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Frontier Comrades

From the Fur Trade to the Ford Car

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Pub Date Aug 01 2025 | Archive Date Jul 31 2025

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Description

Frontier Comrades examines six accounts of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender lives on the frontier of the American West. Each account interprets this history through experiences that take place in different parts of the West, moving chronologically from the fur trade era to the dawn of the automobile age.

Jim Wilke provides the first comprehensive accounts of figures such as transgender stage driver Charley Parkhurst; transgender Seventh Cavalry laundress Mrs. Noonan (also known as Mrs. Nash); and the extraordinary Clara Dietrich and Ora Chatfield, known by the contemporary press as “lady lovers.” Frontier Comrades also offers glimpses of individual personalities: the cool and detached grandeur of William Stewart as he traversed the West during the fur trade era; the stubborn determination of Charley Parkhurst after California’s gold rush; the careful, giddy energy of Mrs. Noonan; the hidden passions of Tombstone sheriff William Breakenridge for a Vanderbilt and a local rustler; the desperate bravery of Dietrich and Chatfield as they sought to elope from Victorian Aspen; and the masculine, matter-of-fact comradeship of loggers and miners as they worked the distant Sierras.

The maelstrom of opportunities and conflicts that made up the West affected lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender westerners in intrinsically personal ways. The accounts in Frontier Comrades provide an intimate yet expansive view of the American West.
 
Frontier Comrades examines six accounts of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender lives on the frontier of the American West. Each account interprets this history through experiences that take place...

Advance Praise

Frontier Comrades places the life stories of six LGBTQ individuals squarely at the center of the history of the American frontier, bringing to life the times and places where these different individuals found opportunities in the West to live on their own terms.”—Carolyn Brucken, senior curator at the Autry Museum of the American West

“Jim Wilke’s vividly drawn histories evoke sexual and cultural borderlands. . . . Readers will encounter here a West that is both familiar from countless frontier narratives and yet unfamiliar in its well-documented accounts of LGBTQ stories. Together these portraits reinstate complexity and humanity to storied times and places—gay, lesbian, and transgender lives that were there all along.”—Josh Garrett-Davis, H. Russell Smith Foundation Curator of Western American History at the Huntington

“With careful storytelling Jim Wilke’s Frontier Comrades follows the complex lives of gay, queer, and transgender individuals who inhabited the borderlands of the U.S. West. With engaging prose this work helps paint a much more detailed portrait of desire and identity in American history than previously seen.”—Rebecca Scofield, author of Outriders: Rodeo at the Fringes of the American West

Frontier Comrades places the life stories of six LGBTQ individuals squarely at the center of the history of the American frontier, bringing to life the times and places where these different...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781496242228
PRICE $27.95 (USD)
PAGES 302

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Featured Reviews

So these days I really stick mostly to fiction. I'll pick up an occasional book about the black plague, or body language, or ghost stories from Scotland, etc but it's less and less often as there are just too many books on my ever-growing TBR.

However I throw on the history channel for background noise while working pretty often. So when I saw this cover/book title I figured I'd check out the blurb at the very least because it so easily caught my eye. Then the blurb itself sounded interesting and here we are.

I absolutely don't regret taking a break from the fiction because this book was highly entertaining in so many ways. Obviously the historical part of it was full of interesting bits but I found the human side of it to be a far bigger part than I had expected it to be. This book doesn't just list out, "here is this story about this person in this time period,' it really gives you every possible detail available to flesh out the people discussed. As much as is possible looking back in history you feel like you can see them, where they lived and how. I was even finding myself learning random bits of information about various time periods in general I'd never heard before or thought about. Such as one account of getting the maid pregnant and the resulting marriage and where she and their son ended up living vs where he ended up living, how society took it, how they viewed it, etc. I'd never considered how that situation would have played out with how common of a story it is in the media both fictional and non.

All in all this book was extremely informative on the history side of things but also humanizing the people discussed as it gave you a look into the past. The figures we meet are across the board names I'd never heard of before but their stories are full of ups and downs and I found myself researching them online along side reading this book because I wanted to know more about them.

If you enjoy a good historical read this was well worth it.

Thank you to Netgalley and University of Nebraska Press (Bison Books) for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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I received this book from netgalley for free for an honest review. This was very educational and lightning. I can't wait to do a deep dive into these stories .

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