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Tales of the Ranch

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  • 2025 Induction North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame June 13-14, 2025
  • North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame Inductee 2019
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  • Articles
  • 2025 Induction North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame June 13-14, 2025
  • North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame Inductee 2019
  • Photo Gallery
  • About
  • History,  The Cowboy Chronicle

    Just One More Ride

    December 9, 2018 /

    Across the prairies they are galloping as fast as old Sandy can go. The tall grass and trees are a blur, the wind is stinging the young cowboy’s face. There is no time to be timid; the outlaws are in close pursuit and he has got to get away. He knows he’s got a loyal friend with him. Sandy is sure footed and wily. All of a sudden Sandy lurches to a stop…and Mom is there saying its time to go. It seems so long ago now, the world of grocery store rides. Young cowboys and cowgirls begging for a quarter for just one more ride! The moms and dads…

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

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    Straight to the Horse’s Mouth

    April 30, 2019

    Necessities for a Nomadic Life

    August 18, 2019

    The Railroad and Settlement in Early North Dakota

    April 9, 2015
  • History,  Tales of the Ranch

    A Century Since the Great War; Family Ties

    November 12, 2018 /

    The 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11 11th month. It’s been 100 years since the first Armistice ( Veterans ) Day. A century, such a long time, yet when I was born the “Great War” had only been over for a little less than 40 years and many veterans of this war were alive and strong. One of them, Alfred V. Taylor lied about his age and joined the Navy when the war started. He became a pharmacists mate, ( a pharmacists mate performed a variety of medical duties), and was assigned duty on an hospital ship spending the war near the coast of France. He was…

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

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    The Battle at Guilford Courthouse

    May 1, 2019

    Just One More Ride

    December 9, 2018

    Necessities for a Nomadic Life

    August 18, 2019
  • The Cowboy Chronicle,  Western History

    Who was Benjamin Henry?

    October 10, 2018 /

    Who was Benjamin Henry? Historians and those knowledgeable of guns would be familiar with his name, but for most his significance is unknown.  Conversely, the name Winchester sparks immediate recognition. Yet in one of history’s many ironies, it was Henry who was directly responsible for the Winchester rifle and Oliver Winchester’s place in American history. As a young man Henry worked as a gunsmith apprentice and rose to foreman of a small arms company in Vermont.  He worked with Horace Smith and Daniel Wesson who went on to form the Volcanic Repeating Arms Company. Oliver Winchester, a clothing manufacturer, was one of their main investors.  Winchester was able to take over…

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

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    Necessities for a Nomadic Life

    August 18, 2019

    The Lewis and Clark Trail Museum

    February 7, 2015

    Booming Settlement to Ghost Town: Whispers of the Living History of Charbonneau

    January 29, 2015
  • Native Americans,  The Cowboy Chronicle,  Western History

    War Bonnet!

    August 13, 2018 /

    The old steamer trunk has been in the family attic for generations.  The treasure it holds comes out from time to time to be admired and pondered. Who wore it?   What moments in history did the wearer see and experience? What stories are hidden in this honorary headdress? Over one hundred years ago the US government opened up a strip of land to homesteaders between the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation and the Cheyenne River Indian Reservation. There were over 100,000 applicants but only 2500 families won a claim. One of these families was that of Henry and Margaret Lutgen, who established their farm along the path the local Native Americans…

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

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    The Legacy of the Horse in the Lives of the Great Plains People

    August 25, 2016

    Necessities for a Nomadic Life

    August 18, 2019
  • North Dakota History,  North Dakota Today

    Knowing Your Past Carries You into the Future

    July 8, 2018 /

    The past meets the present and future in a quiet little town; from the last lynching in North Dakota to the fellowship of burgers in the park and a farmers market on Saturday nights. Showcasing it all is the Lewis and Clark Trail Museum. Motoring down Highway 85 you now bypass the town of Alexander where traffic and trucks lumbering through town used to be an all-day occurrence. All that commotion goes around town now, but beckoning passersby is a highway sign pointing the way for some quiet moments and a glimpse into the past. In the 1960’s McKenzie County and its towns were as they had been for many…

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

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    The Lewis and Clark Trail Museum

    February 7, 2015

    “Come and Get It”

    May 30, 2018

    Biography of George W. Nohle

    March 1, 2015
  • North Dakota History,  The Cowboy Chronicle,  Western History

    “Come and Get It”

    May 30, 2018 /

    She’s all done up like she would have been back in her heyday when she was perhaps the most important entity in a cowboy’s life on the trail. The horse was a cowboy’s first love, but to start and end the day what could be more important than the chuck wagon!

