In the frontier towns of the Wild West, men generally outnumbered women at least three to one, and in some mining camps the population could be up to 90% male. In these semi-lawless areas, where everyone carried a gun and vigilante justice was the norm, a woman on her own had to get tough to survive. Many stepped out of traditional roles and became gunslingers, cowgirls, and/or brothel workers.
To assemble a list of some of the Wild West’s most legendary women, 24/7 Tempo reviewed numerous online sources with a focus on history. We used editorial discretion to assemble the list, based on several factors, including the notoriety of the women, the public’s interest in their stories, and in some cases the crimes they may have been involved in.
Click here to read more about the Wild West’s most legendary women
Many of these women worked as prоstitutes – a lucrative trade in an area full of single men – and the most successful of them established their own brothels. Others worked as ranchers and homesteaders, while some turned to a life of crime. Often, outlaw women were the partners of infamous gang members, and helped rob trains, banks, and stagecoaches. Other women worked as gamblers and cattle rustlers. (Read about which women went down in history as some of the most infamous gunfighters of the American West.)
While most of these women were known for their beauty and fancy clothing, a few took to dressing like men while performing robberies. No matter their dress, many were known for their shooting skills. (These are the guns that won the Old West.)
Mary Ann Conklin
> Lifespan: 1821-1873
> Occupation: Brothel madam
> Known for: Opening Seattle’s first brothel
After spending two years on a whaling ship, Mary Ann Conklin moved to Seattle and ran the Felker House, a reputable hotel on the first floor with a brothel on the second. She came to be known as Mother Damnable because of her penchant for profanity, and is said to have known curse words in six languages. Legend has it that after her death, her body turned to stone in its coffin.
Eleanor Dumont
> Lifespan: 1829-1879
> Occupation: Gambler/brothel madam
> Known for: Plying her trades in five states
Owner of a Nevada City gambling parlor, the Vingt-et-un, Eleanor Dumont – whose birth name may have been Simone Jules – was a skilled card dealer and brothel madam known as Madam Moustache for the line of hair growing above her mouth. Her luck ran out when she fell in love with conman Jack McKnight, who stole her fortune and sold her ranch. After tracking him down and killing him, she returned to gambling but suffered a string of losses and was found dead of a suspected morphine overdose.
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“Stagecoach Mary” Fields
> Lifespan: 1832(?)-1914
> Occupation: Mail carrier
> Known for: First African-American star route postwoman
Mary Fields was contracted by the U.S. Postal Service to deliver mail by stagecoach, as part of the so-called star route postal system, in the rugged territory of northern Montana. Known for her fearless and fiery temperament, she carried both a rifle and a revolver and successfully defended her parcels from bandits for years until her retirement.
Josephine Hensley
> Lifespan: 1844-1899
> Occupation: Brothel madam
> Known for: Being dubbed “Queen of the Red Light District”
Born Mary Welch in Ireland, Hensley renamed herself Josephine Airey at the age of 14 when she moved to New York City. Later, after working as a prоstitute in Chicago, she moved on to Helena, Montana, during the gold rush, where she married one James T. Hensley and acquired the nickname “Chicago Joe.” She set up a mining camp brothel in a log cabin, recruiting other women from Chicago to head West. She and Hensley built up multiple businesses in the red light district, including a variety show theater.
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Lottie Deno
> Lifespan: 1844-1934
> Occupation: Gambler
> Known for: Being the most famous poker player in late 19th-century Texas
After learning cards from her father, an avid gambler, Deno – born Carlotta J. Thompkins – started her life of gambling, working riverboats on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers before heading to San Antonio. There she fell in love with fellow gambler Frank Thurmond and the pair made a fortune playing poker and running gambling rooms before settling down in New Mexico.
Belle Starr
> Lifespan: 1848-1889
> Occupation: Outlaw/gunslinger
> Known for: Associating with famous outlaws, including the James-Younger Gang
An outlaw in Texas and Oklahoma Territory, Belle Starr, nee Myra Maybelle Shirley, was known as a criminal mastermind who committed bank robberies and horse thefts, and also harbored other known criminals, including Frank and Jesse James. She was murdered by an unknown assailant just shy of her 41st birthday.
