20 Wild West 'Facts' That Every Cowboy Movie Keeps Getting Wrong

Yee — and we can’t stress this enough — haw! From old classics like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid to modern takes like Wild Wild West, Hollywood loves to make movies about cowboys on the frontier. Unfortunately, something that filmmakers don’t often take into account is historical accuracy. Here are the most common mistakes that make it into tons of Western flicks.

The cowboy load

True cowboys never fully-loaded their six-shooter pistols. Instead, they’d use a “Cowboy Load” and only put in five rounds, leaving one chamber empty. This was because the guns were extremely finicky in the 1800s and were known to randomly fire.

Safe banks

Bank robberies weren’t that popular of a practice. More of these crimes occurred within a year in Dayton, Ohio, than ever across the Wild West. We’re guessing there weren’t canvas bags with dollar signs printed on them either.

Surprisingly progressive

The Wild West had gay rights! It was incredibly common for cowboys to be in same-sex relationships with one another — some even getting married. Their peers accepted these partnerships. Now this is something Hollywood should make into a movie.  

Feral camels

There used to be feral camels in Texas. For some reason (boredom, maybe) the U.S. military established the Camel Corps in 1856 and imported 66 camels to the arid state. After the Civil War, they were sold to circuses or escaped into the wilds. Their last sighting was in 1941.