KILLING and PLAY FOR KEEPS TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "The Wheelchair Killing" A Murder That Shouldn't Have Been Possible
In "The Wheelchair Killing," Ranger Jace Pearson is called in to investigate a baffling murder that defies logic from the start. The victim, confined to a wheelchair and unable to defend himself, is found dead under circumstances that raise more questions than answers. As Jace digs into the case, he encounters a tangle of strained relationships, hidden resentments, and a household where everyone seems to be holding something back. The physical limitations of the victim make the crime appear simple — but the deeper Jace looks, the more he realizes the killer counted on that assumption. Without revealing the twist, this is a story about opportunity, deception, and the danger of underestimating the motives of those closest to the victim.
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "Play for Keeps" A Fugitive on the Run and a Deadly Game of Cat and Mouse"Play for Keeps" opens with a violent confrontation that sends a dangerous fugitive fleeing across the Texas countryside. Ranger Jace Pearson joins the manhunt, tracking a suspect who is armed, desperate, and willing to do anything to stay free. The chase leads Jace through small towns, open country, and tense encounters with people who may be helping — or hiding — the fugitive. Each lead brings him closer to understanding the man he's pursuing, and the stakes rise as the trail grows hotter. The episode builds toward a showdown that highlights the Rangers' mix of patience, strategy, and courage when dealing with criminals who have nothing left to lose.
⭐ Shared Themes Across Both EpisodesCrimes driven by hidden motives and human desperation
Jace Pearson's steady, methodical approach to unraveling complex cases
Strong atmosphere: rural Texas towns, isolated homesteads, and wide‑open countr
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Fri, 01 May 2026 - 1h 01min - 315 - LOGGER'S LARCENY and THE HATCHET TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "Loggers' Larceny" A Forest Crime with Deep Roots
In "Loggers' Larceny," Ranger Jace Pearson is called into the thick timber country when a logging operation reports a series of costly thefts. What begins as missing equipment soon points to something far more organized — a scheme that threatens both livelihoods and lives. As Jace works his way through a community where everyone knows everyone, he finds himself navigating rivalries, grudges, and the rough‑and‑ready world of men who make their living with saws and sweat. The clues lead him deep into the forest, where the line between accident and sabotage grows dangerously thin. Without revealing the ending, this is a story about greed, betrayal, and the lengths some will go to carve out a profit in the shadows of the pines.
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "The Hatchet" A Brutal Crime and a Trail That Refuses to Stay Cold"The Hatchet" opens with
ales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases.The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
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Wed, 29 Apr 2026 - 1h 01min - 314 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 19) THE PASSAGE OF THE MOUNTAINS
🎙️ **SHOW NOTES — The Oregon Trail, Chapter 19
"Passage of the Mountains"** Narrated by Jon Hagadorn for 1001 Stories From The Old West
In this chapter, Parkman and his companions push deeper into the rugged backbone of the frontier, leaving the open plains behind as they begin their ascent into the mountains. The journey becomes a test of endurance: steep trails, loose rock, and narrow passes that force the party to move slowly and carefully, often leading their horses by hand.
Parkman's descriptions capture both the majesty and the menace of the high country. The air grows thin, the weather shifts without warning, and every ridge reveals a new challenge. Yet there is beauty here too — sweeping views, cool mountain streams, and the sense of crossing into a wilder, older world untouched by settlement.
Along the way, the men encounter signs of game, traces of earlier travelers, and the constant reminder that the mountains demand respect. The chapter blends physical hardship with moments of reflection, giving listeners a vivid sense of what it meant to push westward through terrain that was as unforgiving as it was awe‑inspiring.
Without giving away the chapter's final moments, this is a story of grit, camaraderie, and the quiet triumph of pressing forward when the trail grows steep.
⭐ Themes & HighlightsThe physical challenge of mountain travel in the 1840s
Parkman's vivid contrast between danger and beauty
The growing sense of isolation as the party climbs higher
A chapter that marks a turning point in the journey west
Sun, 26 Apr 2026 - 37min - 313 - JOY RIDE and DEATH SHAFT TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases.The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
NEW Enjoy 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories and The Best of Arthur Conan Doyle https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-sherlock-holmes-stories-best-sir-arthur-conan/id1534427618
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Fri, 24 Apr 2026 - 1h 02min - 312 - CANNED DEATH and NO LIVING WITNESSES TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERSSHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers "Canned Death" A Routine Shipment with a Deadly Secret
In "Canned Death," Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when a quiet Texas town is shaken by a baffling and gruesome discovery: a shipment of canned goods that hides something far more sinister than food. What begins as a simple case of tampering quickly escalates into a dangerous investigation involving smuggling, deception, and a killer willing to go to extraordinary lengths to cover their tracks.
As Jace follows the trail from a small‑town warehouse to the wide‑open backroads of Texas, the clues point toward a criminal operation that has been hiding in plain sight. The episode blends methodical detective work with rising suspense, showing how a single overlooked detail can crack open a case that seemed airtight. It's a classic Rangers story—steady, sharp, and full of frontier grit.
A Crime Buried Deep—and a Killer Counting on Silence"No Living Witnesses" opens with a chilling premise: a violent crime committed with cold precision, leaving behind no one who can speak to what truly happened. Ranger Jace Pearson steps into a case where every lead seems to vanish just as quickly as it appears, and where the killer's greatest weapon is the absence of testimony.
Jace must rely on instinct, patience, and the smallest fragments of evidence as he pieces together a crime that someone has gone to great lengths to erase. The investigation winds through isolated ranchland, tense interviews, and a community shaken by fear and uncertainty. As the truth comes into focus, the episode highlights the Rangers' unwavering commitment to justice—even when the trail grows faint and the danger grows close.
ales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases.The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
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Wed, 22 Apr 2026 - 1h 00min - 311 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAPS 17-18) THE BLACK HILLS and THE MOUNTAIN HUNT
🎙️ SHOW NOTES 1001 Stories From The Old West Francis Parkman — The Oregon Trail, Chapters 17 & 18 The Black Hills & The Mountain Hunt Chapter 17 — The Black Hills
In this chapter, Parkman and his companions push into the rugged, pine‑covered ridges of the Black Hills — a landscape that feels darker, wilder, and more mysterious than anything they've crossed so far. The trail grows steep and broken, the air turns sharp, and the party finds itself surrounded by towering rock formations and dense timber that seem to swallow sound.
Parkman's descriptions capture both the beauty and the unease of this country. The Black Hills are rich with game, but also with signs of Sioux war parties, and every ridge seems to hold the possibility of danger. As the men navigate narrow passes and hidden valleys, Parkman reflects on the strange mixture of exhilaration and isolation that comes with traveling through such untamed ground.
This chapter gives listeners a vivid sense of the frontier at its most dramatic — a place where nature feels ancient, powerful, and indifferent to the travelers moving through it.
Chapter 18 — The Mountain HuntHere Parkman turns from the dark timber of the hills to the open slopes and high meadows where the hunt becomes the day's central drama. The chapter follows a vigorous chase after mountain sheep — a pursuit that demands endurance, sharp shooting, and a willingness to scramble across dangerous ledges and loose rock.
Parkman's account blends action with observation: the agility of the sheep, the difficulty of the terrain, and the raw excitement of the chase. The hunt becomes a test of both skill and stamina, revealing the physical challenges of frontier life and the thrill that drew so many men westward.
Sun, 19 Apr 2026 - 34min - 310 - DEAD IN THE CARDS and BLOOD HARVEST TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases.The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
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Wed, 15 Apr 2026 - 1h 00min - 309 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 16) THE TRAPPERS
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🎙️ SHOW NOTES The Oregon Trail by Francis Parkman Chapter 16 — "The Trappers" Chapter 16 deepens Parkman's immersion into the world of the mountain men, picking up the thread from the previous chapter but shifting the focus from first impressions to lived experience. Now traveling in close company with these seasoned trappers, Parkman observes not just their appearance and habits, but the rhythms of their daily life — the quiet competence, the sudden bursts of danger, and the unspoken code that binds them together. The chapter unfolds like a series of vivid camp‑side vignettes. Parkman watches the trappers prepare their gear, trade stories, and navigate the wilderness with an ease that borders on instinct. Their conversations reveal a life shaped by solitude, hardship, and a constant negotiation with the land and its peoples. Some are boastful, some reserved, but all carry the unmistakable stamp of men who have survived by their wits. Parkman contrasts their rugged independence with the emigrants he has left behind. Where the emigrants struggle under the weight of civilization's expectations, the trappers seem almost elemental — men who have shed everything unnecessary. Yet Parkman also senses the fragility of their world. The beaver trade is fading, the frontier is changing, and these men stand at the edge of a disappearing era. There's humor here, too — rough, frontier humor — and moments of camaraderie that soften the chapter's harsher edges. But beneath it all runs a quiet melancholy, as Parkman realizes he is witnessing a way of life already slipping into legend.
⭐ Key Themes in Chapter 16 • A vanishing profession — trappers as the last representatives
Sun, 12 Apr 2026 - 21min - 308 - THE DEVIL'S SHARE and DEADHEAD FREIGHT TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
⭐ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers "The Devil's Share" — Summary In "The Devil's Share," Ranger Jace Pearson is called to a remote Texas farm where a hardworking dirt farmer is found dead after a bitter confrontation with his hot‑tempered brother. What begins as a simple family dispute quickly unravels into a tangle of jealousy, old grudges, and a suspiciously convenient trail of evidence. As Jace digs deeper, he finds himself navigating a web of lies, planted clues, and a frame‑up designed to send an innocent man to prison. This episode blends frontier tension with classic procedural detective work, showing how greed and resentment can turn kin against kin—and how a Ranger's patience and sharp eye can cut through even the most carefully staged deception.
Here is a full, polished, podcast‑ready show note summary for "Deadhead Freight" in the voice and pacing of 1001 Stories From the Old West. It's atmospheric, spoiler‑safe, and shaped for listeners who want intrigue without giving away the final reveal.
⭐ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers "Deadhead Freight" — Full Summary A quiet night on the Texas rails turns deadly when a brakeman is found crushed beneath a freight car on a routine run. At first glance it looks like a tragic accident—one of the many dangers that come with railroad work in the wide‑open West. But when Ranger Jace Pearson arrives on the scene, the details don't sit right. The timing is off. The positioning is wrong. And the stories coming from the crew don't quite line up. As Jace digs deeper, what seemed like a simple mishap soon reveals signs of deliberate murder, and the investigation shifts onto the rails themselves. Every switching order, every crew change, every stop along the line becomes a clue in a case where the killer is counting on the constant motion of freight traffic to cover their tracks. Jace follows the trail through rail yards, sidings, and the shadowed corners of Texas freight operations, uncovering a scheme built around greed, opportunity, and the anonymity of deadhead travel. The deeper he goes, the clearer it becomes that someone used the vastness of the rail network as both weapon and hiding place. With patience, sharp observation, and a Ranger's instinct for the truth, Jace pieces together a pattern hidden in the timetables—leading to a tense confrontation that brings the whole plot into focus. "Deadhead Freight" delivers a tight, atmospheric mystery where the rhythm of the rails becomes the heartbeat of the investigation, and justice rides on Jace Pearson's ability to read the tracks before they go cold.
…soon reveals signs of deliberate murder, and Ranger Jace Pearson must untangle a case where every timetable, switching order, and crew assignment becomes a potential clue. As he follows the trail through rail yards and lonely sidings, Jace uncovers a scheme built around greed, opportunity, and the anonymity of freight travel. The deeper he digs, the clearer it becomes that the killer counted on the vastness of the Texas rail system to hide their crime — but a Texas Ranger's persistence can close even the widest gaps. The episode blends railroad atmosphere with classic frontier detective work, building toward a sharp, satisfying unraveling of motive and method.