“Poker Alice” Ivers
> Lifespan: 1851-1930
> Occupation: Gambler, brothel madam, and bootlegger
> Known for: Making as much as $6,000 in an evening playing poker
English-born “Poker Alice” got her start in Leadville, Colorado, and earned a reputation for her poker and faro skills across the Southwest, where opponents would line up and attempt to best her. She was known to travel to New York city and splurge on fancy dresses with most of her winnings. Later in life she ran a gambling den and had trouble with the law for bootlegging and operating a brothel.
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Mollie Johnson
> Lifespan: 1853-1883(?)
> Occupation: Brothel madam
> Known for: Grabbing newspaper headlines
Born in Alabama, Mollie Johnson began working as a prostitute around age 14 or 15 and found her way to Deadwood, South Dakota, where she operated a brothel. She flaunted her blonde working girls in a carriage around town – she was known as “Queen of the Blondes” – and married a Black traveling minstrel and comedian, both of which made her popular headline fodder in the local paper, the Black Hills Daily Times. She left Deadwood in early 1883 and dropped out of sight. An obituary notice in Deadwood paper noted the death of a Mollie Johnson, described as “the most prominent member of the demi-monde in New Orleans,” in 1889, but it is unclear whether this was the same woman.
Libby Thompson
> Lifespan: 1855-1953
> Occupation: Brothel madam
> Known for: Marrying gunman “Texas Billy” Thompson.
Mary Elizabeth Haley lived a hard childhood in Texas, which involved being held captive by Comanches for three years and having her first suitor shot dead by her father. She ran away at 14 and began working as a prostitute and dance hall girl in Kansas and Colorado. Libby finally settled down with her husband Billy Thompson and ran a successful brothel in Sweetwater, Texas, where she became known as Madam “Squirrel Tooth Alice” for a gap in her teeth.
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Martha “Calamity Jane” Cannary
> Lifespan: 1856-1903
> Occupation: Explorer, sharpshooter
> Known for: Appearing as a storyteller in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show
A sharpshooter who dressed in men’s clothing, Martha Jane Cannary was a rough-edged carouser and associate of Wild Bill Hickock, as well as a humanitarian who nursed smallpox patients in Deadwood, South Dakota. There are several stories about how she acquired her nickname, one of which involves her rescuing an army captain from the calamity of an Indian ambush.
Pearl de Vere
> Lifespan: 1859-1897
> Occupation: Brothel madam
> Known for: Opening the Old Homestead, the era’s most luxurious brothel
A brilliant businesswoman, Eliza Martin moved to Cripple Creek, Colorado, during the last Colorado gold rush, when the demand for prоstitutes was high. There, she changed her name and started a successful brothel. When that burned down, she built an even more lavish establishment, catering to only the wealthiest of clients, where reservations were obligatory and a stay was $250 a night.
Ellen Liddy Watson
> Lifespan: 1860-1889
> Occupation: Homesteader/outlaw (?)
> Known for: Being the first woman to be hanged in Wyoming
Ellen Liddy Watson, also known as Cattle Kate, was a cook and homesteader from Ontario, Canada. After moving to Wyoming and acquiring 160 acres of land through the Homestead Act, she ran afoul of a wealthy local rancher over water rights, and she and her husband were subsequently accused of cattle rustling and hanged by vigilantes. Whether the two were actually cattle thieves is debatable.
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Josephine Sarah Marcus
> Lifespan: 1861-1944
> Occupation: Actor
> Known for: Being the common-law wife of Wyatt Earp
An actor who traveled with a theater group, Josephine Marcus fell in love with Sheriff Johnny Behan while performing in Tombstone, Arizona. She decided to stay in the town, but things got complicated when Wyatt Earp showed up, and she left Behan for Earp. This may have helped fuel the tensions that led to the famous gunfight at the O.K. Corral. After the fight, Marcus and Earp stayed together for 46 years until his death.
Dora DuFran
> Lifespan: 1868-1934
> Occupation: Brothel madam
> Known for: One of the leading madams in Deadwood, South Dakota
The leading competitor to Deadwood’s Madam Mollie Johnson was Madam Dora DuFran. She ran numerous brothels in South Dakota and Montana, the most famous of which was Diddlin’ Dora’s in Belle Fourche, South Dakota. She famously kept an assemblage of cats in one of her houses of ill repute, and was known to take in and care for the sick and needy.
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Pearl Hart
> Lifespan: 1871-1955
> Occupation: Outlaw
> Known for: Committing one of the last known stagecoach robberies in America
A Canadian-born outlaw, Pearl Hart wore men’s clothing and a short haircut while robbing a stagecoach in Arizona with her partner Joe Boot. The two were caught and jailed but Hart managed to gain an adoring fanbase, who came bearing gifts for the “Bandit Queen.” She reportedly told the court, “I will not consent to be tried under a law which my sex has had no voice in making.” According to some sources, she later ran a cigar store in Kansas City, while others say she married an Arizona rancher.
Fannie Porter
> Lifespan: 1873-1940(?)
> Occupation: Brothel madam
> Known for: Hosting Butch Cassidy, the Sundance Kid, and other noted outlaws
After working her way up from a prostitute to a madam, Fannie Porter opened a high end brothel in San Antonio’s famous Sporting District. Her establishment served champagne, had plush carpets and silk sheets, and was known for being very protective of her “girls.” In addition to welcoming famous outlaws into her establishment, she reportedly once entertained William Pinkerton of the famed Pinkerton National Detective Agency.
Josie Bassett
> Lifespan: 1874-1964
> Occupation: Rancher
> Known for: Marrying five husbands, possibly poisoning one of them
The older of two Bassett sisters, Josie grew up on a ranch frequented by Butch Cassidy and the Wild Bunch gang. After her father’s death, she and her sister defended the ranch from hired thugs meant to scare them into selling the land. Josie was romantically involved with Wild Bunch member Elzy Lay, made a living brewing moonshine, was accused of cattle rustling, and lived to be 90.
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Laura Bullion
> Lifespan: 1876-1961
> Occupation: Outlaw
> Known for: Participating in the Great Northern train robbery
Also known as Della Rose, Laura Bullion became a prostitute at 15, eventually falling in with Ben Kilpatrick, an outlaw and member of Butch Cassidy’s Wild Bunch. She began dressing as a man and going on heists with the Bunch, participating in the Great Northern train robbery, after which she and Kilpatrick fled to Knoxville and were eventually arrested. She later moved to Memphis under an assumed name and made a living as a dressmaker and interior designer.
Etta Place
> Lifespan: 1878(?)-19089(?)
> Occupation: Prostitute/cattle rustler
> Known for: Being the Sundance Kid’s girlfriend
Although the origins and later life of Etta Place are rather mysterious, she rose to fame as the primary companion of the outlaw Harry Longabaugh, also known as the Sundance Kid. She may also have been a paramour of Butch Cassidy, and she fled with the two men to Argentina to escape capture by the Pinkertons after a string of robberies.
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Rose Dunn
> Lifespan: 1878-1955
> Occupation: Outlaw
> Known for: Partner of outlaw George “Bitter Creek” Newcomb
After learning how to ride, rope, and shoot from her older brothers, Rose Dunn – known as the Rose of Cimarron – became involved with outlaw George Newcomb of the Doolin-Dalton Gang. Fiercely loyal to Newcomb, Dunn reportedly once risked her life during a shootout to bring him a gun and extra ammo. Unfortunately, Dunn’s brothers killed Newcomb one day as he came to visit her, and collected the $5,000 bounty on his head.
Ann Bassett
> Lifespan: 1878-1956
> Occupation: Rancher
> Known for: Becoming “Queen of the Rustlers”
The younger of the two Bassett sisters, Ann became involved with Butch Cassidy when he and other Wild Bunch members frequented her father’s farm in Brown’s Hole on the Colorado/Utah border. She took over her parents’ ranch, defended it from hired men who attempted to intimidate her into selling, and was once arrested for cattle rustling. According to one theory, she and Etta Place were the same person, but this possibility has been widely discounted.
Della Moore
> Lifespan: 1880(?)-1926(?)
> Occupation: Prostitute
> Known for: Dealing in stolen goods and money
Also known as Annie Rogers and Maude Williams, Della Moore began working in a brothel at the age of 15. There, she met outlaw Harvey Logan – Kid Curry of the Wild Bunch. The two were involved for years, with Moore hiding Logan and resupplying him after robberies. She was once arrested for passing stolen bank notes. After Curry was killed by a posse in 1904, she may have gone back to work at a brothel, but later disappeared.
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Goldie Griffith Cameron
> Lifespan: 1893-1976
> Occupation: Cowgirl
> Known for: Busting broncos with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show
The daughter of a medicine show hawker, Goldie Griffith became a rodeo rider and performed in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show. She is said to have once been arrested for opening fire on her husband in public after a fight, and yelling that she wanted him dead as the police carted her to the station. She later worked as a stunt rider in Western films and as a rancher and dog trainer.
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