Some Western pulps have been added to the Pulp Magazines Project collection: Includes stories by W.C. Tuttle, Ernest Haycox, H.A. DeRosso, Walt Coburn, Hapsburg Liebe, Johnston McCulley, S. Omar Barker and others. Click on the links below the pictures to open the magazine.
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THE FEUDISTS by Ernest Haycox THE GUN by Stephen Payne SHERIFF TROUBLE by Eugene Cunningham A WESTERN CROSSWORD PUZZLE by Ruth Nails DOLLARS TO CLINK by Bertrand W. Sinclair RAW LAND by Harry Sinclair Drago OH, RIDE THE DRY RIVER! by S. Omar Barker ENCHANTED RANCH by Arthur Preston Hankins | |
All Western Magazine April-June 1950 | |
ALIAS ADAM JONES By W. C. TUTTLE THE MARSHAL OF GOLDFORK (Novelet) by Walker A. Tompkins THE INDIAN RING (Novelet) by Joseph Chadwick TOO STALWART FOR HIS OWN GOOD by Andrew Bronson BANDY LEGS by Richard Brister BROAD SHOULDERS by Cliff Walters THE COWBOY HAD A WORD FOR IT by Chuck Stanley CRISIS ON THE CURLY Q by Don Alviso MEN OF THEIR WORD by William O’Sullivan TRAIL BLAZERS by Captain Ranger | |
Exciting Western September 1947 | |
RIDE WITH THE GUNSMOKE JUDAS by Thomas Thompson DRAW FAST—OR DIE! by Bryce Walton THE DEADLY SECOND by Henry Carlton Jones THE BUSHWHACK BARGAIN by Richard Ferber NEVER SELL YOUR SADDLE! by H.A. DeRosso THE MEDICINE WIRE by Bennett Foster OVER THE HILL TO HELL by Robert Trimnell WHILE THE GALLOWS WAIT by Dave Sands SAD NOSE JOE—RAIN MAKER! by Harold Heifer BRING HIM BACK DEAD! by John C. Colohan GUN-MEETING AT MIDNIGHT by Jonathan Craig INJUN LIST by Walt Coburn | |
Fifteen Western Tales January, 1953 | |
RAIDERS OF RIFLE ROCK By Lee E. Wells MAN-HUNTING MUSTANG by Jack Slerrett STAR ON HIS DESK by Hapsburg Liebe NESTERS ARE POISON by Mel Pitzer CLAWS OF PERDITION by Gunnison Steele TRAIL TALK (A Department) by Foghorn Clancy | |
Masked Rider Western Winter, 1945 | |
THE OUTLAW SHERIFF by Walker A. Tompkins WHELP OF THE FOX .by Johnston McCulley GUNSMOKE ON THE RANGE by Charles N. Heckelmann RUN, COYOTE. RUN .by L. P. Holmes HANGNOOSE BABBITT .by Harold F. Cruickshonk GOOD MAN TO WORK WITH by Jock Benton TRAIL TALK (A DepartmentJ .by Foghorn Clancy MULES ARE ALWAYS MULES (Foct Feoture) .by Gladwell Richardson | |
Masked Rider Western November, 1950 | |
YELLOW DEVIL STARVES TONIGHT! by Tom Roan HANG-TREE TRAIL by Marvin De Vries HOT BLOOD BRANDS THE CROSSBONE by Rod Patterson TROUBLE RIDES FROM TEXAS! by Charles W. Tyler TOO OLD TO DIE! by Charles D. Richardson, Jr. BREED OF THE LAWDOG by Richard Brisler GRAB WEAPONS—OR WEEP! by Robert Trimncll SANTA CLAUS OF BITTER CREEK by A. C. Abbott TRUST A DEAD MAN. by W.J. Reynolds BUCKSKIN LOBO by L. C. Davis RECORD WRANGLING by Arizona Blake MUD AND MARES by Roy Vandergoot ARTISTS OF THE DIAMOND HITCH by J. W. Irving TREASURE OF SAN SABA by Dave Sands | |
Ten Story Western December 1949 | |
WHEN A TEXAS TOWN GOES GUN-CRAZY by George M. Conklin EMPTY SADDLES MEAN WAR! By Morse Chandler THE KID FROM DAMNATION VALLEY by James P. Olsen NO MANBREAKERS WANTED! by W. H. B. Kent BORROWED BULLETS by Ralph Berard | |
Two-Gun Western Novels April 1942 | |
THE WILD TIME by John Lumsden THOU SHALT NOT KILL… by Ellis Sloan AS FAST AS THEY CAME by Harry Harrison Kroll SAM COLT’S KILLER by Gil Paust NOON TOMORROW by Philip Morgan FINAL CURTAIN by L. V. Pidgeon DEAD MAN’S HAND by Dick Baird LAST CARD by Clayton Fox ROTTEN BELLY’S SAD SIEGE by Noel M. Loomis TWO OR THREE FUNERALS by D. Aydelotte A TINHORN CHOOSES HOT LEAD by D. B. Newton THROUGH GUNSIGHTS by John Colohan BLOOD AND SWEAT — OR BULLETS? by L.P. Holmes KILLER’S HERITAGE by Norman A. Fox HARDCASE OR COWARD? by Gunnison Steele | |
Two-Gun Western Novels November 1955 |
I wrote a bio called "Not A Soldier, But A Scoundrel" and it was based on a true story.
ReplyDeleteGeorge W Graham made headlines as a Civil War hero leading southern Unionists through eastern NC. After the war he became one of the original officers of the Tenth US Cavalry, the Buffalo Soldiers. He was courtmartialed and cashiered. Caused trouble in Sale Lake City, Leavenworth, Hays City, and wound up in Denver. He tried to rob an Army paymaster in 1873, was shot and they said he'd die. He survived. Escaped from his hospital bed, recaptured, imprisoned, escaped from there, shot and captured again, more obituaries printed, but he survived again. Then he was released in 1875, jumped a mine in Colorado, and was killed for the last time.
In his obits of the time they even wrote that he "is the stuff of dime store novels." So I wonder if anyone into these pulps recognizes any story that sounds like this, I wonder if anyone based a story on him. He was making national headlines.
Thanks! Heidi M Crabtree scoundrelnc@yahoo.com