Tuesday, October 29, 2013
A Gray Colt for Calamity Jane
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Calamity Jane holds her rifle and wears a holster on her hip as she poses with her horse |
Martha Jane Canary, "Calamity Jane," lived when
the West was still very wild and stories about her -- even the autobiography dictated to a writer of her day -- are probably as much tall tale as truth.
We do know that Jane was fearless on horseback. We know she worked as a scout, leading troops of cavalry soldiers across the mountains and the range. We know she used good sense and backwoods medical
skills to save an encampment of miners during an epidemic. And, we know where she is buried.
Last month, I walked up a hill in Mount Moriah Cemetary in Deadwood, South Dakota and gazed at Calamity Jane's grave and felt a tug at my heart or maybe my imagination.
The wild cowgirl who rode "like an Indian" had been without a horse for so long and I had a toy colt in my briefcase.
I ran back to the car, found the little gray and sprinted back to Calamity's grave.
It wasn't up to me to name the gray colt. I left him for her and hope that someday, someone, will do the same for me.
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I wasn't the only one to leave a token for Calamity Jane. Others had left flowers and pretty stones. |
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Read more about
Calamity Jane but remember, legends loom larger than truths about a girl who dared things that females of her time simply did NOT do!
Labels: Calamity Jane, Deadwood, grave, gray colt, Mount Moriah
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Posted by
Terri Farley @ 6:19 PM
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