Posted by N on October 26, 2008, 7:04 pm In 1989 McPhale returned to the Diamond K with money, an entire account full of money. Eighteen years after his father’s death the family lawyer found McPhale and told him of a secret will kept by his father. The will told of a bank account Samuel McPhale kept, depositing what he could when he could since McPhale was born. Eighteen years after his father’s death McPhale was now eligible to withdraw the money now equaling in excess of $450 million. At the top of his list of things to buy were horses, most specifically a new breed researchers had found a short time after his father’s death. With a small portion of the money McPhale purchased several of the Kiger Mustangs off the Riddle Mountain herd and mixed them with his beloved ranch Quarter Horses. He let the bands run free over the expanse of his family’s ranch and eventually, in a fit of reckless abandon, McPhale tore down all the fences marking the boundaries of the Diamond K. From there McPhale invited people into his little world, citing “intuition” as the reason for hire – he had the money after-all, what did it matter who he hired and what he hired them for? The Diamond K Ranch eventually became known affectionately as McPhaleville – evolving into a small town environment built to cater specifically to McPhale’s group of scattered employees. All-in-all McPhale’s little equine indulgences have been spotted across almost 70000 acres of open territory in Moffat County, Colorado and southern Uintah County, Utah.
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