Ron Nolen estimated one in five Texans belong to a sub-culture he called Western heritage. "This is such a large group of people that many of them are ...
The Arizona Cowboy Symposiuma western heritage event that preserves the tradition heritage and memories of the rural American West is coming to the Santa ...
Preserves an ancient Hohokam farming community and "Great House." Created as the nation’s first archeological reserve in 1892, the site was declared a National Monument in 1918 “in order that better provision may be made for the protection, preservation and care of the ruins and the ancient buildings and other objects of prehistoric interest thereon.”
On February 5, 2007, the Cattle Raisers Museum closed its current facility to make plans for a reopening within the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History’s new building, scheduled to open late 2009.
The Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum is operated by the non-profit, educational Country Music Foundation® (CMF). The mission of the CMF is to identify and preserve the evolving history and traditions of country music and to educate its audiences.
Amidst the fog, the sound of beating hooves begins to grow…
the crowd watches in amazement and the excitement spreads throughout the grand arena…suddenly, as if by magic, a herd of wild buffalo appears. Branson, MO - Orlando, FL - Pigeon Forge, TN - Myrtle Beach, SC
Ghost Town today! Walk down Main Street, explore the many shops and historic buildings. Tour the historic Mammoth Gold Mine and visit the Goldfield Museum. Pan for gold then take a ride on Arizona's only narrow gauge train.
THE GREAT AMERICAN WEST tells the story of the Settlement of the United States' western frontier. Using the stories and words (from diaries and letters) of real life people, this film shows not only the astonishingly beautiful territory, but also the true and often heart-wrenching stories of those who risked everything to explore and settle it.
This film chronicles the major events that contributed to the settlement of the western frontier beginning with the Louisiana purchase and ending in 1890 when the U.S. Census Bureau declared that there was no more frontier; it had been settled.