Date Published: 08-08-2025
Publisher: Farcountry Press
Reviews for The Life and Times of Jim Bridger
Bill Markley has established an enviable reputation as a western biographer. His excellent new biography of Jim Bridger will only augment his status. Crisply written and carefully researched this biography of the greatest of the mountain men will both captivate and inform readers for years to come. --Paul Hutton, author of The Undiscovered Country
Bill Markley has done it again with THE LIFE AND TIMES OF JIM BRIDGER. The mythic mountain man comes to life in Markley's biography and by the end you will be ready to go West and discover for yourself the West of Jim Bridger. --Stuart Rosebrook, editor-at-large, TRUE WEST magazine
Well researched and well told, Markley gives us a fresh look at one of the giants of the American West. I believe he has captured the man and his essence. —Bob Boze Bell, executive editor True West magazine
Bill Markley’s The Life and Times of Jim Bridger vividly captures the adventures of a legendary mountain man whose courage, ingenuity, and deep connection to the American West shaped a nation’s frontier. From fur trapping to guiding emigrants, Bridger’s story is a testament to resilience and cultural fluency, brought to life with meticulous research and engaging prose. -- Jon Nelson, Board Director for the Museum of the Fur Trade, Chadron, Nebraska
When the tall, genial Virginian Jim Bridger ventured West as a “green” teenager in the early years of the fur trade, no one predicted that he would become known as the legendary “old man of the mountains." Packing his life with enough adventure for at least ten mountain men, Bridger led beaver-trapping brigades, hunted buffalo, fought hostile Blackfeet, married a Shoshone woman, mapped trackless wilderness, guided the U.S. Army during Red Cloud’s War, and more. Although illiterate, he spoke several European—and Indian—languages. Did Bridger really leave the grizzly-mauled Hugh Glass to die alone? Markley delves deep into his subject’s extraordinary life. Wonderfully illustrated with period maps and artwork, this book is for anyone who loves true tales of the raucous fur trading era of the early nineteenth century. Bridger once said, “Sir, the grace of God won’t carry a man through these prairies! It takes powder and ball.” And how. –Nancy Plain, four-time Spur Award winner, past president of Western Writers of America.
Final Thoughts
During my two-year research of Jim Bridger, my respect for him
has grown. He accepted all people, no matter who they were. Only when
they turned on him would he treat them as enemies. He tried to stay out of
fights, but if one was unavoidable, he was in the forefront.
It’s a shame—and our loss—that he didn’t learn to read and write. He was
intelligent, creating accurate maps from memory. He learned English, French,
Spanish, a variety of Indian languages, and was proficient in sign language.
After people read Shakespeare to him, he would quote passages from memory.
As to the Hugh Glass story, I believe Bridger was not the teenager who
deserted Glass. Historians have pointed to Bridger because of an 1839 article
that gave the young man’s last name as “Bridges,” based on old riverboat pilot
Joseph LaBarge’s recollection, and tradition had it on the Missouri that it was
Bridger. That’s it. When Alfred Jacob Miller sat around a mountaineer fire
and jotted down the Hugh Glass story during the 1837 rendezvous, the first
name of the person Glass confronted was Bill. If Bridger had been the young
man who deserted Glass, I believe other mountaineers would have ribbed him
about it.
As to Bridger selling Fort Bridger to the Mormons, I don’t believe he sold
it. He was an honest man, and to his dying day, he never said he sold it, continuing to
attempt to collect his rental payment from the federal government.
Bridger’s descriptions of the Yellowstone geothermal region to expedition
leaders and scientists led to its eventual exploration in 1871 by one of those scientists,
Ferdinand Hayden. The following year, Congress designated it the
world’s first national park.
Jim Bridger was loved by many people, from children to generals. He was
well liked by many tribes. Most of his adversaries respected him. He enjoyed
nothing better than to be out in nature, preferring to sleep under the stars than
in a tent. It would have been great fun to sit at a campfire and listen
to him tell
of his exploits and tall tales. He was a man in love with the West.
Toward the end of his life, Jim Bridger said, “I wish I was back there among
the mountains again—you can see so much farther in that
country.”
About the Author
Bill Markley, member of Western Writers of America and multiple winner of the Will Rogers Medallion award, has written eleven books including biographies and histories of Old West characters and events. He writes for True West and Wild West magazines and is a staff writer for Roundup magazine.

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