Wild West Deep Dives

Wild West Deep Dives

Wild West Deep Dives is a deeply researched narrative history podcast that uncovers the real, often brutal stories of the American frontier. Each episode draws from primary sources, period newspapers, diaries, modern scholarship and more to reconstruct massacres, wars, gunfights, and the daily hardships faced by those who lived—and died—on the edge of American expansion. From gunslinging outlaws and relentless lawmen to frontier wars and forgotten communities, this podcast talks about the legends then strips it away to reveal what actually happened. Well, let's get into shall we!

  1. Jun 5

    Simon Kenton - Legendary Frontiersman

    Simon Kenton is one of the great frontier names that deserves to be remembered far more than it is. Born in Virginia in 1755, Kenton was still a teenager when one violent moment changed the course of his life. Believing he had killed a man in a jealous fight, he fled west, took on the name Simon Butler, and stepped into the dangerous world of the early American frontier. What followed was one of the most remarkable lives of the frontier era. Kenton became a hunter, scout, spy, soldier, guide, and survivor. He served during Lord Dunmore’s War, helped defend Boonesborough, saved Daniel Boone’s life during a Shawnee attack, fought in the American Revolution, endured captivity and torture, ran the gauntlet multiple times, and came within moments of being burned alive. Later, he would fight through the Northwest Indian War, cross paths with Tecumseh, serve in the War of 1812, and live long enough to see the violent frontier of his youth become farms, towns, roads, and memory. And yet today, Simon Kenton is often overshadowed by men like Daniel Boone & Davy Crockett. In this episode, we dive into the life, legend, hardship, and legacy of Simon Kenton — the runaway boy who became one of the toughest and most respected frontiersmen of early America. A huge thank you to Jim Cornelius from the Frontier Partisans Podcast and Frontier Partisans website. Jim’s work was a massive help in putting this episode together, and if you enjoy deeply researched frontier history, I highly recommend checking out his work. Frontier Partisans website: https://frontierpartisans.com Frontier Partisans Trading Post, including merchandise and books: https://frontierpartisans.com/trading-post/ I also want to thank and credit Peter Kelly from The Woodland Escape, whose Simon Kenton storytelling helped shape parts of this episode, along with Waypoint Survival and Frontier Quest for their excellent videos demonstrating the underground fire method connected to Kenton’s frontier skills. The Woodland Escape: https://www.youtube.com/c/thewoodlandescapeWaypoint Survival:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQVNnhMNVeE&t=784s Frontier Quest: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qlmPZVAblaI #SimonKenton #FrontierHistory #AmericanFrontier #WildWestDeepDives #DanielBoone #DavyCrockett #Tecumseh #LordDunmoresWar #WarOf1812 #KentuckyHistory #OhioHistory #EarlyAmericanHistory #AmericanRevolution #FrontierPartisans #oldwesthistory Additional Sources; Simon Kenton – Frontiersman and Soldier, Legends of America https://www.legendsofamerica.com/simon-kenton/ Simon Kenton: Frontiersman, Soldier, Spy, By Mark Wilcox https://emergingrevolutionarywar.org/2020/04/08/simon-kenton-frontiersman-soldier-spy/

