Macdonald, [214] n.
Mackenzie, Dan, [390].
MacNab, [49].
Maddox, Mrs., [95], [96], [150], [356].
Maltese Cross, the, [15], [91], [148];
outfit of, [92];
first year of, [255];
callers at, [264], [265];
to-day, [474].
Mandan Pioneer, the, [65], [154], [158].
Marlow, Pete, [84], [85].
Matthews, [84]-86.
Maunders, Archie, [53], [54].
Maunders, Jake, [7], [9], [12], [49], [54]-57;
disliked Roosevelt, [58];
and the Marquis de Mores, [62]-65;
cleans out Johnny Nelson, [80], [81];
clings to the Marquis, [126];
and horse and cattle thieves, [142];
marked for hanging, [198];
his discreetness, [199];
visits Sewall in the dugout, [199]-201;
threatens to shoot Roosevelt, [207], [208];
a bona-fide "bad man," [320];
in Dickinson, [457];
greets Roosevelt, [466].
McFay, [345].
McGee, Chris, [110], [165].
McGeeney, Pete, [52].
McGeeney, Mrs. Pete, [7], [52], [55], [56].
McShane, Jimmie, [347].
Medicine buttes, [202], [203].
Medora, [8], [48];
founded by Marquis de Mores, [61];
blossoms forth, [77];
life of, dominated by the Marquis, [116]-18;
gay life of, [127];
notorious for its iniquity, [128]-30;
attempts at reform in, [131]-35;
in need of a jail, [135];
mass meeting at, [136], [137];
police force and fire department of, [137], [138];
growth of, [170], [318]-20;
possessed deputy marshal, [221];
the coming of law in, [323], [328];
religion at, [325];
first election at, [389]-91;
its glory departed, [451], [452], [454];
visited by Roosevelt as nominee for vice-presidency, [466];
Roosevelt's last visit to, [469];
to-day, [474].
Merrifield, A. W., [12];
his career, [14]-16;
becomes partner of Roosevelt, [42]-44;
tries to establish law in Little Missouri, [56];
signs contract with Roosevelt, [69], [70], [479], [480];
and the Marquis's cattle, [84]-86;
tries out Roosevelt on the Sully Trail, [103], [104];
on hunting trip, [175]-88;
confident of success in cattle raising, [255];
carries news of Mrs. Ferris's adherence to cowboys, [361], [362];
marries, [447];
delegate to Progressive Convention, [473].
Mexico, flurry over, [413], [414].
Miles City, [392]-95.
Mingusville, [151]-54, [242]-47.
Montana Live Stock Association, [219].
Montana Stockgrowers' Association, [392]-95, [444]-46.
Mores, Marquis de, [25];
arrival at Little Missouri, [58]-60;
his views, [60], [61];
and the Northern Pacific Refrigerator Car Co., [61], [79];
founds Medora, [61];
tries to win supporters, [62];
and Maunders, [62]-65;
and Riley Luffsey, [63], [64], [119];
in business, [67]-69;
extends his business, [70]-72;
and The Bad Lands Cowboy, [76];
and the Deadwood stage, [77], [78], [120]-24, [170], [209]-14;
loss of his sheep, [78];
his cabbage project, [79], [80];
removes his cattle from the Roosevelt bottom-land, [84]-86;
description of, [116];
dominates life of Medora, [117];
his grudge against Gregor Lang, [118];
lacked judgment, [119];
and Roosevelt, [124];
on the side of violence, [125], [130];
tries to join Stuart's vigilantes, [147];
claims Roosevelt's range, [165], [191];
member of stockmen's association, [234];
his idea of the Western climate, [236];
and his abattoir, [331]-34: and kaoline, [334];
without friends in Medora, [334];
liked the Bad Lands, [335];
his genealogy, [335], [336];
relations with Roosevelt, [336]-42, [345]-49;
indicted for murder, [342], [343];
in jail, [344];
his trial, [345], [346];
goes to France, [359];
new schemes of, [447]-50;
leaves for India, [450];
article in Sioux Falls Press on, [450];
later career and death of, [460]-63.
Mores, Marquise de, [462], [463].
Morrill, Joe, [143];
deputy marshal in Medora, [221], [222];
stock inspector, [324];
sheriff, [390];
vs. George Myers, [442]-44;
dismissed from inspectorship, [444], [445];
later encounters with Roosevelt, [457].
Mountain sheep, hunting, [228]-32.
Mugwumps, the, [88], [172], [208].
Myers, George, cowpuncher, [93];
his cookery, [106], [107], [232];
invests in cattle, [255];
accused of cattle stealing, [442]-44;
in later years, [467], [473].

