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 #KG101
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Waitin His Turn
This horse is waiting for his turn to visit the arena. It is available in 19" x 24" Limited Edition s/n, 19" x 24" Artist Proof s/n or 11" x 14" open edition. Usually ships in 2 to 5 business days.
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 #KG102
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Another Day at the Office
This is a typical scene when visiting a ranch, a cowboy holding up the fence. By zooming in
on just one area of the cowboy you are able to focas on the detail given to his boots, spurs and wrinkles in his pants. This print is available in 19" x 24" Limited Edition s/n, 19" x 24" Artist Proof s/n or 11" x 14" open edition. Usually ships in 2 to 5 business days.
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click for larger view
 #KG103
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Spring Line
This print comes in 3 sizes, 19" x 24" Limited Edition s/n, 19" x 24" Artist Proof s/n or 11" x 14" open edition. Usually ships in 2 to 5 business days.
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click for larger view
 #KG104
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Jack Pot
It is available in 19" x 24" Limited Edition s/n, 19" x 24" Artist Proof s/n or 11" x 14" open edition. Usually ships in 2 to 5 business days.
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click for larger view
 #KG105
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Weeds N Wire
It is available in 19" x 24" Limited Edition s/n, 19" x 24" Artist Proof s/n or 11" x 14" open edition. Usually ships in 2 to 5 business days.
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Thomas James
Thomas James and his band of merry men decided to rob the Wild Rose State Bank and Post Office the night of October 13, 1905, using two charges of nitroglycerin that failed to open the inner doors of the burglar-proof safe. They did succeed, however, in completely wrecking the post office, and looting it of a variety of valuables. Chased into the hills by a posse of local folks, the gang was surrounded in a ravine and the chase deteriorated into a gun battle, after which the bad guys surrendered. James, a.k.a. Rambler, was wounded in the head but not seriously injured. He is reputed to be one of the best nitro men in the bank robbery business.
Harry Longabaugh, alias the Sundance Kid, was born in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. In 1887 he was convicted of stealing a horse from the VVV ranch in northeastern Crook County, Wyoming. Sheriff Ryan of Crook County apprehended him near Miles City, Montana, and he spent eighteen months in jail in Sundance, the county seat of Crook County. After his incarceration in Sundance, he took on the alias of the Sundance Kid.
From Sundance he went on to ride with the Wild Bunch, a rather large gang, organized by Robert Leroy Parker, alias Butch Cassidy. From their hide-out at Hole-in-the-Wall near Kaycee, Wyoming, the gang robbed banks and railroad trains all over the west. Most historians agree that Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid died in Bolivia in 1909, when they were surrounded and gunned down after robbing the payroll shipment of a Bolivian mine.
The court docket containing the signature of Harry Longabaugh is on display in the lobby of the Crook County Court House in Sundance , Wyoming.
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