    40 min
  2. May 22

    The Ward Party Massacre - 1854

    On August 20, 1854, a small wagon train led by William Alexander Ward — often remembered simply as Alexander Ward — was nearing Fort Boise on the Oregon Trail when their journey came to a violent and horrifying end.The Ward Party had survived months on the trail, crossing dangerous country, enduring exhaustion, heat, hunger, river crossings, and the daily struggle of keeping people and animals alive. But near the Boise River, a stolen horse, a deadly confrontation, and a sudden attack turned one ordinary stop into one of the deadliest settler massacres in Oregon Trail history.By the time the violence ended, nearly the entire Ward Party was dead. Eighteen members of the wagon train were killed, along with one member of a rescue party, bringing the total death toll to 19. Only two young boys, William and Newton Ward, survived.In this episode of Wild West Deep Dives, we look at the Ward Party Massacre, also known as the Boise Massacre, and the larger story behind it: the growing tension along the Oregon Trail, the pressure placed on Native communities in the Snake River country, the thin and often conflicting historical record, the military retaliation that followed, and how this forgotten tragedy helped change the future of southern Idaho.This is the story of one of the Oregon Trail’s deadliest and most forgotten attacks.#WildWestDeepDives #OregonTrail #WardMassacre #BoiseMassacre #OldWest #WildWestHistory #AmericanWest #FrontierHistory #OregonTrailHistory #FortBoise #IdahoHistory #SnakeRiver #PioneerHistory #NativeAmericanHistory #westernhistory Sources for Episode;Fort Boise – (United States Army) Idaho State Historical SocietyHigh, Dave, and Daniel Newcomer. “The Ward Massacre.” https://theclio.com/entry/23713Gone Are the Immigrants and the Indians, And Over It Are Peaceful October Skies By Harold Rhodenbaugh The Idaho Statesman 20 October 1929 https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-idaho-statesman-ward-massacre-pt-1/153115548/Gerald Baydo, “Overland from Missouri to Washington Territory in 1854,” Nebraska History 52 (1971): 65-87 http://www.nebraskahistory.org/publish/publicat/history/full-text/NH1971Overland.pdfThe Oregon Trail in Idaho Idaho State Historical Society https://history.idaho.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/0050.pdfMemorial to 18-Massacred WARD PIONEERS in 1854. https://wardfamily.blog/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/WARD-PIONEERS-MASSACRED-in-1854-on-the-OREGON-TRAIL-compress.pdf

    15 min
  3. May 13

    Was Henry Plummer Really the Outlaw Sheriff of Bannack?

    Henry Plummer is one of the most controversial figures in Old West history. Was he really the Outlaw Sheriff of Bannack — a lawman secretly leading a gang of road agents, robbers, and killers across the Montana gold fields? Or was he a flawed but innocent man, hanged without a trial by the Montana Vigilantes during one of the most debated episodes of frontier justice?In this episode, we follow the life of Henry Plummer from his early years in Maine, to the California Gold Rush, Nevada City, Bannack, and the violent world of the 1860s mining camps. We examine the accusations that Plummer led the so-called "Innocents," a supposed gang of road agents connected to robberies, murders, stagecoach attacks, and disappearances around Bannack and Alder Gulch. But we also look at the other side — the lack of hard evidence, the questionable confessions, the vigilante accounts, and the possibility that Plummer was wrongly executed.This episode explores the full story of Henry Plummer, the Montana Vigilantes, Erastus “Red” Yager, George Ives, Boone Helm, Clubfoot George Lane, Buck Stinson, Ned Ray, and the violent struggle between law, crime, and vigilante justice in the American frontier. Was Henry Plummer truly a criminal mastermind, or did the vigilantes hang a sheriff and then write the story that made it justice?Comment below after watching: was Henry Plummer guilty, innocent, or somewhere in between? I am genuinely curious of y'alls opinion on this!Wild West Deep Dives is a Top 50 History Podcast in the United States. Thank you all for helping make that possible — your support, comments, shares, and subscriptions mean more than you know. Y'all are absolutely amazing!!#HenryPlummer #OutlawSheriff #OldWestHistory #WildWest #MontanaVigilantes #BannackMontana #WesternHistory #FrontierJusticeSources for Episode;Henry Plummer https://historynet.com/henry-plummer/Henry Plummer – Sheriff Meets a Noose https://www.legendsofamerica.com/mt-henryplummer/ The Mysterious Henry Plummer By Maurice E. Smith https://historynet.com/the-mysterious-henry-plummer/ The Vigilantes of Montana By Thomas Josiah Dimsdale & Alva Josiah Noyes https://archive.org/details/vigilantesofmont01dims/page/20/mode/2up?q=Plummer Vigilante Days and Ways; The Pioneers of the Rockies By Nathaniel Pitt Langford https://archive.org/details/vigilantedaysan00unkngoog/page/316/mode/2up?q=helm

