
Wild West Podcast
Welcome to the Wild West podcast, where fact and legend merge. We present the true accounts of individuals who settled in towns built out of hunger for money, regulated by fast guns, who walked on both sides of the law, patrolling, investing in, and regulating the brothels, saloons, and gambling houses. These are stories of the men who made the history of the Old West come alive - bringing with them the birth of legends, brought to order by a six-gun and laid to rest with their boots on. Join us as we take you back in history to the legends of the Wild West. You can support our show by subscribing to Exclusive access to premium content at Wild West Podcast + https://www.buzzsprout.com/64094/subscribe or just buy us a cup of coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/wildwestpodcast
Wild West Podcast
The Man Who Made Dodge City Built an Empire, Lost His Soul
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Exclusive access to premium content!The remarkable tale of Robert M. Wright—the forgotten empire builder who transformed the American frontier—unfolds like a dime novel with shocking twists of fate that reality itself couldn't have scripted better.
Born to Maryland aristocracy with family connections to Ulysses S. Grant himself, Wright abandoned privilege at sixteen to master "the profane poetry of the bullwhip" as a frontier bullwhacker. This stark transition marked the beginning of an extraordinary life that would see him become the founding father of notorious Dodge City and the undisputed "Bison Baron" of the plains.
The numbers alone stagger the imagination: Wright's business shipped 200,000 buffalo hides in a single year, eventually handling over one million in total. At its peak, Dodge City under Wright's influence processed $200,000 monthly—over $4 million in today's currency—all without income tax. As a four-term mayor, he established a peculiar brand of frontier justice, once famously arresting and fining a cowboy who complained about being robbed while gambling illegally.
Behind the commercial success lay a culture of extreme contrasts. Wright's Dodge City embraced a particularly dark humor, exemplified by elaborate pranks involving staged gunfights with legendary figures like Bat Masterson and Wyatt Earp. But the frontier that made Wright's fortune ultimately consumed him. His later years reveal a tragic descent into morphine addiction, financial ruin, and desperate attempts to sell off his remaining assets. His final legacy project—a book chronicling Dodge City's history—suffered a cruel twist of fate when a fire destroyed nearly the entire first printing.
Wright's story forces us to reconsider romantic notions of the Wild West, revealing the steep personal cost of empire-building. What was the true price of taming the frontier, not just to the land and its original inhabitants, but to the souls of those who undertook the task? Join us as we explore this forgotten chapter of American history and the man whose rise and fall embodied the spirit of the Western expansion itself.
"Edward Masterson and the Texas Cowboys," penned by Michael King, takes readers on an exhilarating ride through the American West, focusing on the lively and gritty cattle town of Dodge City, Kansas. This thrilling dime novel plunges into the action-packed year of Ed Masterson's life as a lawman, set against the backdrop of the chaotic cattle trade, filled with fierce conflicts, shifting loyalties, and rampant lawlessness. You can order the book on Amazon.
Welcome curious minds to another Deep Dive. Hello, Today we're plunging into well, a really astonishing account, one of the wildest figures of the American West I think Absolutely Robert M Wright. He's the bison baron of Dodge, and our source is this dime novel style biography. Fascinating stuff. It calls itself a thrilling and absolutely true account.
Speaker 2:Right, which immediately makes you lean in, doesn't it? Absolutely true.
Speaker 1:Exactly so. Our mission for you today is to dig into that, pull out the. You know the thrilling truth, the surprising facts from this larger than life story, so the thrilling truth, the surprising facts from this larger than life story.
Speaker 2:It's a tale of ambition, virtue definitely peril and fate, Lots of ups and downs.
Speaker 1:Yeah, the source even claims profound moral instruction. But wow, the highs are high and the lows are pretty devastating.
Speaker 2:And that's what's so interesting about the source itself. It embraces that big, almost mythological feel. It promises truth, like you said, but then kind of hedges, saying most events are based on fact. So we'll unpack that grand truth you know the moral sense and see how his story fits into that whole westward march narrative.
Speaker 1:Okay, so let's start at the start. You might expect a figure like this to have well rough origins. You would, wouldn't you? But Robert M Wright, born 1840, comes in this really distinguished Maryland family.
Speaker 2:Yeah, Revolutionary war ties War of 1812 connections. Even Ulysses S Grant was a family friend.
Speaker 1:Crazy right, but then, despite all that, At 16,.
Speaker 2:He just dives headfirst into the frontier, becomes a bullwhacker.
Speaker 1:Captaining prairie schooners, mastering the what does the source call it? Profane poetry of the bullwhip.
Speaker 2:Yeah, quite a phrase. It's such a stark contrast Blue blood background, then out on the Santa Fe Trail.
Speaker 1:And the frontier life continues. At 19, he marries his 13-year-old first cousin, Alice Armstrong.
Speaker 2:Which you know sounds startling to us.
Speaker 1:Definitely, but wasn't unheard of back then. Different norms harsh realities out there.
Speaker 2:Exactly, and they lived way out in southwest Kansas years before real settlement. Alice was apparently incredibly brave too.