Nelson, Johnny, [7], [80], [81].
Nesters, [194]-96.
Newburyport Herald, quoted, [384].
Nolan, Mrs., [242], [245]-47.
Northern Pacific Refrigerator Car Co., [61], [79], [117].
Nugent, Lord, [25].

O'Donald, Frank, [63], [64], [66], [67].
O'Hara, Johnny, [329].
Olmstead, Mrs., [96] n.
Osterhaut, [278], [324].

Packard, A. T., arrival in Little Missouri, [73];
and the cowboy, [73]-75;
starts a newspaper, [76];
and the Deadwood stage-line, [123], [124], [170], [209]-14;
a civilizing influence, [130], [131];
endeavors to introduce law and order in the Bad Lands, [131]-35;
issues call for mass meeting, [136];
chief of police at Medora, [137]-39;
announces demise of horse-thieves, [193], [194];
enthusiastic over the Bad Lands, [254];
his account of Roosevelt and the Devil, [271]-75;
tries again for county organization, [324], [387];
firm for order and decency, [328], [329];
realizes bigness of Roosevelt, [411];
excoriates Morrill, [443];
supports Progressive cause, [473].
Paddock, Jerry, [51], [52], [62].
Paddock, Mrs., [52].
Pender, Sir John, [20]-22, [25], [455].
Prairie fires, [351], [357], [358].
Presidential Convention, the, 1884, [88].
Putnam, George Haven, [359].

