"e;Pender was the only one to come out unscathed...claimed her English superiority at the expense of the Americans."e; -Frontiers of Femininity (2008)"e;Rose Pender...toured the American West, partly to inspect a Wyoming cattle ranch in which they'd invested."e; -The Magnificent Mountain Women (2020)"e;Pender...described a 4-month tour through states such as Texas, California, Utah, Wyoming, and Colorado...received critical acclaim."e; -Women and Nature: Saving the Wild West (1999)"e;Pender and two fellow Englishmen went through Wyoming ranch country, stopping on ranches, and she, a very intelligent, spirited woman, saw realities that few other chroniclers suggest."e; -Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest (1958)How would a proper English "e;Lady"e; fare on her trip to inspect a cattle ranch investment in the American West of 1883? Would her critically acclaimed trip narrative set a literary record for the most uses of the adjectives "e;bad"e; and "e;dirty"e;? Or would it be one of the most enjoyable times of her life?In 1888, "e;Britisher"e; Lady Mary Rose Gregge-Hopwood Pender (1844-1932) would publish a narrative of her harrowing trip into the rough and tumble American West in her book titled "e;A Lady's Experiences in the Wild West in 1883."e;About the author Mary Rose Gregge-Hopwood Pender (1844-1932): Born in Lancashire, England in 1844 to Edward John Gregge Hopwood and Susan Frances Glegg. Mary Rose Gregge-Hopwood became a "e;Lady"e; when she married the knighted Sir James Pender, with whom she would tour the American West in 1883 to inspect their cattle ranch investment.