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Wed, 08 Apr 2026 - 1h 00min - 307 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 15) THE HUNTING CAMP
🎙️ SHOW NOTES
The Oregon Trail — Chapter 15 "The Hunting Camp" Chapter 15 finds Parkman and his companions entering one of the most vivid and rugged stretches of their western journey. After days of hard travel, they arrive at a Sioux hunting camp, a temporary village alive with movement, noise, and the unmistakable energy of a people living in close rhythm with the land. Parkman's eye for detail is at its sharpest here. He describes the camp as a bustling, almost theatrical scene: hides stretched for tanning, dogs weaving between lodges, hunters returning with fresh game, and women working with practiced efficiency. The camp is not a romantic tableau but a working community, and Parkman captures its raw vitality with a mixture of curiosity and respect. He and Shaw are welcomed with a blend of hospitality and scrutiny. They observe the hunters preparing for the chase, the women processing meat and hides, and the children darting through the camp with the freedom of the plains. Parkman notes the skill and discipline of the Sioux hunters, whose lives revolve around the buffalo and the seasonal rhythms of the prairie. Throughout the chapter, Parkman reflects on the contrast between his own world and the one unfolding before him. The hunting camp represents a culture built on mobility, cooperation, and deep knowledge of the land—qualities that stand in stark contrast to the emigrant wagons struggling westward. By the time Parkman departs, he has gained not only a deeper understanding of Sioux life but a renewed sense of the vastness and complexity of the frontier. The hunting camp is a world unto itself, and Parkman captures it at a moment of full, vibrant activity.
⭐ Key Elements in Chapter 15 • A living portrait of Sioux daily life — work, play, preparation, and community • Frontier ethnography — Parkman's close observation of customs and camp structure • The centrality of the buffalo hunt — skill, ritual, and survival • Cultural contrast — the fluidity of Native life vs. the rigid struggle of emigrant travel
Sun, 05 Apr 2026 - 49min - 306 - LIVING DEATH and DEAD GIVEAWAY TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
⭐ SHOW NOTES — Tales of the Texas Rangers "Living Death" "Living Death" opens with one of the series' most unsettling premises: a wave of young people across Texas falling victim to a mysterious, paralyzing condition that leaves them alive but barely responsive. Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when the pattern begins to look less like illness and more like the work of a criminal operation preying on the vulnerable. As Jace follows the trail, the case widens into a grim investigation involving addiction, exploitation, and a shadowy figure distributing a dangerous substance. The episode blends procedural detective work with a strong moral undercurrent, showing the Rangers not just as lawmen but as protectors of communities caught in the crossfire of desperation and greed. The tension builds steadily as Jace closes in on the source of the "living death," leading to a confrontation that underscores the series' recurring theme: crime may evolve, but the Rangers' resolve remains the same.
⭐ "Dead Giveaway" — Summary In "Dead Giveaway," a seemingly straightforward murder case takes a sharp turn when the evidence refuses to line up the way it should. Ranger Jace Pearson arrives to find a crime scene that looks almost too perfect—too neat, too convenient, and too carefully arranged. What follows is a classic Texas Rangers puzzle: a trail of clues that point in one direction while human behavior points in another. Jace must sift through conflicting testimonies, hidden motives, and a suspect who appears to have an airtight alibi. The episode highlights the Rangers' trademark mix of patience and intuition, showing how small details—a gesture, a slip of the tongue, a misplaced object—can unravel an entire deception. "Dead Giveaway" is a tight, clever mystery that showcases the series at its procedural best, reminding listeners that the truth has a way of surfacing, even when someone tries to bury it deep.
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Wed, 01 Apr 2026 - 1h 00min - 305 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 14) THE OGALALLA VILLAGE
You won'tfind this eyewitness true account in your history books listeners. This was a warrior race that lived off of the buffalo herds. Good people, great warriors, but very different from todays culture.
⭐ **Show Notes Summary — The Oregon Trail, Chapter 14 "The Ogallala Village" In Chapter 14, Parkman and his companions arrive at an Ogallala Sioux village, and the chapter becomes one of the most detailed cultural portraits in the entire book. Parkman shifts from the hardships of travel to close observation, describing the village's layout, daily rhythms, and the personalities of the people he meets. What begins as simple curiosity turns into a rare, firsthand look at Plains life during a moment of relative peace. Parkman moves through the camp as both guest and outsider. He notes the hospitality, the humor, the pride, and the small frictions that arise when two very different worlds meet on the prairie. The chapter is rich with scenes: children playing, warriors preparing their horses, women managing the work of the camp, and the constant movement that gives the village its energy. At the same time, Parkman's own health continues to waver, and his physical weakness sharpens his sense of vulnerability. The contrast between his fragility and the strength and confidence of the Ogallala people adds an undercurrent of tension to the chapter. "The Ogallala Village" stands out for its blend of ethnographic detail, personal reflection, and the quiet realization that Parkman is witnessing a way of life already under pressure from the expanding American frontier.
⭐ How This Chapter — and the Book — Was Received at the Time When The Oregon Trail was first published in 1849, it drew immediate attention for its vivid descriptions of Western landscapes and Native cultures. Eastern readers, who had little firsthand knowledge of the Plains, found Parkman's accounts exotic, exciting, and unusually detailed. A few key points about its early reception: • Praised for realism: Many reviewers admired Parkman's ability to capture scenes like the Ogallala village with a reporter's eye and a novelist's sense of drama. His willingness to live among Native people, rather than observe from a distance, was considered bold for the time. • Seen as adventurous travel writing: Readers treated the book almost like a window into a world they would never see — buffalo hunts, frontier camps, and tribal life. Chapters like "The Ogallala Village" were singled out for their immediacy. • Long-term influence: The book became a foundational text in American frontier literature, shaping how generations of readers imagined the Plains and the people who lived there. So when Chapter 14 appeared, it was received as both a rare ethnographic snapshot and a gripping piece of frontier storytelling, even as readers filtered it through the assumptions of the time.
Sun, 29 Mar 2026 - 45min - 304 - CANDY MAN and CLEAN UP TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
⭐ "Candy Man" In "Candy Man," Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when a seemingly harmless drifter—known for handing out candy to kids—becomes the prime suspect in a shocking crime. What begins as a routine inquiry quickly turns into a tense manhunt as Jace uncovers the man's troubled past and the trail of deception he's left behind. The episode blends small‑town unease with classic Ranger detective work. Jace must separate rumor from fact, track down elusive leads, and confront a suspect who hides behind a friendly smile. The tension builds steadily as the investigation reveals how appearances can mask darker intentions. This is Tales of the Texas Rangers at its best: a mix of psychological suspense, frontier law enforcement, and the quiet persistence that defined the Rangers' real‑life work.
⭐ "Clean Up" "Clean Up" opens with a violent crime that threatens to ignite a wave of fear across a rural Texas community. Ranger Jace Pearson steps in to restore order, but the case proves more tangled than it first appears. What looks like a straightforward arrest becomes a deeper investigation into hidden motives, old grudges, and a criminal who's determined to cover his tracks at any cost. Jace methodically pieces together the truth, following a trail of small clues that lead to a larger conspiracy. The episode highlights the Rangers' reputation for patience, toughness, and the ability to bring calm to chaotic situations. As the case unfolds, Jace must outthink a suspect who believes he's already gotten away clean. "Clean Up" delivers a satisfying blend of action, deduction, and the gritty realism that made the series a standout in the golden age of radio crime drama.
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Wed, 25 Mar 2026 - 1h 00min - 303 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAPS 12-13) ILL LUCK and HUNTING INDIANS
The Oregon Trail by Francis Parkman Chapter 12 — "Ill Luck" In Chapter 12, Parkman hits a stretch of pure frontier misfortune. Everything that can go wrong does go wrong. The chapter opens with a string of setbacks—sick horses, broken gear, and the kind of bad weather that turns the prairie into a test of endurance. Parkman and his companions find themselves slowed, frustrated, and worn down by the grind of daily travel. But the "ill luck" isn't just physical. Parkman's own health begins to falter, and he describes the creeping exhaustion and fever that make every mile feel heavier. The chapter captures the reality of the trail in a way few writers ever have: the West wasn't just grand vistas and adventure—it was hardship, monotony, and the constant threat of things falling apart.
Despite the setbacks, Parkman's eye for detail never dims. He paints the landscape with the same care as always, showing how beauty and misery often walked hand‑in‑hand on the frontier. By the end of the chapter, the party is still moving forward, but the trail has taken its toll. Chapter 13- Hunting Indians Par4kman, still weak, has many miles to go through some very tough terrian before catching up with the Ogalalla camp which they have been trailing.Knowing he has friends there. His decriptions of the difficulties and the mountainous terrain, with is deep chasms and rocky paths that are scarring the horses legs, are detailed.
Sun, 22 Mar 2026 - 1h 09min - 302 - CUSTER and ANOTHER MAN'S POISON GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is one of those long-running classic vintage radio shows that everyone knows and remembers. It's also one that is still respected for its high values, in all aspects. Gunsmoke first aired on the CBS network on April 26, 1952, billed as the first adult western. It was set in Dodge City, Kansas in the 1870's.The main character, Marshall Matt Dillon was played by William Conrad.
"Custer" — Summary Marshal Matt Dillon and Chester cross paths with a suspicious drifter named Joe Trimble, who is caught running a string of horses that belong to Old Man Granby, a reclusive rancher rumored to have hidden money. When Dillon forces Trimble to help return the horses, they discover Granby murdered and his home ransacked. Trimble denies involvement, but the circumstantial evidence is strong enough for Dillon to arrest him. The case collapses at trial for lack of proof, but Trimble's troubles aren't over. The U.S. Army arrives and reveals his true identity: Private Joe Gould, a deserter from the 7th Cavalry. Instead of facing a court‑martial, he is ordered back to rejoin his regiment—now preparing to ride under General George Armstrong Custer toward the Sioux and Northern Cheyenne. The episode closes with the chilling implication that Trimble's fate is sealed on the road to the Little Bighorn.
"Another Man's Poison" — Summary Sally Bogan's world collapses when her first husband, Jeff Lightly—long believed drowned at sea—suddenly appears in Dodge City. In the years since his disappearance, she has remarried Ben Bogan, unknowingly becoming a bigamist. Jeff aggressively insists she return to him, while Ben, blindsided and furious, refuses to give her up. Marshal Dillon tries to keep the peace as tensions escalate toward a deadly showdown. But the real twist comes from Sally herself: rather than choose between the two men, she quietly boards an eastbound train with Slim Randall, a third suitor who has been courting her. Her farewell letter leaves both husbands stunned, realizing they nearly killed each other over a woman who chose neither of them.
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Wed, 18 Mar 2026 - 48min - 301 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 11) SCENES AT THE CAMP
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Chapter 11 Summary — Scenes at the Camp Chapter 11 finds Parkman and his companions settled into a rough but lively camp on the prairie, where daily life blends danger, boredom, and unexpected company. The chapter opens with Reynal—always high-strung—panicking at the sound of distant gunfire, convinced a Crow war party is closing in. The tension breaks when the source of the shots appears: four rugged trappers named Morin, Saraphin, Rouleau, and Gingras. Their arrival instantly changes the atmosphere. These men, with their battered rifles, buffalo robes, and hard‑earned stories, embody the wild, perilous life of the Rocky Mountain trapper. They lounge in the shade, swap tales, and settle in beside Parkman's party as if they've always belonged there. With their nerves eased, the group decides it's time to move camp. Their old site has been trampled into mud, so they shift to a massive cottonwood tree by the river—its trunk carved with mysterious Indian hieroglyphics and its branches still holding the remnants of a burial scaffold. The new location adds a sense of history and solemnity to their daily routine. During a midday meal, a small procession of horsemen appears over a nearby hill. Leading them is Bull-Bear (Mahto‑Tatonka), a young Ogallalla chief of striking presence, accompanied by his brother and two other warriors. The men dismount, accept coffee and biscuits, and share the pipe in the traditional manner. Their visit is calm, respectful, and quietly ceremonial—an intimate glimpse into Plains diplomacy and hospitality. Across the chapter, Parkman paints a vivid picture of camp life: the mingling of cultures, the constant undercurrent of danger, the camaraderie of the frontier, and the way each new arrival—whether trapper or chief—reshapes the rhythm of the day.