    43 min
  4. May 9

    The Legend of Boone Helm - The Cannibal Outlaw

    In this episode of Wild West Deep Dives, we explore the dark and disturbing legend of Boone Helm — the outlaw remembered as one of the most feared names of the American frontier.Born in Kentucky, raised on the Missouri borderlands, and driven west by violence, Boone Helm’s life became a trail of murder, robbery, survival, and infamy. From the California gold fields to Oregon, from the frozen wilderness near Fort Hall to the mining camps of Florence and Virginia City, Helm’s name became tied to some of the most chilling stories in Old West history.Known as the “Cannibal Outlaw,” Boone Helm was accused of killing, robbing, and even eating the men who traveled beside him. But where does the truth end and the legend begin?This is the story of Boone Helm — murderer, thief, road agent, and one of the darkest legends of the American West.I also want to take a moment to say thank you. Wild West Deep Dives recently reached the Top 50 History Podcasts in the United States, and that is only possible because of everyone who listens, shares, comments, and supports the show. I started this with a microphone, a computer, and a love for telling history, so to see it reach that level is truly unbelievable. Thank you all for being part of it.#WildWestDeepDives #BooneHelm #CannibalOutlaw #OldWest #WildWest#AmericanWest #OutlawHistory #WesternHistory #OldWestOutlaws #VirginiaCity #MontanaHistory #FrontierHistory #TrueWest #HistoryPodcast #DarkHistorySources; Levi Boone Helm – Murderer, Cannibal & Thief By Emerson Hough, 1907 https://www.legendsofamerica.com/we-boonehelm/ Jack Gallager – Deputy Sheriff Hanged https://www.legendsofamerica.com/jack-gallager/ Photo of Jack Gallager’s HeadstoneKentucky Cannibal in Cariboo; A Story of the Killer Boone Helm By Ron Young https://www.barkerville.com/vol10/boonehelm.html Vigilante Days and Ways; The Pioneers of the Rockies By Nathaniel Pitt Langfordhttps://archive.org/details/vigilantedaysan00unkngoog/page/74/mode/2up?q=helm

    30 min
  5. Apr 25

    The Man Who Killed Hardin - John Selman

    John Selman killed John Wesley Hardin—but that’s not the whole story.Before Hardin was shot inside the Acme Saloon, another man had already been killed. And before a year had passed, Selman would be dead as well. What happened in El Paso in 1895 wasn’t just a single act of violence—it was part of a chain.In this episode, we break down the full story of John Selman: lawman, outlaw, and one of the most controversial figures of the Old West. From cattle rustling and the Lincoln County chaos to the killing of Hardin and Selman’s own violent end, this is the complete, fact-driven account.If you enjoy detailed, research-based Old West history, be sure to subscribe to Wild West Deep Dives for more episodes like this.#JohnSelman #JohnWesleyHardin #WildWestDeepDives #oldwesthistory #westernhistory #gunfighters Sources for Episode;John Selman – Wicked Lawman and Vicious Outlaw Legends of America https://www.legendsofamerica.com/we-johnselman/ The Life and Legacy of John Henry Selman: Outlaw to Lawman By; Leon C. Metz https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/selman-john-henry Dead Right: The Lincoln County War By C. R. Caldwell https://books.google.com/books?id=HSysw_UbEIQC&pg=PA240#v=onepage&q=selman&f=false ‘He was bad’: A brief sketch of J.W. Hardin’s eventful career By Trish Long: El Paso Times https://www.elpasotimes.com/story/news/history/2025/08/21/john-wesley-hardin-meets-his-fate-shot-by-john-sellman/85740459007/