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 4 Comments

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    In Good Company

    February 13, 2019

    Booming Settlement to Ghost Town: Whispers of the Living History of Charbonneau

    January 29, 2015

    The Railroad and Settlement in Early North Dakota

    April 9, 2015
  • Horses,  North Dakota History,  North Dakota Horizons magazine,  North Dakota Today

    The Wild Horses of Roosevelt’s Badlands

    February 24, 2018 /

    He was an old man, arthritic and without a family band, but still wild and free.  Singlefoot was the oldest stallion living in the Theodore Roosevelt National Park (TRNP). He may have been on his own but he still found the energy to play and enjoy life. He looked out over grasslands and rolling hills interrupted by dramatic and colorful badland formations where his ancestors once roamed. The history of the plains horse dates from prehistoric times; disappearing from North America about 11,000 years ago and returning in the 1500’s with Spanish explorers.  Singlefoot and the other horses in the park descended from those brought by the Spaniards and other…

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

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    History of the Western Saddle

    January 27, 2015

    The Legacy of the Horse in the Lives of the Great Plains People

    August 25, 2016

    Rex

    April 21, 2020
  • Horses,  North Dakota History,  North Dakota Today,  The Cowboy Chronicle

    The Wild Horses of Roosevelt’s Badlands for The Cowboy Chronicle

    November 10, 2017 /

    He’s an old man now – arthritic and without a family band, but Singlefoot, the oldest stallion living in  Roosevelt National Park (TRNP)still roams wild and free where his ancestors did, looking out over grasslands and rolling hills interrupted by dramatic and colorful badlands. The history of the plains horse dates from prehistoric times; disappearing from the North America about 11,000 years ago and returning in the 1500’s with Spanish explorers.  Singlefoot and the other horses in the park are descended from those brought by the Spaniards and other domesticated stock. Once domesticated, they are feral animals, not “wild” horses as they are generally called. Regardless, these beautiful animals seen…

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 2 Comments

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    The Western Trail

    February 13, 2015

    The Legacy of the Horse in the Lives of the Great Plains People

    August 25, 2016

    Straight to the Horse’s Mouth

    April 30, 2019
  • North Dakota History,  North Dakota Horizons magazine,  Tales of the Ranch

    The True Facts

    July 3, 2017 /

    Published in: North Dakota Horizons magazine Summer 2017 There is a certain beauty in the harshness of western North Dakota winters. Winds howl across the prairie, through the coulees, and sometimes bring the effective temperature as low as forty below. Snow, not always abundant, is often a patchwork with gray and brown rather than a continuous blanket of white.  Days are short in deep winter with as little as nine hours of daylight.  Men and beasts adapt, putting on their winter coats and hunkering down for those long months until the ground thaws and grasses grow tall again. Those that survive these winters are men with resilience and determination, and animals that herd…

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 2 Comments

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    The Wild Horses of Roosevelt’s Badlands

    February 24, 2018

    Harold Schafer, Mr. Bubble and the Legacy of Medora

    April 9, 2015

    National Day of the Cowboy: Preserving Pioneer Heritage and Cowboy Culture

    May 29, 2017
  • North Dakota History,  North Dakota Today,  The Cowboy Chronicle,  Western History

    National Day of the Cowboy: Preserving Pioneer Heritage and Cowboy Culture

    May 29, 2017 /

    “We celebrate the Cowboy as a symbol of the grand history of the American West. The Cowboy’s love of the land and love of the country are examples for all Americans” President George W. Bush The thirteenth annual National Day of the Cowboy is July 22, 2017. The American cowboy has firmly taken his place in American history. He is an almost mythological character of the American west; often a lone rider embracing a simple life, loving and living off the land with hard work and nobility. The cowboy culture is firmly embedded in the character of many western states; the cowboy hat and boots are more than just a…

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    Mary Patricia Martell Jones 0 Comments

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    The True Facts

    July 3, 2017

    Biography of George W. Nohle

    March 1, 2015

    The Wandering Man

    June 4, 2019
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