Coming Soon Chapter 12 — Ill-Luck Next week, the journey takes a sharp turn. Chapter 12 plunges Parkman into a stretch of misfortune—bad weather, bad luck, and bad timing—that tests the endurance and spirit of everyone in the party. After the relative calm of the camp, trouble is about to ride straight into their path.
Thu, 12 Mar 2026 - 43min - 300 - FOOLS GOLD and THE OPEN RANGE TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
⭐ "Fool's Gold" — Summary In "Fool's Gold," Ranger Jace Pearson is called in when what looks like a simple robbery turns into a far more calculated crime. A man is found dead after being lured into a phony gold‑mining scheme, and the trail leads Jace into a world of con artists who prey on greed and desperation. As he pieces together the victim's last movements, Jace uncovers a pattern of deception involving forged claims, fake assays, and a smooth‑talking swindler who has left a string of victims behind. The case becomes a race to stop the con man before he disappears with his next haul.
⭐ "The Open Range" — Summary "The Open Range" begins with the murder of a respected rancher, a killing that threatens to ignite a range war. Ranger Jace Pearson rides into a tense situation where cattle rustling, land disputes, and old grudges all cloud the truth. As he digs deeper, Jace discovers that the murder is part of a larger, carefully organized rustling operation run by a mastermind who uses hired guns and intimidation to control the open range. The investigation builds toward a classic Western showdown as Jace works to expose the ringleader and restore order before violence spreads.
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases. The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
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Wed, 11 Mar 2026 - 1h 01min - 299 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 10) THE WAR PARTIES
🌾 Chapter 10 Summary: The War Parties Chapter 10 opens with the plains alive with tension. The summer of 1846 finds the Dakota bands stirred into a state of warlike excitement after suffering heavy losses the previous year. Several war parties had been wiped out, leaving the nation in mourning and hungry for revenge. Among the fallen were ten warriors led by the son of an Ogallalla chief known as The Whirlwind, all killed in an ambush by the Snakes. The Snakes, fearing retaliation, sent a peace offering—a scalp and a parcel of tobacco—delivered by the trader Vaskiss. This scalp is the same one Parkman had earlier seen hanging at Fort Laramie. But The Whirlwind refuses peace. He sends messengers across hundreds of miles, calling the Dakota to unite for a massive retaliatory campaign. Soon, thousands of people—warriors, families, entire villages—are slowly converging on La Bonte's Camp for a grand war council and ceremonial preparations. Parkman is thrilled. His goal in traveling west was to observe Native life firsthand, and this gathering offers him the chance to join a village and live among them. He resolves not to miss the rendezvous, setting the stage for the next phase of his journey—one that will immerse him deeply in the culture, politics, and daily life of the Plains tribes.
🔎 Key Themes • Cycle of retaliation: The chapter highlights how honor, loss, and vengeance shaped intertribal conflict. • Cultural immersion: Parkman's excitement reveals his deeper purpose—understanding Native societies from the inside, not as an outsider. • Mass mobilization: The gathering at La Bonte's Camp shows the scale and organization of Plains warfare, far beyond the small raiding parties often imagined.
Sun, 08 Mar 2026 - 49min - 298 - WHO LIVES BY THE SWORD and THE HUNTER GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is one of those long-running classic vintage radio shows that everyone knows and remembers. It's also one that is still respected for its high values, in all aspects. Gunsmoke first aired on the CBS network on April 26, 1952, billed as the first adult western. It was set in Dodge City, Kansas in the 1870's.The main character, Marshall Matt Dillon was played by William Conrad.
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Wed, 04 Mar 2026 - 39min - 297 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 9) SCENES AT FORT LARAMIE
**Chapter 9 Summary — "Scenes at Fort Laramie" from The Oregon Trail by Francis Parkman (1849)** Parkman's ninth chapter is a vivid snapshot of life at Fort Laramie, the great frontier crossroads where cultures, tempers, and ambitions collided on the mid‑19th‑century plains. For your show notes, this version emphasizes atmosphere, character, and the cinematic detail your listeners enjoy.
🌵 Life at the Edge of the Frontier Parkman arrives at Fort Laramie expecting a military outpost, but what he finds is something far stranger and more colorful—a bustling, multicultural trading hub where soldiers, trappers, emigrants, and Lakota families mingle in a dusty, sun‑baked courtyard. The fort is alive with movement: horses stamping, children running, traders shouting, and the constant hum of barter and gossip. The place feels less like a fort and more like a frontier village, full of contradictions. Parkman notes the adobe walls, the cluttered rooms, and the uneasy blend of hospitality and suspicion that greets newcomers.
🏹 Encounters with the Oglala and Brulé Lakota One of the chapter's most striking elements is Parkman's close observation of the Lakota Sioux, who camp in large numbers around the fort. He describes their clothing, their horses, their ceremonies, and their interactions with the white traders—sometimes friendly, sometimes tense. He is especially fascinated by: • Warriors in full regalia, wrapped in white buffalo robes • Women adorned with beads and bright fabrics • Children darting through the fort's alleys • Pipe ceremonies and diplomatic gestures Parkman's tone mixes admiration, curiosity, and the biases of his era, giving modern readers a layered, sometimes uneasy window into cross‑cultural contact on the plains.
🏚️ Spartan Quarters and a Haunting Detail Parkman and his companions are initially mistaken for rival traders, and their welcome is chilly until a letter of introduction clears things up. Their assigned quarters are stark—buffalo robes on the floor, a crucifix on the wall, and, in a detail that startles both Parkman and modern readers, a freshly taken scalp hanging as a trophy. This grisly reminder underscores the volatility of the region. Peace at Fort Laramie is always temporary, always fragile.
🔥 A Place of Rumor, Diplomacy, and Brewing Conflict Throughout the chapter, Parkman captures the fort as a place where: • Rumors swirl about war parties, raids, and emigrant trains • Military discipline clashes with frontier informality • Trade and diplomacy happen side by side • Tension simmers beneath every interaction The chapter ends with Parkman sensing that the uneasy calm around the fort won't last. The region is on the brink of conflict, and the next chapters will carry him deeper into the world of war parties and tribal politics.
Sun, 01 Mar 2026 - 34min - 296 - THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES 0F CALAMITY JANE and LIFE IN DAKOTA W GEN. CUSTER
METwo great stories here- the first from the autobiography of Calamity Jane, and the second from Custer's wife Libby, who accompanied him on the Plains campaigns. The theme is 'GerryOwen'- an old Irish tune that Custer picked to be the 7th Cavalry's official song. narration by Kevin Sikes.
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Wed, 25 Feb 2026 - 34min - 295 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP.8) TAKING FRENCH LEAVE
Chapter 8 Summary Taking French Leave Concise summary: In Chapter 8 Parkman recounts the party's departure from the Platte country and their approach toward Fort Laramie, focusing on the small dramas of travel — disagreements among companions, the decision to separate from the English officers, encounters with traders and emigrants, and Parkman's close observations of frontier life. The chapter emphasizes the practical tensions of an overland journey (logistics, personalities, and local warnings) while also pausing for vivid scenes of the plains and the people who inhabit them. Key moments to note: • Parkman and his companions break with the British officers after disputes about route and company. Their decision to break camp and leave first when they want to, without notifying their stubborn counterparts,, can be described as 'Taking French Leave" • The narrative mixes travel detail (routes, rivers, forts) with character sketches of traders, emigrants, and "mountain men."
What Taking French Leave Meant Definition: "Taking French leave" means leaving a place or duty without saying goodbye or without permission — essentially departing quietly or abruptly. Historically it referred to a social custom attributed (often pejoratively) to the French of slipping away from a gathering without formal leave; the phrase later broadened to include unauthorized absences.
What the Indians Smoked with Pipe Tobacco Substance used: The Native peoples Parkman describes commonly used kinnikinnick — a traditional herbal smoking mixture made from inner bark or leaves (often bearberry or red willow) and other local plants — either alone or mixed with tobacco to complement pipe smoking. Kinnikinnick recipes vary by region and tribe and were noted by 19th‑century travelers for their aromatic and sometimes narcotic effects. It was described as "Shinshasa"here.
Teaser for Chapter 9 Scenes at Fort Laramie Teaser copy: Next chapter moves the story into Fort Laramie, a bustling crossroads of traders, trappers, soldiers, and Indian delegations. Expect sharper portraits of frontier commerce, tense rumors of intertribal conflict, and Parkman's close-up encounters with the people who make the fort a temporary capital of the plains — where hospitality, suspicion, and rumor shape every decision.
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Sun, 22 Feb 2026 - 38min - 294 - THE COWBOY and THE MINES from THE PASSING OF THE FRONTIER by EMERSON HOUGH
Two great old west pieces by historian Emerson Hough from his 'Passing of the Frontier'.
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Wed, 18 Feb 2026 - 40min - 293 - DID THEODORE ROOSEVELT SAVE THE BISON? SPECIAL RELEASE
In chapter 7 of Francis Parkman's "Oregon Trail" , which was titled "The Buffalo", I promised this article from Teddy Roosevelt's Presidential library. Its titled "Did Theodore Roosevelt Save the Bison?"- and the answer follows.
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Sun, 15 Feb 2026 - 17min - 292 - THE STORY OF THE OUTLAW & MEMORIES OF THE WEST EMERSON HOUGH
"Good men" and "bad men" were often one and the same in the west. The law breakers and the law keepers had to be good with a gun and have the courage to use it. These are some memories from sheriffs as well as from T.R. Roosevelt regarding the West of the 19th century and what made it a unique time in history.
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Wed, 11 Feb 2026 - 25min - 291 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP7) THE BUFFALO
CHAPTER 7 'THE BUFFALO'
In Francis Parkman's classic 1849 travelogue, The Oregon Trail (originally titled The California and Oregon Trail), Chapter 7, titled "The Buffalo," focuses on the party's first significant encounter with the great buffalo herds of the American West. Summary of Chapter 7: "The Buffalo" The Sighting: As the party travels along the Platte River, they finally encounter the massive herds they had been anticipating. Parkman describes the overwhelming scale of the herds, which blacken the horizon and transform the landscape into a "moving sea" of animals. The Hunt: The chapter details an exhilarating and dangerous buffalo hunt. Parkman, alongside his guide Henry Chatillon, engages in the chase on horseback. He vividly describes the physical sensations of the hunt—the thundering hooves, the clouds of dust, and the raw adrenaline of pursuing such massive, unpredictable creatures. A "New" Reality: For Parkman, the hunt is a rite of passage. It represents his transition from a "refined" Easterner to a participant in the rugged, primal reality of the frontier. Resourcefulness vs. Waste: The chapter also touches on the practicalities of the trail; while the hunt provides essential meat for the party, Parkman observes the different attitudes toward the buffalo, from the skillful necessity of the hunters to the more reckless or wasteful habits of some emigrant groups.
