bojangles Report post Posted December 19, 2017 These are in springerville, circa 1915-1920, or near springerville I should say. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
naturebob Report post Posted December 19, 2017 Cool Stuff!..........BOB! 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CatfishKev Report post Posted December 19, 2017 That's cool man. Gun totin old lady right there. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Couestracker Report post Posted December 19, 2017 Very awesome! 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Roosevelt Mark Report post Posted December 19, 2017 That's cool. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AZ Wildcat Report post Posted December 19, 2017 Very cool! 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
firstcoueswas80 Report post Posted December 19, 2017 About a year before my Grandpa died, I asked him to get his old hunting pictures out reminisce over them and write a little story about some of them. However he never did I really wish you would have that would have been something great to put together for myself and my cousins and show my kids. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bojangles Report post Posted December 19, 2017 yeah, my great grandfather died 4 years before i was born, so i have limited info about these hunts, but my grandfather, who died about 10 years ago, did include these pictures in his book of memoirs. He did tell me one hunting story. Back then, food was scarce, as it was the great depression, and hence wild game was scarce, too. Pronghorn were on the "do not hunt" list due to endangered populations. But one day, out on the range, a speed goat showed up. Needing food, my grandfather shot him, and took him home for dinner. When asked what he would have done if someone showed up to witness the event, he replied, "I would have waved them around." Upon further questioning, the person asked what he would have done if they didn't go around. He replied, "They had BETTER go around." He was not an Arizona native, but a Texan. He moved here in 1915 after selling his blacksmith shop in Sanco, Texas. He grew up in the post civil war era, and knew his way around a gunfight really well. This was the great grandfather who's hunting rifle i inherited, as mentioned in a previous topic. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Non-Typical Solutions Report post Posted December 19, 2017 Always fun to find things out about the old timers, really cool pictures. It always seems like those black and white pictures just make it look so dang tough.....which it was! 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
300RUM Report post Posted January 14, 2018 I used to do a lot of hunting in 1 & 27 and came across a number of old log cabins over the years. I wondered what life was like for those who had lived in them. Thanks for sharing the photos. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bojangles Report post Posted January 15, 2018 On 1/13/2018 at 5:46 PM, 300RUM said: I used to do a lot of hunting in 1 & 27 and came across a number of old log cabins over the years. I wondered what life was like for those who had lived in them. Thanks for sharing the photos. When my grandpa was a kid, he drove cattle from spingerville to Magdalena, unsupported. He was a rodeo cowboy, pro boxer, enlisted in the military in WW2, and traveling evangelist that drilled wells on the side. His dad, (great grandpa) was a post civil war era gunslinger. His uncle had been murdered by CC Slaughter, predecessor of the famed Texas John Slaughter. He turned his life to vengeance and turned his guns to the Slaughters. After years of the hard life of vengeance, he became a Christian and put his gun in his holster. He sold his backsmith shop in Sanco, Texas in 1915 and bought a ranch in Springerville, when my grandfather was 5 years old. They lost the ranch in the depression when the bottom fell out of the cattle market and they couldn't make the mortgage. They then turned to drilling wells, mostly in southern AZ. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites