- Kitty Wilkins
Kitty Wilkins (1857-1936) was a horse breeder at the turn of the 19th century known as the "Horse Queen of Idaho". Her Diamond Ranch supplied thousands of horses for midwestern markets like St. Louis and
Chicago , and later to theU.S. Army in theFirst World War .
Wilkins was raised inTuscarora, Nevada where her father John Wilkins operated a hotel. She was well educated, sent to St. Vincent’s Academy inWalla Walla, Washington and later the Convent of Notre Dame inSan Jose, California . In the early 1880s, her family moved to the Bruneau country of Idaho and began operating the horse ranch that she later inherited.
She retired toGlenns Ferry, Idaho after 1920.External links
*Idaho State Hist. Soc. entry on [http://www.idahohistory.net/Reference%20Series/0978.pdf Kitty Wilkins' Diamond Ranch]
*Idaho State Hist. Soc. entry on [http://www.idahohistory.net/Reference%20Series/0503.pdf Ranching and Mining in the Bruneau Country]
* [http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:DktsbmGFQUoJ:www.newspaperarchive.com/newspapers1/na0003/93052/900817.html+%22idaho+horse+queen%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=2&client=opera Cache of Dec. 1898 article from the Nevada State Journal] via newspaperarchive.com
* [http://www.swaviator.com/html/issueAM00/hotspringsAM00.html "Hot Spring Heaven"] in "Southwest Aviator" online.
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