COMING NEXT WEEK: HOW TEDDY ROOSEVELT SAVED THE BUFFALO
Sun, 08 Feb 2026 - 35min - 290 - ARMY WIFE and THE SCOUT FORT LARAMIE
We are narrating The Oregon Trail on Sundays and they are getting close to Fort Laramie so I'm putting the radio episodes up for Fort Laramie the4 next few Wednesdays
CHAPTER 6 of 'The Oregon Trail 'is titled "The Platte and the Desert
In Chapter 6, "The Platte and the Desert," Francis Parkman and his party reach the Platte River, entering buffalo country and a harsh, desert-like environment. The chapter details the landscape of the vast, shallow Platte, the group's buffalo hunting, encounters with other travelers, and internal tensions within the party.
Wed, 04 Feb 2026 - 47min - 289 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 6) THE PLATTE AND THE DESERT
In Chapter 6, "The Platte and the Desert," Francis Parkman and his party reach the Platte River, entering buffalo country and a harsh, desert-like environment. The chapter details the landscape of the vast, shallow Platte, the group's buffalo hunting, encounters with other travelers, and internal tensions within the party.
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Sun, 01 Feb 2026 - 29min - 288 - JUST A NUMBER and WHITE ELEPHANT TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
Tales of the Texas Rangers was a popular western police procedural radio drama that aired on NBC from July 1950 to September 1952. Often described as a western version of Dragnet, the show featured stories based on actual Texas Ranger case files from 1928 to 1948. Show Overview Protagonist: Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson. Modern Setting: Unlike typical 19th-century westerns, this show featured 20th-century cases where Pearson used modern forensic science and laboratory techniques to solve crimes. Signature Elements: Pearson often worked with local sheriffs and relied on his horse, Charcoal, to navigate rugged terrain. Each episode typically opened with a description of the Texas Rangers as a legendary 50-man force covering over 260,000 square miles. Episode Summaries "Just a Number" Original Air Date: April 19, 1950 (Audition) / July 8, 1950 (Series Premiere). Plot: The story begins when a young boy discovers a horrific scene at the Evans ranch. A local sheriff calls in the Texas Rangers to investigate a triple murder. Ranger Jayce Pearson must use keen observation and precise questioning to track down the killer responsible for the brutal crime. "White Elephant" Original Air Date: July 15, 1950. Plot: Ranger Pearson investigates the murder of a man found dead in a car parked on the shoulder of a road. The investigation is linked to a prior incident involving a hobo jumping off a freight train after a scuffle with a brakeman. Alternative Version: Note that a later TV adaptation with the same title involved someone trying to frighten off buyers from an empty house by shooting at them, leading to the discovery of a gold coin and a pack rat's nest as clues.
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Fri, 30 Jan 2026 - 1h 00min - 287 - A SCOUT'S STORY OF THE DEFENSE OF BEECHER'S ISLAND
Contrary to the general opinion- all colors and creeds of American men fought for the U.S Cavalry to protect settlers, railroads, and freight wagons from warring Indians. In this account, written sometime after the Battle at Beecher's Island, the writer, who was a young Jewish boy from New York who signed up with the US Cavalry as a volunteer scout, describes the defense of Beecher's Island from over 200 warring Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Arikara Indians, as well as their rescue by elements of the 10 Cavalry-comprised of Buffalo Soldiers.
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Wed, 28 Jan 2026 - 20min - 286 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 5) THE BIG BLUE
In Chapter 5 of Francis Parkman's The Oregon Trail, titled "The Big Blue," the narrator and his party advance deeper into the wilderness and encounter the heightening tensions of the westward migration. Key Events and Themes The Mormon Panic: The chapter opens with a "great alarm" among the emigrants at Independence. Rumors circulated that a massive party of 2,300 Mormons was moving nearby. Given the violent history between Missouri/Illinois settlers and the "Latter Day Saints," emigrants feared bloody confrontations on the lawless prairie. Failed Request for Military Escort: Terrified women and children, along with alarmed men, requested a dragoon escort from Colonel Kearney. This request was refused, though the feared Mormon conflict never materialized. River Crossing Struggles: The party reaches the Big Blue River, which is swollen and difficult to cross. Delorier's Cart: Their guide, Delorier, attempts to cross first but his cart gets stuck midway in the mud and water. The Captain's Indecision: A recurring character, "The Captain," offers unsolicited advice to unload the wagons, fearing they will all "stick fast". His cautious, often ineffective suggestions are ignored as the group pushes forward with "Drive on!". Atmosphere of the Camp: Parkman describes the "characteristic" scenes of the wild region, including groups of Spanish traders, Native Americans from remote tribes, and French hunters in buckskin. Encounters with Outcasts: Parkman observes the diverse crowd of emigrants, noting that they ranged from "sober-looking countrymen" to the "vilest outcasts," reflecting the wide spectrum of people seeking a new life in the West. For further reading or the full historical text, you can access The Oregon Trail through the Project Gutenberg archive
Sun, 25 Jan 2026 - 39min - 285 - THE MASSACRE and ASSEMBLY LINE FORT LARAMIE
Fort Laramie is a CBS Radio Western series starring Raymond Burr as Captain Lee Quince. It aired Sunday afternoons January 22–October 28, 1956, at 5:30 pm ET. Produced and directed by Norman Macdonnell, this Western drama depicted life at old Fort Laramie during the 19th Century. The 41 episodes starred Raymond Burr as Lee Quince, captain of the cavalry. One year later, Burr became a television star as Perry Mason.[
Premise In the series, the fort had 400 troops in all but they had to keep their eye on a nearby Indian reservation with 4,000 Sioux camped there. Major Ned Daggart led the troops and he didn't always see eye to eye with Quince. Daggart had a niece called Terrie Lawson, who had her eye on the Captain.
Wed, 21 Jan 2026 - 1h 00min - 284 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAPS 3-4) FORT LEAVENWORTH and JUMPING OFF
Chapter 3: Fort Leavenworth Arrival at the Frontier: After struggling up the Missouri River on a steamboat, Parkman and his party arrive at Fort Leavenworth. He describes the fort as a remote but orderly military outpost on the edge of the wilderness. The Contrast of Life: Parkman observes the interaction between the disciplined U.S. military presence and the "wild" characters of the frontier, including Kansas Indians and various traders. Logistics and Preparation: This chapter emphasizes the final stage of preparation before heading into "Indian Country." Parkman notes the bustling activity as emigrants and traders gather supplies, weapons, and livestock. Chapter 4: "Jumping Off" The Chaos of Independence: Parkman visits the town of Independence, Missouri, which served as the primary "jumping-off point" for the trail. He finds the town crowded and overwhelmed by thousands of emigrants. Lack of Leadership: He observes that while there are many parties of emigrants, they are in a state of "great confusion." They hold constant meetings and pass resolutions but struggle to agree on leaders or cohesive regulations for the journey. Forming the Party: Desiring to avoid the slow and disorganized emigrant wagon trains, Parkman and his companion Quincy Adams Shaw finalize their own small group. They solidify their team, which includes their experienced guide Henry Chatillon and the muleteer Deslauriers. Departure: The chapter concludes with the party finally leaving the settled frontier behind and pushing out onto the open prairie, marking the true beginning of their overland expedition.
Sun, 18 Jan 2026 - 29min - 283 - THE BATTLE OF THE WASHITA by C..T. BRADY
This excellent account can be found in the book 'Indian Fights & Fighters- The Soldiers and the Sioux' by Cyrus Townsend Brady
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Wed, 14 Jan 2026 - 45min - 282 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 2) BREAKING THE ICE
The Oregon Trail Chapter 2 often covers the initial stages of the journey, focusing on the immense preparations, the chaotic departure from Independence/St. Joseph, Missouri, and early encounters with the vast plains, including challenges like weather, trail dust, broken equipment, and the initial, sometimes tense, interactions with Native American groups, setting the scene for the incredible hardships and realities of westward expansion.
music 'Fit As A Fiddle' BY ALAN jORDAN
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Sun, 11 Jan 2026 - 27min - 281 - BLOOD TRAIL and NIGHT CHASE TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases.The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
ANDROID USERS-
1001 Stories From The Old West at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/0c2fc0cGwJBcPfyC8NWNTw
1001 Radio Crime Solvers at Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/0UAUS12lnS2063PWK9CZ37
1001's Best of Jack London at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2HzkpdKeWJgUU9rbx3NqgF
1001 Radio Days at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5jyc4nVoe00xoOxrhyAa8H
1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rzDb5uFdOhfw5X6P5lkWn
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rO7HELtRcGfV48UeP8aFQ
1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories & The Best of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/4dIgYvBwZVTN5ewF0JPaTK
1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5P4hV28LgpG89dRNMfSDKJ
1001 Stories for the Road on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6FhlsxYFTGNPiSMYxM9O9K
1001 Greatest Love Stories on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5sUUFDVTatnGt7FiNQvSHe
1001 History's Best Storytellers: (INTERVIEWS) on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/3QyZ1u4f9OLb9O32KX6Ghr
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New! 1001 Tales of Escape and Suspense at Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-tales-of-escape-and-suspense/id1689248043
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Catch 1001 RADIO DAYS now at Apple iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-days/id1405045413?mt=2
NEW 1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre is now playing at Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-stories-tales-of-the-macabre/id1516332327
NEW Enjoy 1001 History's Best Storytellers (Interviews) on Apple Devices here:
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Wed, 07 Jan 2026 - 58min - 280 - THE GENTLEMAN and CONFEDERATE MONEY GUNSMOKESun, 04 Jan 2026 - 45min
- 279 - BAD BLOOD and CONSPIRACY TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
Tales of the Texas Rangers, a western adventure old-time radio drama, premiered on July 8, 1950, on the US NBC radio network and remained on the air through September 14, 1952. Movie star Joel McCrea starred as Texas Ranger Jayce Pearson, who used the latest scientific techniques to identify the criminals and his faithful horse, Charcoal, to track them down. The shows were reenactments of actual Texas Ranger cases.The series was produced and directed by Stacy Keach, Sr., and was sponsored for part of its run by Wheaties.