Ranges, cattle, [91], [92];
claims on, [219];
need of law of, [220].
Religion, in the Bad Lands, [325]-28.
Reuter, John, [16];
and Riley Luffsey, [63], [64];
returns to old occupations, [169];
one of Roosevelt's scow-hands, [338], [339];
and the Marquis, [347];
becomes Progressive, [473].
Roberts, Lloyd, [456].
Roberts, Margaret, in, [112], [258]-60, [456].
Robins, Captain, [160], [189];
his bout with Sewall, [161]-64.
Robinson, Douglas, [458].
Roderick, Mrs., [52].
Roosevelt, Anna, [104]-06.
Roosevelt, James, [40], [70].
Roosevelt, Theodore, arrives in Little Missouri, [3]-5;
his reason for going to the Bad Lands, [8];
starts on buffalo hunt, [12]-14;
gets an extra saddle horse, [16], [17];
enjoys talks with Gregor Lang, [19], [24]-28;
hunting buffalo, [28]-39;
desirous of buying a large farm, [39];
interested in ranching projects, [40], [41];
secures two partners, [42], [43];
gives check for fourteen thousand dollars without receipt, [43];
kills his buffalo, [44]-46;
relished things blood-curdling, [47];
signs contract with Sylvane and Merrifield, [69], [70], [479], [480];
his cattle venture is disapproved of by family, [70];
enters upon third term in New York Legislature, [81], [82];
death of mother and wife, [82];
of public activities of, [82], [83], [87], [88];
refuses to join Mugwumps, [88], [172], [208];
description of, [89];
describes Presidential Convention, [90], [91];
makes new contract, [94];
gets buckskin suit, [95], [96];
shoots antelope, [97];
enters into life of ranchman, [97], [98];
on the round-up, [99], [275]-307, [400]-03;
attitude of cowboys toward, [101], [102];
tried out on the Sully Trail, [103], [104];
his life as cowboy, [104], [105];
on solitary hunting trip, [105], [106];
tries cooking, [107];
his reading and writing, [108], [109];
a good mixer, [112];
and Bill Jones, [115], [116];
and the Marquis, [124];
tries to join Stuart's vigilantes, [146];
determines upon spot for home-ranch, [149];
and Mrs. Maddox, [150];
adventures at Mingusville, [150]-54, [244]-47;
editorial on, in the Mandan Pioneer, [154];
on the Bad Lands, in the New York Tribune, [156];
contract with Sewall and Dow, [156], [157], [481];
interviewed by the Pioneer, [158], [159];
on the ranch, [159]-65;
prepares for hunting trip, [168], [169], [173], [174];
demanded as first Congressional representative of Dakota, [171];
his political standing in the East, [172];
always wanted to make the world better, [174], [219];
his hunting trip in the Big Horn Mountains, [175]-88;
shoots a grizzly, [185]-88;
returns to Elkhorn, [202]-05;
threatened by Maunders, [207], [208];
makes campaign speeches in New York, [208];
night ride of, [216], [217];
depression of, [217]-19;
starts a reform, [219], [222];
in winter on the ranch, [223]-28;
hunts mountain sheep, [228]-32;
forms stockmen's association, [231]-34.
Returns to New York and works on "Hunting Trips of a Ranchman," [235], [239];
his derby hat, [239];
illness of, [240], [241];
swims the Little Missouri, [249]-52;
and his ranching companions, [252], [253];
a capable ranchman, [255];
intolerant of dishonesty and ineffectiveness, [256], [257];
how esteemed by the ranchmen, [257], [258];
and the buttermilk, [259];
and the neighbors, [260]-64;
tries cooking again, [265];
trailing cattle, [268]-70;
his horsemanship, [270], [271];
gentles the Devil, [271]-75;
on the round-up, [275]-307;
breaks bronco, [287]-89;
tries Ben Butler, [289]-91;
breaks point of shoulder, [290], [291], [293];
attends dinner at Mrs. Cummins's, [293], [294];
in the stampede, [295]-97;
rescues Englishman with lasso, [297], [298];
his enjoyment of the cowboy life, [305], [306];
interviewed at St. Paul, [308], [309];
his life at Elkhorn, [310]-12, [316], [317];
adventure with Wadsworth's dog, [315], [316];
relations with the Marquis, [336]-42, [345]-49;
did not intend to enter Dakota politics, [350], [351];
adventure with Indians, [353], [354];
his attitude toward the Indians, [355], [356];
breaks his arm, [359];
writes articles for press, [359];
and Mrs. Ferris, [363], [364];
anger at theft of boat, [365]-71;
undertakes Life of T. H. Benton, [371];
on a thief hunt, [372]-86;
representative of stockmen's association, [392]-95;
his cattle prospects, [395]-97;
continues his Life of Benton, [397]-99;
his enjoyable summer of 1886, [401], [402];
his influence over the cowboys, [403];
Fourth of July oration, [407]-11;
restlessness of, [412];
feelings at prospect of war with Mexico, [413]-15;
what he got from the Western life, [416];
his human sympathy, [417];
holds up train, [418], [419];
goes goat hunting with John Willis, [419]-24;
terminates engagement with Sewall and Dow, [424]-28;
becomes engaged to Edith Carow, [426];
nominated for Mayor of New York City, [429];
marriage, [430];
his losses, [440], [441];
assumes leadership in stockmen's association, [446];
later visits to Bad Lands, [453], [454], [458];
books of, [453], [454];
member of Civil Service Commission, [454];
later encounters with Morrill, [457], [458];
meets Seth Bullock, [459];
member of Civil Service Commission, Police Commissioner, and Assistant Secretary of the Navy, [463];
in Spanish War, [463], [464];
Governor of New York, [464];
goes to Dakota as nominee for vice-presidency, [465]-68;
becomes President, [468];
entertains cowboys at White House, [468], [469];
visits Medora for last time, [469]-72;
death, [473];
Dakota investment, [482].
Rough Riders, the, [464].
Round-up, the, [99], [220], [275]-307, [403]-03.
Rowe, [313], [314].
Russell, Archibald D., [458].