    21 min
  6. Apr 4

    The Battle of Pima Butte (1857): The Last Major Intertribal Battle in the Southwest

    On September 1, 1857, deep in the Arizona desert, one of the largest and most brutal Native vs Native battles in North American history unfolded—and almost no one remembers it.In this episode of Wild West Deep Dives, we break down the Battle of Pima Butte, also known as the Battle of Maricopa Wells. What began as a carefully planned raid quickly spiraled into chaos, as a coalition of Quechan, Mojave, Yavapai, and Apache warriors marched over 160 miles across the Sonoran Desert to strike the Maricopa people by surprise.At first, the attack worked. The village burned. Families fled. The defenders were caught off guard.But within hours, everything changed.As Pima and Maricopa forces rallied and closed in, the attackers found themselves surrounded in the open desert, with no escape, no water, and no way out. What followed was a violent and desperate fight fought with bows, clubs, spears, and lances… ending in near annihilation.This is the story of a battle that wasn’t fought against the U.S. Army… but between Native nations themselves—a forgotten war shaped by generations of rivalry, survival, and revenge.And like many events of the American West, the truth is buried in conflicting accounts, oral histories, and scattered reports.If you enjoy deep, research-based stories of the American West that go beyond the myths, make sure to subscribe to Wild West Deep Dives and thank you for everyone's amazing support!#WildWest #AmericanHistory #NativeAmericanHistory #ArizonaHistory #PimaButte #HistoryExplained #OldWest

    21 min
  7. Mar 21

    The Grattan Fight (1854)

    On the 19th of August, 1854, a small detachment of U.S. soldiers marched out of Fort Laramie with a simple mission — arrest a single Sioux warrior over a dead cow. Within hours, nearly every man in that command would be dead, and the Great Plains would be pushed toward decades of brutal warfare.In this episode of Wild West Deep Dives, we break down the Grattan Fight — often called the Grattan Massacre — in full detail. From the fragile peace created by the 1851 Fort Laramie Treaty, to the growing tensions along the Oregon Trail, to the deadly mix of arrogance, miscommunication, and a drunken interpreter that turned a minor dispute into a massacre.We dive deep into the lead-up, the confrontation with Conquering Bear, and the moment a single shot triggered a devastating chain of events. This isn’t just a battle story — it’s the spark that ignited the Sioux Wars and reshaped the American frontier.If you’re interested in real Old West history — the kind built on conflicting accounts, human error, and moments that changed everything — this is a story you don’t want to miss. #Grattanfight #Grattanmassacre #wildwesthistory #oldwesthistory #frontierhistory Sources for ResearchThe Grattan Fight: Prelude to a Generation of War By; Douglas R. Cubbison https://www.wyohistory.org/encyclopedia/grattan-fight-prelude-generation-warLloyd E McCann, “The Grattan Massacre,” Nebraska History 37 (1956): 1-25 https://history.nebraska.gov/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/doc_publications_NH1956Grattan.pdf The First Sioux War: The Grattan Fight and Blue Water Creek 1854-1856 By Paul N. Beck https://books.google.com/books?id=Nqcng_YtoXQC&q=The+First+Sioux+War#v=snippet&q=The%20First%20Sioux%20War&f=false https://www.legendsofamerica.com/wy-grattanfight/ Grattan Fight – Indian Wars Begin on the Northern Plains

    26 min
4.8
out of 5
17 Ratings

About

Wild West Deep Dives is a deeply researched narrative history podcast that uncovers the real, often brutal stories of the American frontier. Each episode draws from primary sources, period newspapers, diaries, modern scholarship and more to reconstruct massacres, wars, gunfights, and the daily hardships faced by those who lived—and died—on the edge of American expansion. From gunslinging outlaws and relentless lawmen to frontier wars and forgotten communities, this podcast talks about the legends then strips it away to reveal what actually happened. Well, let's get into shall we!

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