ANDROID USERS-
1001 Stories From The Old West at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/0c2fc0cGwJBcPfyC8NWNTw
1001 Radio Crime Solvers at Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/0UAUS12lnS2063PWK9CZ37
1001's Best of Jack London at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2HzkpdKeWJgUU9rbx3NqgF
1001 Radio Days at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5jyc4nVoe00xoOxrhyAa8H
1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rzDb5uFdOhfw5X6P5lkWn
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rO7HELtRcGfV48UeP8aFQ
1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories & The Best of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/4dIgYvBwZVTN5ewF0JPaTK
1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5P4hV28LgpG89dRNMfSDKJ
1001 Stories for the Road on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6FhlsxYFTGNPiSMYxM9O9K
1001 Greatest Love Stories on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5sUUFDVTatnGt7FiNQvSHe
1001 History's Best Storytellers: (INTERVIEWS) on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/3QyZ1u4f9OLb9O32KX6Ghr
APPLE USERS
New! 1001 Tales of Escape and Suspense at Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-tales-of-escape-and-suspense/id1689248043
Catch 1001 Stories From The Old West- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-from-the-old-west/id1613213865
Catch 1001's Best of Jack London- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-best-of-jack-london/id1656939169
Catch 1001 Radio Crime Solvers- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-crime-solvers/id1657397371
Catch 1001 Heroes on Apple
Catch 1001 Classic Short Stories at Apple Podcast
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-classic-short-stories-tales/id1078098622
Catch 1001 Stories for the Road at Apple Podcast now:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-for-the-road/id1227478901
NEW Enjoy 1001 Greatest Love Stories on Apple Devices here:
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Catch 1001 RADIO DAYS now at Apple iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-days/id1405045413?mt=2
NEW 1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre is now playing at Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-stories-tales-of-the-macabre/id1516332327
NEW Enjoy 1001 History's Best Storytellers (Interviews) on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-historys-best-storytellers/id1483649026
NEW Enjoy 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories and The Best of Arthur Conan Doyle https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-sherlock-holmes-stories-best-sir-arthur-conan/id1534427618
Get all of our shows at one website: https://.1001storiespodcast.com
My email works as well for comments: 1001storiespodcast@gmail.com
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Sat, 03 Jan 2026 - 1h 00min - 278 - DEATH PLANT and PICK UP TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
ANDROID USERS-
1001 Stories From The Old West at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/0c2fc0cGwJBcPfyC8NWNTw
1001 Radio Crime Solvers at Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/0UAUS12lnS2063PWK9CZ37
1001's Best of Jack London at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2HzkpdKeWJgUU9rbx3NqgF
1001 Radio Days at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5jyc4nVoe00xoOxrhyAa8H
1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rzDb5uFdOhfw5X6P5lkWn
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rO7HELtRcGfV48UeP8aFQ
1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories & The Best of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/4dIgYvBwZVTN5ewF0JPaTK
1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5P4hV28LgpG89dRNMfSDKJ
1001 Stories for the Road on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6FhlsxYFTGNPiSMYxM9O9K
1001 Greatest Love Stories on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5sUUFDVTatnGt7FiNQvSHe
1001 History's Best Storytellers: (INTERVIEWS) on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/3QyZ1u4f9OLb9O32KX6Ghr
APPLE USERS
Catch 1001 Stories From The Old West- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-from-the-old-west/id1613213865
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Catch 1001 Radio Crime Solvers- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-crime-solvers/id1657397371
Catch 1001 Heroes on Apple
Catch 1001 Classic Short Stories at Apple Podcast
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-classic-short-stories-tales/id1078098622
Catch 1001 Stories for the Road at Apple Podcast now:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-for-the-road/id1227478901
NEW Enjoy 1001 Greatest Love Stories on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-greatest-love-stories/id1485751552
Catch 1001 RADIO DAYS now at Apple iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-days/id1405045413?mt=2
NEW 1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre is now playing at Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-stories-tales-of-the-macabre/id1516332327
NEW Enjoy 1001 History's Best Storytellers (Interviews) on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-historys-best-storytellers/id1483649026
NEW Enjoy 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories and The Best of Arthur Conan Doyle https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-sherlock-holmes-stories-best-sir-arthur-conan/id1534427618
Get all of our shows at one website: https://.1001storiespodcast.com
My email works as well for comments: 1001storiespodcast@gmail.com
SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated).
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Wed, 31 Dec 2025 - 58min - 277 - OIL and THE ODDS HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL
Have Gun Will Travel was a popular American Western television series that aired on CBS from 1957 through 1963. It was the #4 show in the Nielsen ratings in its first year, and #3 for the next three years. It was one of the few television shows to spawn a successful radio version. The radio series debuted on November 23, 1958. The show followed the adventures of Paladin, a gentleman-turned-gunfighter played by John Dehner on radio, who preferred to settle problems without violence, yet, when forced to fight, excelled. Paladin lived in the Carlton Hotel in San Francisco, where he dressed in semi-formal wear, ate gourmet food, and attended opera. In fact, many who initially met him mistook him for a dandy from the East. When working, he dressed in black, used calling cards and wore a holster which carried characteristic chess knight emblems, and carried a derringer under his belt. The knight symbol is of course in reference to his name — possibly a nickname or working name — and his occupation as a champion-for-hire. The theme song of the series refers to him as "a knight without armor." In addition, Paladin drew a parallel between his methods and the chess piece's movement: "It's a chess piece, the most versatile on the board. It can move in eight different directions, over obstacles, and it's always unexpected." Paladin was a former Army officer and a graduate of West Point. He was a polyglot, capable of speaking any foreign tongue required by the plot. He also had a thorough knowledge of ancient history and classical literature, and he exhibited a strong passion for legal principles and the rule of law.
Sun, 28 Dec 2025 - 55min - 276 - BLOOD RELATIVE and HANGING BY A THREAD TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
With the success of Dragnet in 1949-50, radio networks rushed to fill the airwaves with more realistic police procedural dramas. Tales of the Texas Rangers was one of these. Stacy Keach, Sr. was able to gain to the cooperation of the legendary Texas law enforcement agency to adapt stories from their case files. While the agency was formed in 1835, the cases adapted for radio were from between the 1920s and the late the 1940s.
While programs like Dragnet and The Line Up told realistic stories in urban settings, Tales of the Texas Rangers featured stories set across the breadth and depth of the Lone Star State, which often sent Ranger Jace Person (Joel McCrea) into rural areas in Texas, including some that could only be reached on horseback. Still, like Dragnet, the series was dedicated to showing the real procedures and processes used by investigators in the field.
Tales of the Texas Rangers made its way to television in 1955, starring Willard Parker as Ranger Jace Pearson and Harry Lauter as his partner Clay Morgan. Unlike the radio series, the television series was targeted towards a juvenile audience, and alternated between contemporary stories and those from the Old West. The TV series ran for fifty-two episodes, and left the air after three seasons on CBS and ABC in 1958.
NEW Enjoy 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories and The Best of Arthur Conan Doyle https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-sherlock-holmes-stories-best-sir-arthur-conan/id1534427618
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Wed, 24 Dec 2025 - 59min - 275 - THE OREGON TRAIL (CHAP 1) THE FRONTIER by FRANCIS PARKMAN
Currently beginning at 1001 Stories From the Old West- will alternate with Radio shows)
(Also planned "Six Years As A Texas Ranger") for 2026
"The Oregon Trail: Sketches of Prairie and Rocky-Mountain Life" by Francis Parkman is a historical account written in the mid-19th century. The book chronicles the experiences and observations of the author and his companion as they embark on a significant journey across the American frontier to the Rocky Mountains, illustrating the diverse array of emigrants, traders, and Indigenous peoples they encounter along the way. The opening of the work sets the scene in St. Louis in the spring of 1846, highlighting the bustling activity as people prepare for their journeys to Oregon and California. Parkman and his friend Quincy A. Shaw board a steamboat, the Radnor, laden with supplies and passengers from varied backgrounds. The narrative captures their initial experiences on the river as they navigate the physical challenges of the Missouri and the multitude of characters around them, including traders and adventurers. As they progress, the narrative foreshadows the hardships and adventures to come, celebrating the spirit of exploration while addressing the complexities of the American frontier.
To browse all shows and episodes goto www.bestof1001stories.com.
Fri, 09 Jan 2026 - 20min - 274 - THE QUICK AND THE DEAD (PT 2) SPECIAL RELEASE LEGENDARY GUNFIGHTERS OF THE WESTWed, 17 Dec 2025 - 46min
- 273 - THE QUICK AND THE DEAD (PT 1) STORIES OF THE GUNFIGHTERS OF THE OLD WEST
A special presentation for our fans at 1001 Stories From The Old West- this is a deep dive story on the gunfighters of the old west I did about 7 years ago. Its always been one of my favorites and I hope you enjoy it and share it with others. In part one we talk about Bat Masterson, Bill Tilghman, Bass Reeves, Clay Allison, Mysterious Dave Mather, and many other legends.
Check out our new website at www.bestof1001stories.com for all our episodes on 12 1001 podcasts.
Stay tuned WED for part 2!
Sun, 14 Dec 2025 - 49min - 272 - KITTY LOST and BOTTLE MAN GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is an American radio and television Western drama series created by director Norman MacDonnell and writer John Meston. The stories take place in and around Dodge City, Kansas, during the settlement of the American West.
The radio version ran from 1952 to 1961 and is commonly regarded as one of the finest radio dramas of all time. The television version ran from 1955 to 1975 and is the longest running prime time drama and the second-longest running prime time fictional program in U.S. television history, its record surpassed only by the Disney anthology television series (which, though essentially the same in every incarnation, has appeared on TV under several titles).
Wed, 10 Dec 2025 - 50min - 271 - BONE HUNTERS and MAGNUS
Gunsmoke is an American radio and television Western drama series created by director Norman MacDonnell and writer John Meston. The stories take place in and around Dodge City, Kansas, during the settlement of the American West.
The radio version ran from 1952 to 1961 and is commonly regarded as one of the finest radio dramas of all time. The television version ran from 1955 to 1975 and is the longest running prime time drama and the second-longest running prime time fictional program in U.S. television history, its record surpassed only by the Disney anthology television series (which, though essentially the same in every incarnation, has appeared on TV under several titles).
Sun, 07 Dec 2025 - 50min - 270 - HELPING HAND and OPEN AND SHUT TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
Try the new "Tales of Escape & Suspense"- links below!
ANDROID USERS-
1001 Tales of Escape & Suspense at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/2HQYk53AJHTOgBTLBzyP3w
1001 Stories From The Old West at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/0c2fc0cGwJBcPfyC8NWNTw
1001 Radio Crime Solvers at Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/0UAUS12lnS2063PWK9CZ37
1001's Best of Jack London at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2HzkpdKeWJgUU9rbx3NqgF
1001 Radio Days at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5jyc4nVoe00xoOxrhyAa8H
1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rzDb5uFdOhfw5X6P5lkWn
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rO7HELtRcGfV48UeP8aFQ
1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories & The Best of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/4dIgYvBwZVTN5ewF0JPaTK
1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5P4hV28LgpG89dRNMfSDKJ
1001 Stories for the Road on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6FhlsxYFTGNPiSMYxM9O9K
1001 Greatest Love Stories on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5sUUFDVTatnGt7FiNQvSHe
1001 History's Best Storytellers: (INTERVIEWS) on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/3QyZ1u4f9OLb9O32KX6Ghr
APPLE USERS
New! 1001 Tales of Escape and Suspense at Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-tales-of-escape-and-suspense/id1689248043
Catch 1001 Stories From The Old West- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-from-the-old-west/id1613213865
Catch 1001's Best of Jack London- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-best-of-jack-london/id1656939169
Catch 1001 Radio Crime Solvers- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-crime-solvers/id1657397371
Catch 1001 Heroes on Apple
Catch 1001 Classic Short Stories at Apple Podcast
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-classic-short-stories-tales/id1078098622
Catch 1001 Stories for the Road at Apple Podcast now:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-for-the-road/id1227478901
NEW Enjoy 1001 Greatest Love Stories on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-greatest-love-stories/id1485751552
Catch 1001 RADIO DAYS now at Apple iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-days/id1405045413?mt=2
NEW 1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre is now playing at Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-stories-tales-of-the-macabre/id1516332327
NEW Enjoy 1001 History's Best Storytellers (Interviews) on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-historys-best-storytellers/id1483649026
NEW Enjoy 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories and The Best of Arthur Conan Doyle https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-sherlock-holmes-stories-best-sir-arthur-conan/id1534427618
Get all of our shows at one website: https://.1001storiespodcast.com
My email works as well for comments: 1001storiespodcast@gmail.com
SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated).
YOUR REVIEWS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED!
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Wed, 03 Dec 2025 - 1h 00min - 269 - SAM CROW and STARDUST HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL
"Have Gun Will Travel," the 106 episode radio Western created by Sam Rolfe & Herb Meadow (starring John Dehner as Paladin) was broadcast on CBS (ty jenni janzen, for the thumbs up!!) radio, November 23, 1958 to November 22, 1960. Paladin 'Gun For Hire' lived in & worked out of the Carleton Hotel, in 1875 San Francisco. During many episodes, we heard Paladin in conversation with the Carleton Hotel's Chinese bell hop, 'Hey-Boy' (starring Ben Wright).