St. Paul Pioneer Press, its version of the Roosevelt-Mores bargain, [341].
Sewall, Bill, [87];
Roosevelt's contract with, [156], [157], [481];
his opinion of the West as a cattle-raising country, [159], [160], [206], [238], [240], [254], [306], [307], [396];
his bout with Captain Robins, [162]-64;
his description of the Bad Lands, [167], [168], [190];
begs off on hunting trip, [175];
as a cowhand, [189], [190], [206], [225];
and the vigilantes, [191], [192], [195];
visited by Maunders in the dugout, [199]-201;
had good knowledge of the ways of cattle, [206], [207];
consoles Roosevelt, [217]-19;
refuses to ride broncos, [225]-27;
on the cold of the Bad Lands, [236], [238];
describes "cattle torture," [266], [267];
superintends the house at Elkhorn, [312];
level-headed, [313];
helps clean up country of thieves, [324];
lectures Roosevelt, [359];
on a thief hunt, [372]-80;
terminates engagement with Roosevelt, [424]-28;
in later years, [457].
Sewall, Mrs., [310]-13.
Simpson, John, [25], [385].
Sioux Falls Press, on Roosevelt, [429].
Smith, "Vic," [9] n.
Snyder, Jack, [436].
Stage-line, the Deadwood, [77], [78], [120]-24, [170], [209]-14, [334].
Stampede, [295]-97.
Starr, Western, [303], [304], [385].
Stickney, Dr., [291]-93, [325], [382], [383].
Stockmen's association, Roosevelt makes move to form, [222], [223];
formation of, [232]-34;
activity of, [323], [324];
its action on prairie fires, [358];
Roosevelt representative of, [390].
Stranglers, the, [192]-94.
Stuart, Granville, [144]-46;
his vigilantes, [146], [147], [157]-59, [192]-94.
Styles in the Bad Lands, [321], [322].
Sully Trail, the, [102]-04.

"Tepee Bottom," [111].
Thieves, horse and cattle, [139]-47;
rounding up of, [157]-59, [192]-94.
"Three Seven," the, [94].
"Tolu Tonic," [22].
Trimble, Richard, [40].
Truscott, J. L., [390].

Valentine scrip, [61].
Vallombrosa, Antoine de. See [Mores].
Van Brunt, [110].
Van Driesche, [334], [390].
Van Zander, [128], [322], [363], [457].
"V-Eye," [110].
Vigilantes, Stuart's, [146], [147], [157]-59, [192]-94;
other, [192], [194]-96.
Vine, Captain, [10], [21].
Vine, Darius, [21], [53], [54].
Vine, Frank, [10], [22]-24, [56], [61];
his joke on Packard, [73]-75.
Vines, the, [456].

Wadsworth dog, the, [315], [316].
Wadsworth family, [15], [25].
Walker, J. B., [360].
Wannigan. See [Reuter].
Watterson, Walter, [275].
Wharfenberger, [375].
Wibaux, Pierre, [242].
Williams, Bill, [7], [9];
description of, [50], [51];
thief, [54], [81];
starts freight-line, [120];
and stage-line, [122];
in the gay life of Medora, [128];
hissaloon, [319], [320];
a bona-fide "bad man," [320];
and the preacher, [325] n.;
the last of his saloon, [454].
Willis, John, [419]-24. [454], [469].
Wister, Owen, The Virginian, [214] n.

Young, Farmer, [315].[Back to Contents]