Pioneers of Outlaw Country: Wyoming History
Welcome to Pioneers of Outlaw Country: Wyoming History where we dive deep into the rugged, untamed spirit of Wyoming's rich history.
I’m your host, Jackie Dorothy. So pleased to meet you! I am a historian, journalist and memoir coach and you can find me at legendrockmedia.com. I’m the seventh generation of my family living in Wyoming and currently live near Thermopolis on the Wind River Reservation. My passion is to make history come alive!
Many of these stories have been forgotten and the pioneers are relatively unknown. Join us for a journey back into time that is fun for the entire family and students of any age!
This podcast series has been supported by our partners; the Hot Springs County Pioneer Association, the Wyoming Cultural Trust Fund, a program of the Department of State Parks and Cultural Resources, the Wyoming Humanities, and the Wyoming Office of Transportation.
Pioneers of Outlaw Country: Wyoming History
The White Devil: Wyoming Ghost Story
High in the Rattlesnake Range above Casper, Wyoming, a legend rides the wind. He is a ghostly white stallion known as The White Devil.
In the 1800s, this spectral horse was said to protect his herds of wild mustangs from any cowboy who dared to rope them. Fierce, untamed, and impossible to catch, he became more than a horse. The White Devil was a warning.
Even today, locals whisper that the White Devil still roams those rocky hills, a restless spirit of the Wyoming frontier, guarding his herd and haunting anyone who crosses his path.
White Devil's story was discovered buried in the Wyoming newspapers from the late 1800s. He refuses to be forgotten!
This episode of Pioneers of Outlaw Country: Wyoming History is brought to you by Rooted in Legacy, helping listeners like you preserve your own family history and wild youth! Book a free session today at www.legendrockmedia.com!
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This is a production of Legend Rock Media Productions.
The White Devil
High in the Rattlesnake Range above Casper, Wyoming, a legend rides the wind. He is a ghostly white stallion known as The White Devil.
In the 1800s, this spectral horse was said to protect his herds of wild mustangs from any cowboy who dared to rope them. Fierce, untamed, and impossible to catch, he became more than a horse. The White Devil was a warning.
Even today, locals whisper that the White Devil still roams those rocky hills, a restless spirit of the Wyoming frontier, guarding his herd and haunting anyone who crosses his path.
The Pioneers of Outlaw Country.
Cowboys, Lawmen and Outlaws… to the businessmen and women who all helped shape Wyoming.
Here are their stories
The White Devil
Out of the misty hills above Casper, Wyoming, rides a ghostly white stallion with eyes like burning coals. He is fierce, untamed, and said to punish any cowboy who dares to touch his wild mustangs.
Laurance “Tick” Jameson, grew up on the Rattlesnake Range in the late 1800s. He said there was a special rhythm that beats through the consciousness as you ride through the grass and listen to the cattle bellowing in the herd.
The smell of the smoke of the sage brush fire, the taste of the bacon sizzling in the pan at daybreak and the twists and turns of the bailing wire conjured up his boyhood memories of the Rattlesnakes. He fondly recalled the bunch grass and wildflowers that still grow today on a landscape unmarred by plows.
It was in these same hills that Jameson rode that also rode a creature made from nightmares. The cowboys spoke about it in hushed tones around the campfire or cursed it as they nursed their bruises. They called him the White Devil.
By the 1800s, the wild mustang herds had swelled to over a thousand in Wyoming. Many are descendants of horses brought by the Spanish conquistadors in the 15th century and some were horses turned loose from area ranches or travelers along our historic trails.
The CY Ranch ran their cows up on Rattlesnake Range and it was there that the legend of the White Devil was born. This ghostly white stallion protected the herds of wild mustangs against cowboys who attempted to rope the rogue horses.
The spectral horse would attack, biting and kicking at these cowboys who would dare to try and round up the wild horses under his protection.
He was so effective in keeping the cowboys at bay that legends persist that the White Devil still roams the Rattlesnake Range as an apparition, forever protecting his herd.
In 1891, the Rawlins Republican carried a story from Mexico about another white horse they had dubbed the “White Devil.” Could this have inspired the legend of Wyoming’s White Devil or is it just a coincidence?
The White Devil of Mexico was the horse of Vasquez, the most feared bandit in the early days of California. After the bandit was finally brought to justice, attempts were made to capture the horse. The reporter shared the stories of the White Devil’s battles against mankind.
One of the capturing party tried to take him and was severely bitten for his greed.The horse broke away, went careening off toward the canyon and was lost to sight. Most people say he died in the mountains of starvation, but the Mexicans say no. They saw him again.
The reporter then went on to share the story of the White Devil, painting a picture of a loyal and brave stallion. He was also vicious and fought those who would try to tame him much like the White Devil of Wyoming did to the cowboys on Rattlesnake Range.
The night after Vasquez was hung, a white horse galloped up the street to the jail, stood a moment at the door and gave a neigh. The Mexicans heard in it a call to the dead Vasquez. There came no answer to the horse’s challenge and he wheeled about and went as suddenly as he came. Then he turned bandit and followed Vasquez’ old trails.
Once in a while a man would be found on the road with his body frightfully mutilated and his flesh bearing the marks of hoofs. Sometimes in the night a white horse would appear at the door of a Mexican cabin in some lonely spot and neigh.
If no answer came, he would be off like the wind, but if any man dared show himself the horse would attack him with hoof and teeth and it was seldom that a victim escaped.
Time and again he was shot at and one Mexican young man was foolhardy enough to try to rope him and met a horrible death. The horse bore a charmed life. He became almost as great a terror to the Mexicans as Vasquez had been to the rich Americans.
Like the Wyoming White Devil, this white stallion did not always run alone. He gathered a herd and protected them viciously.
If by chance a Mexican’s pony got out of the corral and wandered off in search of grass, the White Devil would find him and enlist him. First he had one follower, then two, then half a dozen.
No man could kill them and no man dared to attempt to capture them. With no loads upon their backs, they were as fleet as the wind and could outstrip the best horse with a rider.
The White Devil of California eventually faded into history in the minds of most, except those who knew him best.
As the years went by and Vasquez became a memory, and his exploits the theme for children’s stories, the White Devil lost his companions. His visits to the vicinity of the little towns became less and less frequent and then ceased altogether. At long intervals a Mexican would ride in with a report that he had seen the White Devil in some canyon among the hills.
Eventually, the reports ceased altogether until one fateful day when a white horse had been killed by a freight train. The Mexicans came for miles to look at him and paid their respect to the horse they supposed to be the White Devil.
Or was it the White Devil? Perhaps this white stallion had traveled to a less populated area for the appearance of a wild white mustang in Wyoming coincided with White Devil’s disappearance in California.
There are those that believe that even though the large wild horse herds no longer roam on the remote Rattlesnake Ranger, the phantom like White Devil is still there, defying any to try to catch him.
Tonight’s ride with the White Devil is brought to you by Rooted in Legacy — helping your stories live on long after the trail goes silent.
Be sure to tune in next week on Pioneers of Outlaw Country: Haunted Wyoming, when we visit Kirwin, a Wyoming mining town built in the late 1890s with the most modern technology and luxury, but abandoned in fear.
A century later, some say the residents never truly left. Strange voices echo through empty streets, doors swing on their own, and the shadow of a terrible curse still lingers over the valley.
Join us… if you dare, as we uncover the restless spirits of Kirwin, Wyoming’s haunted ghost town.
This is a production of Legend Rock Media.