Have Gun Will Travel was one of those very rare programs which got its START as a top rated television show (CBS TV 1957 thru 1963, starring Richard Boone), successfully moving to radio broadcast, there-after.
Wed, 26 Nov 2025 - 47min - 268 - BRINGING UP OLLIE and TALIKA HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL
"Have Gun Will Travel," the 106 episode radio Western created by Sam Rolfe & Herb Meadow (starring John Dehner as Paladin) was broadcast on CBS (ty jenni janzen, for the thumbs up!!) radio, November 23, 1958 to November 22, 1960. Paladin 'Gun For Hire' lived in & worked out of the Carleton Hotel, in 1875 San Francisco. During many episodes, we heard Paladin in conversation with the Carleton Hotel's Chinese bell hop, 'Hey-Boy' (starring Ben Wright).
Have Gun Will Travel was one of those very rare programs which got its START as a top rated television show (CBS TV 1957 thru 1963, starring Richard Boone), successfully moving to radio broadcast, there-after.
Sun, 23 Nov 2025 - 48min - 267 - FOR THE BIRDS and EAT CROW HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL
Have Gun Will Travel was a popular American Western television series that aired on CBS from 1957 through 1963. It was the #4 show in the Nielsen ratings in its first year, and #3 for the next three years. It was one of the few television shows to spawn a successful radio version. The radio series debuted on November 23, 1958. The show followed the adventures of Paladin, a gentleman-turned-gunfighter played by John Dehner on radio, who preferred to settle problems without violence, yet, when forced to fight, excelled. Paladin lived in the Carlton Hotel in San Francisco, where he dressed in semi-formal wear, ate gourmet food, and attended opera. In fact, many who initially met him mistook him for a dandy from the East. When working, he dressed in black, used calling cards and wore a holster which carried characteristic chess knight emblems, and carried a derringer under his belt. The knight symbol is of course in reference to his name — possibly a nickname or working name — and his occupation as a champion-for-hire. The theme song of the series refers to him as "a knight without armor." In addition, Paladin drew a parallel between his methods and the chess piece's movement: "It's a chess piece, the most versatile on the board. It can move in eight different directions, over obstacles, and it's always unexpected." Paladin was a former Army officer and a graduate of West Point. He was a polyglot, capable of speaking any foreign tongue required by the plot. He also had a thorough knowledge of ancient history and classical literature, and he exhibited a strong passion for legal principles and the rule of law.
Wed, 19 Nov 2025 - 48min - 266 - DEADLINE and NELLIE WATSON'S BOY HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL
Have Gun Will Travel was a popular American Western television series that aired on CBS from 1957 through 1963. It was the #4 show in the Nielsen ratings in its first year, and #3 for the next three years. It was one of the few television shows to spawn a successful radio version. The radio series debuted on November 23, 1958. The show followed the adventures of Paladin, a gentleman-turned-gunfighter played by John Dehner on radio, who preferred to settle problems without violence, yet, when forced to fight, excelled. Paladin lived in the Carlton Hotel in San Francisco, where he dressed in semi-formal wear, ate gourmet food, and attended opera. In fact, many who initially met him mistook him for a dandy from the East. When working, he dressed in black, used calling cards and wore a holster which carried characteristic chess knight emblems, and carried a derringer under his belt. The knight symbol is of course in reference to his name — possibly a nickname or working name — and his occupation as a champion-for-hire. The theme song of the series refers to him as "a knight without armor." In addition, Paladin drew a parallel between his methods and the chess piece's movement: "It's a chess piece, the most versatile on the board. It can move in eight different directions, over obstacles, and it's always unexpected." Paladin was a former Army officer and a graduate of West Point. He was a polyglot, capable of speaking any foreign tongue required by the plot. He also had a thorough knowledge of ancient history and classical literature, and he exhibited a strong passion for legal principles and the rule of law.
Sun, 16 Nov 2025 - 49min - 265 - BRINGING UP OLLIE and SAM CROW HAVE GUN , WILL TRAVEL
Have Gun Will Travel was a popular American Western television series that aired on CBS from 1957 through 1963. It was the #4 show in the Nielsen ratings in its first year, and #3 for the next three years. It was one of the few television shows to spawn a successful radio version. The radio series debuted on November 23, 1958. The show followed the adventures of Paladin, a gentleman-turned-gunfighter played by John Dehner on radio, who preferred to settle problems without violence, yet, when forced to fight, excelled. Paladin lived in the Carlton Hotel in San Francisco, where he dressed in semi-formal wear, ate gourmet food, and attended opera. In fact, many who initially met him mistook him for a dandy from the East. When working, he dressed in black, used calling cards and wore a holster which carried characteristic chess knight emblems, and carried a derringer under his belt. The knight symbol is of course in reference to his name — possibly a nickname or working name — and his occupation as a champion-for-hire. The theme song of the series refers to him as "a knight without armor." In addition, Paladin drew a parallel between his methods and the chess piece's movement: "It's a chess piece, the most versatile on the board. It can move in eight different directions, over obstacles, and it's always unexpected." Paladin was a former Army officer and a graduate of West Point. He was a polyglot, capable of speaking any foreign tongue required by the plot. He also had a thorough knowledge of ancient history and classical literature, and he exhibited a strong passion for legal principles and the rule of law.
Wed, 12 Nov 2025 - 49min - 264 - LITTLE GUNS and DELTA QUEEN HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL
Have Gun Will Travel was a popular American Western television series that aired on CBS from 1957 through 1963. It was the #4 show in the Nielsen ratings in its first year, and #3 for the next three years. It was one of the few television shows to spawn a successful radio version. The radio series debuted on November 23, 1958. The show followed the adventures of Paladin, a gentleman-turned-gunfighter played by John Dehner on radio, who preferred to settle problems without violence, yet, when forced to fight, excelled. Paladin lived in the Carlton Hotel in San Francisco, where he dressed in semi-formal wear, ate gourmet food, and attended opera. In fact, many who initially met him mistook him for a dandy from the East. When working, he dressed in black, used calling cards and wore a holster which carried characteristic chess knight emblems, and carried a derringer under his belt. The knight symbol is of course in reference to his name — possibly a nickname or working name — and his occupation as a champion-for-hire. The theme song of the series refers to him as "a knight without armor." In addition, Paladin drew a parallel between his methods and the chess piece's movement: "It's a chess piece, the most versatile on the board. It can move in eight different directions, over obstacles, and it's always unexpected." Paladin was a former Army officer and a graduate of West Point. He was a polyglot, capable of speaking any foreign tongue required by the plot. He also had a thorough knowledge of ancient history and classical literature, and he exhibited a strong passion for legal principles and the rule of law.
Sun, 09 Nov 2025 - 48min - 263 - BLOW OFF and DEAD GIVEAWAY TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
ANDROID USERS-
1001 Stories From The Old West at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/0c2fc0cGwJBcPfyC8NWNTw
1001 Radio Crime Solvers at Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/0UAUS12lnS2063PWK9CZ37
1001's Best of Jack London at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2HzkpdKeWJgUU9rbx3NqgF
1001 Radio Days at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5jyc4nVoe00xoOxrhyAa8H
1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rzDb5uFdOhfw5X6P5lkWn
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rO7HELtRcGfV48UeP8aFQ
1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories & The Best of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/4dIgYvBwZVTN5ewF0JPaTK
1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5P4hV28LgpG89dRNMfSDKJ
1001 Stories for the Road on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6FhlsxYFTGNPiSMYxM9O9K
1001 Greatest Love Stories on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5sUUFDVTatnGt7FiNQvSHe
1001 History's Best Storytellers: (INTERVIEWS) on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/3QyZ1u4f9OLb9O32KX6Ghr
APPLE USERS
Catch 1001 Stories From The Old West- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-from-the-old-west/id1613213865
Catch 1001's Best of Jack London- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-best-of-jack-london/id1656939169
Catch 1001 Radio Crime Solvers- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-crime-solvers/id1657397371
Catch 1001 Heroes on Apple
Catch 1001 Classic Short Stories at Apple Podcast
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-classic-short-stories-tales/id1078098622
Catch 1001 Stories for the Road at Apple Podcast now:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-for-the-road/id1227478901
NEW Enjoy 1001 Greatest Love Stories on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-greatest-love-stories/id1485751552
Catch 1001 RADIO DAYS now at Apple iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-days/id1405045413?mt=2
NEW 1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre is now playing at Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-stories-tales-of-the-macabre/id1516332327
NEW Enjoy 1001 History's Best Storytellers (Interviews) on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-historys-best-storytellers/id1483649026
NEW Enjoy 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories and The Best of Arthur Conan Doyle https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-sherlock-holmes-stories-best-sir-arthur-conan/id1534427618
Get all of our shows at one website: https://.1001storiespodcast.com
My email works as well for comments: 1001storiespodcast@gmail.com
SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated).
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Wed, 05 Nov 2025 - 1h 00min - 262 - ROOM 114 and THE LUCKY DOLLAR TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
Two great stories from the case files of the Texas Rangers
Try the new "Tales of Escape & Suspense"- links below!
ANDROID USERS-
1001 Tales of Escape & Suspense at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/2HQYk53AJHTOgBTLBzyP3w
1001 Stories From The Old West at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/0c2fc0cGwJBcPfyC8NWNTw
1001 Radio Crime Solvers at Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/0UAUS12lnS2063PWK9CZ37
1001's Best of Jack London at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2HzkpdKeWJgUU9rbx3NqgF
1001 Radio Days at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5jyc4nVoe00xoOxrhyAa8H
1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rzDb5uFdOhfw5X6P5lkWn
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rO7HELtRcGfV48UeP8aFQ
1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories & The Best of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/4dIgYvBwZVTN5ewF0JPaTK
1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5P4hV28LgpG89dRNMfSDKJ
1001 Stories for the Road on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6FhlsxYFTGNPiSMYxM9O9K
1001 Greatest Love Stories on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5sUUFDVTatnGt7FiNQvSHe
1001 History's Best Storytellers: (INTERVIEWS) on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/3QyZ1u4f9OLb9O32KX6Ghr
APPLE USERS
New! 1001 Tales of Escape and Suspense at Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-tales-of-escape-and-suspense/id1689248043
Catch 1001 Stories From The Old West- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-from-the-old-west/id1613213865
Catch 1001's Best of Jack London- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-best-of-jack-london/id1656939169
Catch 1001 Radio Crime Solvers- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-crime-solvers/id1657397371
Catch 1001 Heroes on Apple
Catch 1001 Classic Short Stories at Apple Podcast
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-classic-short-stories-tales/id1078098622
Catch 1001 Stories for the Road at Apple Podcast now:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-for-the-road/id1227478901
NEW Enjoy 1001 Greatest Love Stories on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-greatest-love-stories/id1485751552
Catch 1001 RADIO DAYS now at Apple iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-days/id1405045413?mt=2
NEW 1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre is now playing at Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-stories-tales-of-the-macabre/id1516332327
NEW Enjoy 1001 History's Best Storytellers (Interviews) on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-historys-best-storytellers/id1483649026
NEW Enjoy 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories and The Best of Arthur Conan Doyle https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-sherlock-holmes-stories-best-sir-arthur-conan/id1534427618
Get all of our shows at one website: https://.1001storiespodcast.com
My email works as well for comments: 1001storiespodcast@gmail.com
SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated).
YOUR REVIEWS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED!
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Wed, 29 Oct 2025 - 1h 00min - 261 - WRONG MAN and HOW TO KILL A WOMAN GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is an American radio and television Western drama series created by director Norman MacDonnell and writer John Meston. The stories take place in and around Dodge City, Kansas, during the settlement of the American West.
