Summary

  • The 1883 ending of the Yellowstone prequel series provides important insight into the difficulties the Dutton family faced in establishing their ranch.
  • Elsa's death in the 1883 ending marked the end of one chapter for the Dutton family and foreshadowed tensions between Indigenous American communities and the Yellowstone Dutton Ranch in present times.
  • The 1883 ending sets the stage for future series in the Yellowstone franchise, including the spinoff 1923, and explores the roots of conflicts that drive the Yellowstone universe.

The 1883 ending tied up the 10-episode prequel series to Taylor Sheridan's neo-Western sensation Yellowstone and deftly set up more series in the franchise. 1883 tells the tale of how the Dutton family came to own the land in Montana that would eventually go on to become the Yellowstone Dutton Ranch. The series centers on James Dillard Dutton (Tim McGraw), his wife Margaret (Faith Hill), their eldest daughter and show narrator Elsa (Isabel May), and Shea Brennan (Sam Elliott) the leader of the wagon train that the Duttons travel with to the American West, and is set over 135 years before Yellowstone in the franchise timeline.

1883 gives an important insight into Yellowstone by showing how difficult it was for the Dutton family to set up their ranch. From the start of the series, the family faces danger, tragedy, and the thinning of their clan as they head west. The defense of the Yellowstone Dutton Ranch is the top priority for every generation of the family and to see the trials the founders had to go through to acquire it puts the future ranchers’ vigilance in perspective. Family members die, friends pass on, and a promise about the rightful owners of the Dutton land is made in the 1883 ending, which affects the future series.

RELATED: Yellowstone Spinoff 1883 Cast & Character Guide

1883 Tells The Story Of The Dutton Ranch

LaMonica Garrett as Thomas and Sam Elliott as Shea in 1883

1883's ending painted a stark picture of how those who were part of the Westward Expansion survived, loved, and died along the journey. Heartbreakingly, Elsa was mortally wounded and picked the spot in Paradise Valley where she wanted James to bury her. Meanwhile, a year after Josef's (Marc Rissmann) wife died and his leg had to be amputated, he finally removed his wedding ring and prepared to rebuild his home. Additionally, Thomas (LaMonica Garrett) and Noemi's (Gratiela Brancusi) family also find a spot in Oregon where they settle. As for Shea, he finally reached the beach, and there, he took his own life.

In a mix of tragic death and hopeful optimism for the show's settlers, the 1883 ending fleshed out the story of how the Yellowstone Dutton Ranch was founded with the blood of pioneers, literally. The site Elsa chose to be buried was a valley called “Paradise” which ended up becoming the Yellowstone Ranch. Though the Duttons finally made it to the future site of their homestead, it came at the cost of James and Margaret losing their beloved daughter Elsa. The implications of the violence and harshness that resulted in the ranch in the 1883 ending would be felt decades later for future generations of Duttons.

Why Elsa Dutton Had To Die In The 1883 Ending

Ella Dutton smiling in the 1883 finale.

Elsa's death signaled the end of the first chapter in the story of the Duttons of Yellowstone. Elsa wasn't just the narrator – she was the very heart and soul of 1883. In short, it was simply time for Elsa to die, which heralded the beginning of an entirely new chapter for the Duttons.

It's also important to remember how Elsa died: gravely wounded in a violent misunderstanding between the caravan of white settlers and 1883's band of Lakota warriors. As James and Margaret agreed to settle the land wherever Elsa decided to die, Elsa's death foreshadowed the tensions between Indigenous American communities and the Yellowstone Dutton Ranch in the present time. While Indigenous Americans have lived and survived in Paradise Valley thousands of years before 1883's settlers even set foot in Montana, Elsa's death showed what the Duttons gave up in order to claim their property – a long, lingering look into the roots of the conflicts that drive the Yellowstone universe.

What The Hummingbird That Joins Shea In The 1883 Ending Means

Shea Brennan looking at a hummingbird in the 1883 finale.

In the end, Shea Brennan fulfilled his personal quest to see the ocean before he died. Amid the crashing of the waves, Shea admired the ocean while remembering his wife, who died of smallpox during the pilot episode of 1883. Like Elsa, Shea is one of the 1883 characters who can't be in the 1923 cast, because he also died in the finale. After a hummingbird appeared and hovered around Shea for some time before flying away — implying his wife was there to enjoy the beach with him in spirit — Shea followed through with his plan to shoot himself.

Although Shea's death is tragic, it's a rare moment of true peace and fulfillment in 1883, as the tormented character finally got what he wants. In Indigenous American culture, the hummingbird is a symbol of good luck, which is likely why Shea was moved by the bird's presence, especially as it appeared during his last moments on Earth. While Shea won't be needing any luck, the hummingbird's presence could foreshadow good fortune for the surviving members of the caravan, who each have found their own plots of land to settle in Oregon and Montana.

Related: You Know The Ranch's Beau Bennett From Sam Elliott's Movie & TV Roles

What Happens To The Dutton Family Ranch After The End of 1883

Tim McGraw as James Dutton holding a rifle in 1883.

