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world notoriety would have to go to Tombstone
Southwind said:I have been pretty surprised at the responses, although I guess I shouldn't be.........
I would have expected this response from the average person but was surprised coming from a group of people who generally know more about real history.
Didn't know this was a test!!
I would spend some time panning gold or detecting up around Rockerville and Keystone and Hill City...theres a lot of places I used to trap around there before I got into detecting that are calling my name to this day...old places!, abandoned mines!, old 'school sections' and down in the creeks and the like with the AtPro!....good placer gold to be dug...a guy can still go offroad up some logging trails and camp out within reason (quietly and with a small fire, or none at all) and not be hassled..I am unfamiliar with the other two locations you mentioned but thought this was a good enough subject to respond to...

Not kidding here, just saying..(the only thing I can brag about truthfully and actually do successfully in my meager Life on this Planet is catch beaver, so do not deprive me of this one boys). (great big Platinum colored beaver that I averaged 80 bucks per, and that was in the mid 80's!)
Still, thanks for the inspiration and wonderful thoughts Southwind!.....your friend,Gold Buddy said:Best Old West Gunfighter Town for 2015 by True West Magazine.
http://www.chadrad.com/newsstory.cfm?story=36069
Dodge City is among the best-known towns of the Old West, thanks in no small part to the popularity of Gunsmoke.
But the rugged cattle town was far more than just a convenient setting for a TV show. Dodge City was the real deal, alive with all the elements we associate with the era—cattle and cowboys, outlaws and lawmen, saloons and shady ladies.