The radio version ran from 1952 to 1961 and is commonly regarded as one of the finest radio dramas of all time. The television version ran from 1955 to 1975 and is the longest running prime time drama and the second-longest running prime time fictional program in U.S. television history, its record surpassed only by the Disney anthology television series (which, though essentially the same in every incarnation, has appeared on TV under several titles).
Wed, 22 Oct 2025 - 48min - 260 - KITTY CAUGHT and MA TENNIS GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is an American radio and television Western drama series created by director Norman MacDonnell and writer John Meston. The stories take place in and around Dodge City, Kansas, during the settlement of the American West.
The radio version ran from 1952 to 1961 and is commonly regarded as one of the finest radio dramas of all time. The television version ran from 1955 to 1975 and is the longest running prime time drama and the second-longest running prime time fictional program in U.S. television history, its record surpassed only by the Disney anthology television series (which, though essentially the same in every incarnation, has appeared on TV under several titles).
Wed, 15 Oct 2025 - 48min - 259 - MATT GETS IT and LOVE OF A GOOD WOMAN GUNSMOKESun, 12 Oct 2025 - 47min
- 258 - DAD-BLAMED LUCK and FIVE DAYS TO YUMA HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVELWed, 08 Oct 2025 - 48min
- 257 - TOO, TOO SOLID TOWN and DOCTOR FROM VIENNA HAVE GUN , WILL TRAVELSun, 05 Oct 2025 - 45min
- 256 - THE ILLUSION and ADDRESS UNKNOWN TALES OF THE TEXAS RANGERS
Two more episodes of the classic radio show 'Tales of The Texas Rangers' starring Joel McRae.
Check out the latest new Jack London episode today at 1001 Best of Jack London (links below)
ANDROID USERS-1001's Best of Jack London at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2HzkpdKeWJgUU9rbx3NqgF
1001 Stories From The Old West at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/0c2fc0cGwJBcPfyC8NWNTw
1001 Radio Crime Solvers at Spotify-(Sun & Wed) https://open.spotify.com/show/0UAUS12lnS2063PWK9CZ37
1001 Radio Days (Now all Variety, Sun & Wed) at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5jyc4nVoe00xoOxrhyAa8H
1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rzDb5uFdOhfw5X6P5lkWn
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rO7HELtRcGfV48UeP8aFQ
1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories & The Best of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/4dIgYvBwZVTN5ewF0JPaTK
1001 Witness...Everyone Has A Story (COMING SOON)
1001 History's Best Storytellers (Now Playing Archives Only: https://open.spotify.com/show/3QyZ1u4f9OLb9O32KX6Ghr
1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre on Spotify (Playing Archives Only) https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-stories-tales-of-the-macabre/id1516332327
1001 Tales of Escape & Suspense at Spotify - (Playing Archives Only) https://open.spotify.com/show/2HQYk53AJHTOgBTLBzyP3w
APPLE USERSCatch 1001 Stories From The Old West- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-from-the-old-west/id1613213865
Catch 1001's Best of Jack London- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-best-of-jack-london/id1656939169
Catch 1001 Radio Crime Solvers- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-crime-solvers/id1657397371
Catch 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries on Apple
Catch 1001 Classic Short Stories at Apple Podcast
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-classic-short-stories-tales/id1078098622
Catch 1001 Stories for the Road at Apple Podcast now:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-for-the-road/id1227478901
NEW Enjoy 1001 Greatest Love Stories on Apple Devices here:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-greatest-love-stories/id1485751552
Catch 1001 RADIO DAYS now at Apple iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-days/id1405045413?mt=2
Enjoy 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories and The Best of Arthur Conan Doyle https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-sherlock-holmes-stories-best-sir-arthur-conan/id1534427618
001 Witness...Everyone Has A Story (COMING SOON)
1001 History's Best Storytellers at Apple Podcast (Now Playing Archives Only: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-historys-best-storytellers/id1483649026
1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre at Apple Podcast (Playing Archives Only) https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-stories-tales-of-the-macabre/id1516332327
1001 Tales of Escape & Suspense at Apple Podcast- (Playing Archives Only) https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-tales-of-escape-and-suspense/id1689248043
Get all of our shows at one website: https://.1001storiespodcast.com
My email works as well for comments: 1001storiespodcast@gmail.com
SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated).
YOUR REVIEWS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED!
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Wed, 01 Oct 2025 - 1h 00min - 255 - GUN IN THE BACK MARRIAGE and DRESSED TO KILL HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL
John Dehner began his career as an animation assistant at Walt Disney Studios, worked as an Army publicist during WWII and, as a Los Angeles radio news reporter, editor and announcer, netted his station a Peabody Award for his coverage of the first UN conference in San Francisco in the late 1940s. Dehner started acting in films in the mid-1940s, eventually appearing in over 100 features, mostly westerns or action films. As sheriff Pat Garrett, he proved a notable foil to Paul Newman's Billy the Kid in Arthur Penn's "The Left-Handed Gun" (1958).
Once voted "best radio voice" by "Radio Life Magazine," Dehner was a prolific radio performer during the 1950s, starring as J.B. Kendall, a Brit in the American West, on "Frontier Gentleman" and as Paladin on "Have Gun Will Travel." Throughout the 60s and 70s he made regular appearances on TV series including "The Westerner" (1960), "The Roaring Twenties" (1960-62), "The Don Knotts Show" (1970-71) "The Doris Day Show" (1971-73) and "Big Hawaii" (1977). Later roles included Secretary of State Dean Acheson in the miniseries "The Missiles of October" (1974); Admiral Ernest King in the miniseries "The Winds of War" (1983); Henry Luce in "The Right Stuff" (1983); and the judge in "Jagged Edge" (1985).
Sun, 28 Sep 2025 - 43min - 254 - GUNSMOKE TRIPLE PLAY YOUNG MAN and OBIE TATER and HANDCUFFSWed, 24 Sep 2025 - 1h 43min
- 253 - JOE PHY and MAVIS MCCLOUD GUNSMOKESun, 21 Sep 2025 - 51min
- 252 - MATT FOR MURDER and NO INDIAN GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is one of those long-running classic Old-Time Radio shows that everyone knows and remembers. It's also one that is still respected for its high values, in all aspects. Gunsmoke first aired on the CBS network on April 26, 1952, billed as the first adult western. It was set in Dodge City, Kansas in the 1870's.
The main character, Matt Dillon, was played by William Conrad. On August 6, 1951, William Conrad played the lead in a show entitled "Pagosa" in the series Romance, where he played the part of a reluctant sheriff in a tough Western town. Although not a true audition, Conrad's character role is very close the that of Matt Dillon in Gunsmoke. It was one of the "stepping stones" toward the production of Gunsmoke.
Other regular characters were Chester Proudfoot, played by Parley Baer; Kitty, played by Georgia Ellis; and Doc Adams, played by Howard McNear.
The series featured top-notch acting and well-developed scripts that set it apart from many other shows, not only Westerns; however, it was the sound effects that stood out the most. Listen carefully and one can hear many levels of sound that really helps transport the listener back to the old west.
Wed, 17 Sep 2025 - 50min - 251 - TEXAS COWBOYS and THE QUEUE GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is one of those long-running classic Old-Time Radio shows that everyone knows and remembers. It's also one that is still respected for its high values, in all aspects. Gunsmoke first aired on the CBS network on April 26, 1952, billed as the first adult western. It was set in Dodge City, Kansas in the 1870's.
The main character, Matt Dillon, was played by William Conrad. On August 6, 1951, William Conrad played the lead in a show entitled "Pagosa" in the series Romance, where he played the part of a reluctant sheriff in a tough Western town. Although not a true audition, Conrad's character role is very close the that of Matt Dillon in Gunsmoke. It was one of the "stepping stones" toward the production of Gunsmoke.
Other regular characters were Chester Proudfoot, played by Parley Baer; Kitty, played by Georgia Ellis; and Doc Adams, played by Howard McNear.
The series featured top-notch acting and well-developed scripts that set it apart from many other shows, not only Westerns; however, it was the sound effects that stood out the most. Listen carefully and one can hear many levels of sound that really helps transport the listener back to the old west.
Sun, 14 Sep 2025 - 50min - 250 - SO TRUE, MR. BARNUM HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL
"Have Gun Will Travel," the 106 episode radio Western created by Sam Rolfe & Herb Meadow (starring John Dehner as Paladin) was broadcast on CBS (ty jenni janzen, for the thumbs up!!) radio, November 23, 1958 to November 22, 1960. Paladin 'Gun For Hire' lived in & worked out of the Carleton Hotel, in 1875 San Francisco. During many episodes, we heard Paladin in conversation with the Carleton Hotel's Chinese bell hop, 'Hey-Boy' (starring Ben Wright).
Have Gun Will Travel was one of those very rare programs which got its START as a top rated television show (CBS TV 1957 thru 1963, starring Richard Boone), successfully moving to radio broadcast, there-after. Thank you to OTR fan, "Hack Prine" (Aug 13/10), for this important additional data!
Check out our website and join our newsletter mailing list today at www.bestof1001stories.com
Wed, 10 Sep 2025 - 24min - 249 - BAD BERT and SOMEBODY OUT THERE HATES ME HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL
"Have Gun Will Travel," the 106 episode radio Western created by Sam Rolfe & Herb Meadow (starring John Dehner as Paladin) was broadcast on CBS (ty jenni janzen, for the thumbs up!!) radio, November 23, 1958 to November 22, 1960. Paladin 'Gun For Hire' lived in & worked out of the Carleton Hotel, in 1875 San Francisco. During many episodes, we heard Paladin in conversation with the Carleton Hotel's Chinese bell hop, 'Hey-Boy' (starring Ben Wright).
Have Gun Will Travel was one of those very rare programs which got its START as a top rated television show (CBS TV 1957 thru 1963, starring Richard Boone), successfully moving to radio broadcast, there-after. Thank you to OTR fan, "Hack Prine" (Aug 13/10), for this important additional data! These wonderful programs will never die as long as they have avid OTR listeners to keep it alive!
Catch ALL our westerns at our website at www.bestof1001stories.com
Sun, 07 Sep 2025 - 45min - 248 - THE DOLLHOUSE IN DIAMOND SPRINGS and THAT WAS NO LADY HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL
"Have Gun Will Travel," the 106 episode radio Western created by Sam Rolfe & Herb Meadow (starring John Dehner as Paladin) was broadcast on CBS (ty jenni janzen, for the thumbs up!!) radio, November 23, 1958 to November 22, 1960. Paladin 'Gun For Hire' lived in & worked out of the Carleton Hotel, in 1875 San Francisco. During many episodes, we heard Paladin in conversation with the Carleton Hotel's Chinese bell hop, 'Hey-Boy' (starring Ben Wright).
Have Gun Will Travel was one of those very rare programs which got its START as a top rated television show (CBS TV 1957 thru 1963, starring Richard Boone), successfully moving to radio broadcast, there-after. Thank you to OTR fan, "Hack Prine" (Aug 13/10), for this important additional data! These wonderful programs will never die as long as they have avid OTR listeners to keep it alive!
Wed, 03 Sep 2025 - 42min - 247 - THE BOSS and BRING HIM BACK ALIVE HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL W JOHN DEHNER AS PALADIN
John Dehner was born John Forkum on November 23rd, 1915 in Staten Island, New York. His father Leroy was an artist. His career allowed John to attend school in Norway and France. John was also a gifted artist, and pianist. He studied at the Grand Central School of Art in New York, while simultaneously getting into acting.