After the 1883 ending that left the Dutton family in mourning, they immediately got to work building what would eventually become the largest ranch in the United States. However, for James and Margaret, the tragic loss of their daughter, sister, and niece may have hampered their efforts to effectively run the ranch. After only a few years, James was shot and Margaret froze to death. Their remaining children, John and Spencer, were near death in 1894 when Jacob Dutton (Harrison Ford) arrived at Margaret’s request to save the family and the ranch.

How The 1883 Ending Spoiled The Finale Of Yellowstone Season 5

Spotted Eagle talking to James Dutton in 1883.

The Indigenous man who helped Elsa is also the one who told James about Paradise Valley. Moreover, James and the man's conversation also potentially foreshadowed events in Yellowstone season 5. While the man pointed James to the future site of the Yellowstone Dutton Ranch, he followed up by saying, “but know this: in seven generations, my people will rise up and take it back from you.” James replies, “In seven generations, you can have it.” The Dutton Ranch in Yellowstone is called a seven-generation ranch by Governor Lynelle Perry. The implication here is that John Dutton's children, or possibly even Tate Dutton — Kayce and Monica's half-white, half-Indigenous son — could end up giving their land back to the Broken Rock Indian Reservation in Yellowstone season 5.

How 1883's Ending Set Up Yellowstone Spinoff 1923

Audie Rick plays John Dutton Sr in the Yellowstone prequel 1883

The explosive premiere episodes of Paramount's Yellowstone spinoff 1923 revealed the respective fates of James and Margaret after the 1883 ending. Though James and Margaret founded the ranch, they failed to make it a thriving business, and they eventually both died, with James succumbing to gunshot wounds from an encounter with horse thieves and Margaret freezing to death. Fortunately, as Elsa narrated in 1923, Margaret wrote to James' family for help. This was what prompted James' brother, Jacob Dutton, to come to the ranch, turn it into a successful business, and raise James and Margaret's children as his own. The 1883 ending, explained from the context of the beginning of 1923, bridges the first 40 years of Yellowstone Ranch history.

1883 ended with revealing how the Yellowstone Dutton Ranch was founded and the story of how the Duttons carved Paradise Valley into the largest contiguous cattle ranch in America continues in 1923. Apart from how the ranch operated under the watch of Jacob and Cara Dutton (Helen Mirren), 1923's true story-inspired plot sees the Yellowstone universe once again diving deep into America's dark past, showing what goes on inside Indigenous American boarding schools and how white pioneers fought each other to survive Montana's harsh early century.

A New 1883 Spinoff Will Tell The Real-Life Story Of Bass Reeves

David Oyelowo smiling with Bass Reeves in the background

Officially named Lawmen: Bass Reeves, the spinoff, set before the 1883 ending, the spinoff will be about the legendary Bass Reeves, one of the first Black deputy U.S. Marshals. Born in Arkansas as a slave in 1838, Reeves grew up in Texas. According to Reeves' family members, it was around 1860 when Reeves knocked out his owner over a poker game, after which he escaped to Indigenous territories in what is now Kansas and Oklahoma. It was 1875 when U.S. Deputy Marshal Bass Reeves was deputized by Federal Judge Isaac Parker, also known as the "hanging judge" of the Western District of Arkansas, due to the high number of death sentences in his court.

Related: Every Upcoming Taylor Sheridan TV Show

By this time, due to the years Reeves spent living among and befriending the Cherokee people, Reeves was a skilled tracker, rider, and shooter who spoke five different Indigenous American languages. These skills turned Reeves into a legendary lawman, killing 14 outlaws in the line of duty while successfully apprehending over 3,000 – including his own son, one of Reeves' 10 children. After a long career wrangling outlaws, escorting government officials through Indigenous territories, and surviving several ambushes alone, Bass Reeves retired in Oklahoma, serving in the local police department until his death in 1910.

Lawmen: Bass Reeves will see Taylor Sheridan taking on an entirely different challenge in adapting the real-life story of Bass Reeves. While 1883 season 1's true history approach (playing it a little loose) was hardly controversial and genuinely enhanced the story, Sheridan cannot take this exact same approach with Lawmen: Bass Reeves. Bass Reeves is a crucial figure in Black American history. In fact, Reeves was the real-life inspiration for the Lone Ranger character who, in turn, inspired the hero-cowboys of early American cinema, radio, and written fiction. Sheridan, with actor David Oyelowo, should be able to do justice to the legendary lawman just as he's done for the pseudo-historical people of 1883.

Every Other Yellowstone Spinoff (& If They Connect To The 1883 Ending)

Jimmy Hurdstrom in his 6666 shirt

The 1883 ending has consequences that go far beyond the miniseries. 1923 begins soon after the series and features Elsa in ghostly narration over the season. Yellowstone season 4 even features some of the characters from 1883 in flashback sequences. There are three other upcoming spinoffs set in the Yellowstone universe, but none appear to have a direct connection to 1883. 6666 will feature the Four Sixes Ranch in Texas where Jimmy Hurdstrom (Jefferson White) was sent for training in Yellowstone. Then there is the planned sequel spinoff to 1923, 1944 ,set in the eponymous year, and an unnamed Yellowstone sequel set to take place after the event of season 5. Matthew McConaughey is in talks to play the lead role.