A COWBOY DETECTIVE (CHAPTER 3) BY CHARLES SIRINGO

⭐ SHOW NOTES
A Cowboy Detective — Chapter 3
By Charles A. Siringo A 1001 Stories From The Old West Presentation Narrated by Jon Hagadorn
Episode Summary
Chapter 3 of A Cowboy Detective finds Charles Siringo stepping into one of the most unusual and dangerous phases of his early career — a period when he lived and rode as an outlaw in order to gather intelligence and survive the chaos of the West.
This chapter covers several dramatic turning points. Siringo travels to the White River country during the tense buildup to the Ute Indian War, a conflict that put settlers, soldiers, and Native tribes on a collision course. To move safely through the region, Siringo adopts the alias “Dull Knife,” a name that allows him to blend in with rough company and avoid drawing the wrong kind of attention.
From there, the chapter shifts to Denver, where Siringo — still under his outlaw identity — enters a cowboy tournament. His riding and roping skills earn him both admiration and suspicion, and the event becomes a showcase of frontier bravado at a time when reputations were made in the saddle.
The chapter closes with Siringo heading north toward Wyoming, still traveling as an outlaw, still balancing the thin line between survival and exposure. It’s a vivid look at the early West, where identity could be a matter of life and death, and where a man’s skill with a horse and rope could open doors — or close them forever.