Forkum's talent took him west. He found animation work at Disney before landing a job at KMPC. At the radio station, John did everything from dramatic work to newscasting. He later earned a Peabody Award for his coverage of the first U.N. Conference.
He spent the last half of World War II in the Army. After being honorably discharged, he returned to California. Now using his mother's maiden name, Dehner, hoped to act. Lawrence Dobkin remembered how difficult it was for an outsider to find Hollywood work.
But Dehner had good timing. Thanks to William Paley's Packaged Program initiative, CBS was piloting dozens of shows. By 1948, he was a regular on the network, where a new crop of directors like Elliott Lewis and Norman MacDonnell were joining veterans like Bill Robson and Bill Spier. On August 1st, Dehner appeared on Escape in Bill Robson's production of "The Man Who Would Be King."
On April 11th, 1950 Dehner appeared in an episode of The Adventures of Philip Marlowe. It was noted because Bill Conrad subbed for star Gerald Mohr. The pair's relationship went back to their days at KMPC. By the early 1950s, Dehner had appeared on The NBC University Theater, The Screen Directors Playhouse, Escape, and The Whistler. Dehner became a regular on Gunsmoke after its 1952 debut. This is from the December 27th, 1952 episode called, "The Cabin."
Dehner spent the next six years playing a variety of parts on shows like Gunsmoke and Johnny Dollar. He was a toothless drunk, dashing leading man, vile psychopath, pillar of the community, and no nonsense anti-hero.
In 1955 Gunsmoke's success led CBS and director Norman Macdonnell to launch a second adult western called Fort Laramie. John Dehner auditioned for the lead on July 25th, 1955. But he was worried about being typecast and Captain Lee Quince went to Raymund Burr. With no sponsorship Fort Laramie lasted only ten months before being canceled after the October 28th, 1956 episode.
Gunsmoke remained CBS's only western until February of 1958 when Dehner was cast as J.B. Kendall in Antony Ellis' production of Frontier Gentleman. Kendall was an English journalist writing for the London Times, weaving his way through the Western territories of the US in the late nineteenth century.
In the September 1st, 1958 issue of Broadcasting Magazine WCBS Radio in New York took out a local ad touting their station as having the city's most persuasive radio salesmen. They also hailed their star personalities like Jack Sterling, Lanny Ross, Jim Lowe, Martha Wright, and Galen Drake. More and more network programming was being left to local stations. William N. Robson remembered that time.
Frontier Gentleman lasted nine months. In November, the network announced it was dropping several shows, including Nora Drake, Our Gal Sunday, Backstage Wife, The FBI in Peace and War, Indictment, The Galen Drake Show, City Hospital, and Frontier Gentleman
Sun, 31 Aug 2025 - 41min - 246 - WORD OF HONOR and HACK PRIME GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is an American radio and television Western drama series created by director Norman MacDonnell and writer John Meston. The stories take place in and around Dodge City, Kansas, during the settlement of the American West.
The radio version ran from 1952 to 1961 and is commonly regarded as one of the finest radio dramas of all time. The television version ran from 1955 to 1975 and is the longest running prime time drama and the second-longest running prime time fictional program in U.S. television history, its record surpassed only by the Disney anthology television series (which, though essentially the same in every incarnation, has appeared on TV under several titles)
Now you can enjoy browsing all 12 of our podcasts and 2,500 episodes filled with history, old time radio, and storytelling at www.bestof1001stories.com- join us!
Wed, 27 Aug 2025 - 48min - 245 - GOING BAD and CLAUSTROPHOBIA GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is an American radio and television Western drama series created by director Norman MacDonnell and writer John Meston. The stories take place in and around Dodge City, Kansas, during the settlement of the American West.
The radio version ran from 1952 to 1961 and is commonly regarded as one of the finest radio dramas of all time. The television version ran from 1955 to 1975 and is the longest running prime time drama and the second-longest running prime time fictional program in U.S. television history, its record surpassed only by the Disney anthology television series (which, though essentially the same in every incarnation, has appeared on TV under several titles)
Join us at www.bestof1001stories.com for over 2,500 great old radio, history, and storytelling episodes
Sun, 24 Aug 2025 - 45min - 244 - THE BLACKSMITH and THE COVER-UP GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is set in and around Dodge City, Kansas, in the post-Civil War era and centers around United States Marshall Matt Dillon (William Conrad) as he enforces law and order in the city. The series also focuses on Dillon's friendship with three other citizens of Dodge City: Doctor Charles "Doc" Adams (Howard McNear), the town's physician; Kitty Russell (Georgia Ellis), owner of the Long Branch Saloon; and Chester Wesley Proudfoot (Parley Baer), Dillon's deputy.[ Other roles were played by a group of supporting actors consisting of John Dehner, Sam Edwards, Harry Bartell, Vic Perrin, Lou Krugman, Lawrence Dobkin, Barney Phillips, Jack Kruschen, Ralph Moody, Ben Wright, James Nusser, Richard Crenna, Tom Tully, Joseph Kearns, Virginia Gregg, Jeanette Nolan, Virginia Christine, Helen Kleeb, Lillian Buyeff, Vivi Janiss, and Jeanne Bates. The entire nine-season run of Gunsmoke was produced by Norman Macdonnell.
Wed, 20 Aug 2025 - 49min - 243 - MONOPOLY and FEUD GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is set in and around Dodge City, Kansas, in the post-Civil War era and centers around United States Marshall Matt Dillon (William Conrad) as he enforces law and order in the city. The series also focuses on Dillon's friendship with three other citizens of Dodge City: Doctor Charles "Doc" Adams (Howard McNear), the town's physician; Kitty Russell (Georgia Ellis), owner of the Long Branch Saloon; and Chester Wesley Proudfoot (Parley Baer), Dillon's deputy.[ Other roles were played by a group of supporting actors consisting of John Dehner, Sam Edwards, Harry Bartell, Vic Perrin, Lou Krugman, Lawrence Dobkin, Barney Phillips, Jack Kruschen, Ralph Moody, Ben Wright, James Nusser, Richard Crenna, Tom Tully, Joseph Kearns, Virginia Gregg, Jeanette Nolan, Virginia Christine, Helen Kleeb, Lillian Buyeff, Vivi Janiss, and Jeanne Bates. The entire nine-season run of Gunsmoke was produced by Norman Macdonnell.
PIC WILLIAM CONRAD W CIGARETTE HA HA and VIRGINIA GREGG
Sun, 17 Aug 2025 - 48min - 242 - BEN SCOFIELD and THE CAPTURE OF STACY GAULT THE SIX-SHOOTER W JIMMY STEWART
The Six Shooter brought James Stewart to the NBC microphone on September 20, 1953, in a fine series of folksy Western adventures.
Stewart was never better on the air than in this drama of Britt Ponset, frontier drifter created by Frank Burt. The epigraph set it up nicely: "The man in the saddle is angular and long-legged: his skin is sun dyed brown. The gun in his holster is gray steel and rainbow mother-of-pearl. People call them both The Six Shooter." Ponset was a wanderer, an easy-going gentleman and -- when he had to be -- a gunfighter.
Stewart was right in character as the slow-talking maverick who usually blundered into other people's troubles and sometimes shot his way out. His experiences were broad, but The Six Shooter leaned more to comedy than other shows of its kind. Ponset took time out to play Hamlet with a crude road company. He ran for mayor and sheriff of the same town at the same time. He became involved in a delighful Western version of Cinderella, complete with grouchy stepmother, ugly sisters, and a shoe that didn't fit. And at Christmas he told a young runaway the story of A Christmas Carol, Substituting the original Dickens characters with Western heavies. Britt even had time to fall in love, but it was the age-old story of people from different worlds, and the romance was foredoomed despite their valiant efforts to save it.
So we got a cowboy-into-the-sunset ending for this series, truly one of the bright spots of radio. Unfortunately, it came too late, and lasted only one season.
Wed, 13 Aug 2025 - 58min - 241 - RINK LARKIN and NED LARSON'S REVENGE THE SIX SHOOTER W JIMMY STEWART
The Six Shooter brought James Stewart to the NBC microphone on September 20, 1953, in a fine series of folksy Western adventures.
Stewart was never better on the air than in this drama of Britt Ponset, frontier drifter created by Frank Burt. The epigraph set it up nicely: "The man in the saddle is angular and long-legged: his skin is sun dyed brown. The gun in his holster is gray steel and rainbow mother-of-pearl. People call them both The Six Shooter." Ponset was a wanderer, an easy-going gentleman and -- when he had to be -- a gunfighter.
Stewart was right in character as the slow-talking maverick who usually blundered into other people's troubles and sometimes shot his way out. His experiences were broad, but The Six Shooter leaned more to comedy than other shows of its kind. Ponset took time out to play Hamlet with a crude road company. He ran for mayor and sheriff of the same town at the same time. He became involved in a delighful Western version of Cinderella, complete with grouchy stepmother, ugly sisters, and a shoe that didn't fit. And at Christmas he told a young runaway the story of A Christmas Carol, Substituting the original Dickens characters with Western heavies. Britt even had time to fall in love, but it was the age-old story of people from different worlds, and the romance was foredoomed despite their valiant efforts to save it.
So we got a cowboy-into-the-sunset ending for this series, truly one of the bright spots of radio. Unfortunately, it came too late, and lasted only one season.
Sun, 10 Aug 2025 - 57min - 240 - THE CONSTABLE and THE INDIAN HORSE GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is an American western radio series, which was developed for radio by John Meston and Norman Macdonnell. The series ran for nine seasons and was broadcast by CBS. The first episode of the series originally aired in the United States on April 26, 1952, and the final first-run episode aired on June 18, 1961. During the series, a total of 480 original episodes were broadcast, including shows with re-used or adapted scripts. A television version of the series premiered in 1955.
Wed, 06 Aug 2025 - 45min - 239 - MURDER WARRANT and CARA GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is an American western radio series, which was developed for radio by John Meston and Norman Macdonnell. The series ran for nine seasons and was broadcast by CBS. ] The first episode of the series originally aired in the United States on April 26, 1952, and the final first-run episode aired on June 18, 1961. During the series, a total of 480 original episodes were broadcast, including shows with re-used or adapted scripts.[4] A television version of the series premiered in 1955.
Sun, 03 Aug 2025 - 46min - 238 - OLD FRIEND and BLOOD MONEY GUNSMOKEWed, 30 Jul 2025 - 1h 09min
- 237 - THE LAST FLING and BAD BOY GUNSMOKEWed, 23 Jul 2025 - 47min
- 236 - BIG BROAD and THE KILLER GUNSMOKESun, 20 Jul 2025 - 46min
- 235 - JOKE'S ON US and GUN SMUGGLER GUNSMOKE
Gunsmoke is one of those long-running classic Old-Time Radio shows that everyone knows and remembers. It's also one that is still respected for its high values, in all aspects. Gunsmoke first aired on the CBS network on April 26, 1952, billed as the first adult western. It was set in Dodge City, Kansas in the 1870's.
The main character, Matt Dillon, was played by William Conrad. On August 6, 1951, William Conrad played the lead in a show entitled "Pagosa" in the series Romance, where he played the part of a reluctant sheriff in a tough Western town. Although not a true audition, Conrad's character role is very close the that of Matt Dillon in Gunsmoke. It was one of the "stepping stones" toward the production of Gunsmoke.
Other regular characters were Chester Proudfoot, played by Parley Baer; Kitty, played by Georgia Ellis; and Doc Adams, played by Howard McNear.
The series featured top-notch acting and well-developed scripts that set it apart from many other shows, not only Westerns; however, it was the sound effects that stood out the most. Listen carefully and one can hear many levels of sound that really helps transport the listener back to the old west.
Wed, 16 Jul 2025 - 47min
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