Speaker 1:Yeah, held off marauding Indians with just one hired hand Incredible.
Speaker 2:Speaks volumes about the resilience needed then.
Speaker 1:But Wright's big moment, arguably comes in 1872.
Speaker 2:Right the railroad, he sees the Atchison, topeka and Santa Fe coming real foresight and he leads the founding of Dodge City. That wasn't just luck.
Speaker 1:No, that was strategy. And then his business side kicks in.
Speaker 2:Big time. That grant connection helps him become post-trader at Fort Dodge. Then he partners with Charles Rath, the buffalo hunter. They open Rath Company General Store.
Speaker 1:And suddenly Dodge City is the capital of the bison kingdom.
Speaker 2:The scale is just hard to picture. First year they shipped 200,000 hides.
Speaker 1:Wow.
Speaker 2:There's a photo somewhere showing a stack, a rick, of 40,000 hides. They handled over a million total.
Speaker 1:It's mind-boggling, and their store ledger, it tells its own story oh, yeah, like what well, you see entries for things like uh, shovels round. Point for the seasonal expansion of the boot hill municipal grounds okay, ha ha, grim, but practical or laudanum for toothaches, gunshot wounds and general existential dread, because you feel for the place.
Speaker 2:It really does, yeah, which leads us nicely into his time as mayor four years in Dodge City.
Speaker 1:And the law there was, let's call it unique.
Speaker 2:Fluid and often surprising, as the source says.
Speaker 1:Perfect description. There's this great story, maybe my favorite. A cowboy complains to Mayor Wright, says he got robbed gambling at the Green Front Saloon.
Speaker 2:Ah yes, Wright's peculiar brand of justice.
Speaker 1:So what does Wright do? His genius move.
Speaker 2:He points out, the cowboy was gambling illegally.
Speaker 1:Right Yells to Marshall. Bill Telgemein, run him in.
Speaker 2:And the cowboy gets fined. $10 plus costs the guy who got robbed.
Speaker 1:It showed, the law protected well the enterprising folks, not the complainers.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:What a mindset.
Speaker 2:It really captures the spirit of the place, including the humor.
Speaker 1:Oh, the humor. The practical jokes were apparently something else.
Speaker 2:Elaborate productions, the reception for that doctor from the East. Oh tell that one. Okay. So they lure him out with fake letters from guys called Sim Dip and Blue Pete. He gives a lecture at the Lady Gay Theater. Bat Masterson and Wyatt Earp are flanking him on stage Just casually. Then hecklers start up and the lawmen just unleash gunfire, Shoot out the lights.
Speaker 1:And ammonium. I bet.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, audience stampedes, the doctor dives under a table, and then Wright himself has to secretly warn him they were planning to put 10 pounds of powder under the stage for his next lecture.
Speaker 1:Unbelievable.
Speaker 2:That's intense humor, Darkly humorous yeah, but that wild energy also fueled incredible wealth for a time.
Speaker 1:Absolutely Wright's peak was when Dodge became queen of the cow towns. Handling what? $200,000 a month in 1880?
Speaker 2:Which is like over $4 million today, and no income tax.
Speaker 1:Just imagine.
Speaker 2:But as the source kind of hints, that kind of life, that empire building, it could take a terrible price upon a man's soul.
Speaker 1:And it seems it did for Wright. His fortune started to dwindle.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and he apparently sought solace in narcotics. The insidious embrace the book calls it, the frontier life that made him, also started to break him down.
Speaker 1:It's really tragic. There's a letter from 1906 from the Keeley Institute, a drug addiction treatment center.
Speaker 2:What does it say?
Speaker 1:He writes he was out of my head part of the time and full of morphine part of the time. And he's asking friends, can't you find a buyer for my land? Just desperate.
Speaker 2:Wow.
Speaker 1:Such a fall. So in his later years he makes this one last big effort, his legacy project.
Speaker 2:Right the book Dodge City, the Cowboy Capital and the Great Southwest, published in 1913.
Speaker 1:His magma opus. And then the final, just brutal twist.
Speaker 2:The fire.
Speaker 1:Yeah, the book barely sees the light of day and this fire just sweeps through the publisher's place in Wichita it destroys the entire first printing, the whole thing. He ends up having to pay for a reprint himself the whole venture because of financial loss.
Speaker 2:A final blow from fate, really. He died just two years later, in 1915, outlived the frontier but couldn't escape its wild unpredictability.
Speaker 1:What a life Sensational highs, absolutely crushing lows, yeah. Built an empire, shaped a legendary town and then saw so much of it just consumed fortune, health, even that final book project. It really makes you wonder, doesn't it About truth in history, especially told by the person living it, and what a legacy really is what stands out most to you from this dive into the bison barren?
Speaker 2:For me it's that constant tension between building something immense and the personal cost. It exacted the price of carving that empire out of the wilderness. Yeah.
Speaker 1:Well, thank you for joining us for another deep dive. Thank, you. We hope this look into Robert M Wright's wild, surprising, sometimes dark life has given you plenty to think about. Until next time, keep exploring.