Wild West Podcast

Andy the Swede: How One Man's Hands Shaped Dodge City

Subscriber Episode Michael King/Brad Smalley

This episode is only available to subscribers.

Wild West Podcast +

Exclusive access to premium content!

Send us a text

The American frontier conjures images of famous lawmen and outlaws, but what about the quiet builders who shaped towns like Dodge City from the ground up? Meet Andrew "Andy the Swede" Johnson, a remarkable immigrant whose hands literally constructed the West.

Arriving from Sweden in 1869, Johnson's chance meeting with businessman Charles Rath launched an extraordinary frontier partnership. Starting by breaking 1,000 acres of virgin prairie—an almost unimaginable feat of physical endurance—Johnson quickly became Rath's most trusted ally. From managing massive buffalo hide operations with 80,000 hides stacked high to helping build the original structures of Dodge City, his contributions were foundational yet often overlooked.

Johnson's most dramatic moment came during the 1874 Adobe Walls siege in the Texas Panhandle. When hundreds of Native American warriors attacked the trading post he had just built, Johnson's reinforced doors held firm against the assault. Even more remarkably, under gunfire, he dug a life-saving well inside the sod store, providing water for everyone trapped during the siege. This quick thinking and practical ingenuity saved countless lives and exemplified the resourcefulness required on the frontier.

After establishing himself as Dodge City's blacksmith, Johnson expanded into various businesses while literally cementing his legacy by laying sidewalks marked with his initials "AJ"—many still visible today. Though his collection of Adobe Walls artifacts was lost in an 1885 fire, he transformed himself into a respected historian of the event, speaking at its 50th anniversary celebration. Before his death in 1925, with characteristic foresight, he prepared his own tombstone and burial plot, controlling his final chapter just as he had built his remarkable life.

Andy the Swede's story reminds us that history is built by determined individuals whose quiet contributions outlast their lifetimes. What marks are you leaving behind? Listen now to discover how one man's hands shaped the American West.

If you'd like to buy one or more of our fully illustrated dime novel publications, you can click the link I've included.

"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.

Speaker 1:

History can be funny, can't it? How often the same name pops up for different significant people.

Speaker 2:

Oh, definitely.

Speaker 1:

Take Andrew Johnson on the American frontier, it can get pretty confusing. We're diving into one today, but maybe not the one you immediately think of.

Speaker 2:

Exactly. Most people hear Andrew Johnson and think you know, 17 president, the impeachment trial Senator Ross from Kansas, saving him Right.

Speaker 1:

Or maybe the doctor out in Ingalls and Simmerin.

Speaker 2:

Dr Andrew Johnson. Yeah, another Kansas figure, but no, our focus today is Andrew H Johnson, better known maybe as Andy the Swede.

Speaker 1:

Andy the Swede, ok, and our mission here is to really unpack his story, because he was just foundational in shaping Dodge City, wasn't he the queen of the cow town?

Speaker 2:

Absolutely foundational. He was a builder, a blacksmith, an entrepreneur, really core to the town's early days.

Speaker 1:

So where does his story start? It wasn't Kansas, right?

Speaker 2:

No, he was born way over in Ingelholm, sweden back in 1845, came to the US in 1869. So he was about 24.

Speaker 1:

Okay, young guy, yeah. And then comes this really interesting part Sweetwine, ohio. He meets Charles Rath.

Speaker 2:

Yes, and this meeting is well. It's absolutely crucial. Rath was this up-and-coming frontier businessman and he saw potential in Johnson.

Speaker 1:

What kind of potential?

Speaker 2:

Rath persuaded him to head west by 1870, johnson's working for Rath in Kansas, leavenworth first, then Osage City.

Speaker 1:

Doing what initially?

Speaker 2:

His first big job breaking a thousand acres of virgin sod for Rath. Just think about that. Turning raw prairie into farmland.

Speaker 1:

That's incredible labor and that built trust, I imagine.

Speaker 2:

Massive trust. It basically made them partners. Rath could then go off and, you know, pursue other things like distributing railroad ties, because he knew Andy could handle the tough stuff.

Speaker 1:

So Johnson becomes Rath's right hand man, especially in the Buffalo trade.

Speaker 2:

That was a huge huge and messy Johnson was managing the logistics, hauling tons of hides meat, getting it all to the railheads. It was relentless work.

Speaker 1:

And then his direct role in building Dodge City itself.

Speaker 2:

Right when Rath set up his mercantile company there. Johnson physically helped build this store and he oversaw the hide yard, sometimes Like 70 or 80,000 hides piled up. Where the Santa Fe Depot later stood 80,000 hides.

Speaker 1:

Just imagine the scale.

Speaker 2:

It's hard to fathom and get this. He even used his own team of horses on the pile driver for the new toll bridge over the Arkansas River. That bridge was vital for the town.

Speaker 1:

Wow. Ok. So he's deeply involved. But then comes Adobe Walls. That's probably his most dramatic chapter.

Speaker 2:

Without a doubt, 1874, Rath sends him down to the Texas Panhandle. He's the chief builder for this new trading post at Adotey Walls. Bill's Rath Sod Store, a saloon.

Speaker 1:

And then the attack happens.

Speaker 2:

June 27th 1874, hundreds of Comanche Cheyenne Kiowa warriors attack the settlement. It was desperate, but those heavy doors Johnson had built and reinforced, they held.

Speaker 1:

And didn't he do something else inside the store? Something ingenious, yes.

Speaker 2:

This is amazing. During the siege he dug a walk down well in the sand inside the sod store, provided life-saving water for everyone trapped inside.

Speaker 1:

Just unbelievable presence of mind under fire. Did he keep anything from that?

Speaker 2:

He did actually. After the battle, he collected artifacts left behind by the Native American warriors, mementos of that incredible ordeal.

Speaker 1:

So, after surviving that, he settles back in Dodge City as a blacksmith.

Speaker 2:

Yep Settled down as a blacksmith A really essential trade. Then there's even an old ad from the Dodge City Times in 1881. Andrew Johnson blacksmith. All kinds of work well done, Simple, direct.

Speaker 1:

But he was more than just a blacksmith, wasn't he Always thinking like an entrepreneur?

Speaker 2:

Oh, definitely. He also sold Osage City Shaft coal, advertised right alongside his blacksmithing Eight bucks a ton.

Speaker 1:

Smart Fuel for his forge and a side business.

Speaker 2:

Exactly, and later he ran a restaurant, a liquor store. But maybe his most lasting mark literally is underfoot. People say all the sidewalks in Dodge City that are marked AJ were laid by Andy Johnson.

Speaker 1:

He laid the sidewalks that's amazing. And he kept his integrity too right, even with his old friend Rath.

Speaker 2:

That's a key point. There was an 1892 deposition about losses from adobe walls and Johnson refused to exaggerate Rath's claim, even though they were friends.

Speaker 1:

He stuck to the facts Speaks volumes. But he faced loss too.

Speaker 2:

That fire, yeah, the big Front Street fire in 1885. It destroyed his whole collection of Adobe Walls artifacts, those tangible links to that defining moment gone.

Speaker 1:

How do you think that affected him Losing those pieces of his past?

Speaker 2:

It's hard to say for sure, but it's interesting. He seemed to pivot. Instead of relying on the objects, he became the storyteller. He turned into this really respected historian of the Adobe Walls battle.

Speaker 1:

A living narrator. He even spoke at the 50th anniversary.

Speaker 2:

He did in 1924. A reliable voice recounting those events. But his private life, well, that remains a bit of an enigma. No record of a wife or children. His identity seems almost entirely wrapped up in his work, his building, his public life. His identity seems almost entirely wrapped up in his work his building, his public life.

Speaker 1:

So Andrew H Johnson passes away in June 1925. He's 79, lived 52 years in Dodge City watching it grow from almost nothing.

Speaker 2:

And here's a final telling detail he was buried in Mabel Grove Cemetery, but before he died, with that same foresight, he showed at Adobe Walls he'd already purchased his own plot and put up his own tombstone, prepared for the end himself.

Speaker 1:

Wow. So, thinking about all this, what does Anne to the Swedes story mean for you?

Speaker 2:

listening right now. Well, I think it's a testament to how much impact one person can have quietly, consistently, just by building things, literally building stores, bridges, sidewalks.

Speaker 1:

And even building their own final monument. It's about leaving your mark, quite literally, through sheer hard work, and ingenuity Makes you wonder who are the quiet builders shaping our world today. Thank you.

Podcasts we love

Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.

This Week in the West Artwork

This Week in the West

The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum