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Chapter 18 Ranching and Farming

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The cattle first brought to America arrived on the ships of Spanish ... Barbed wire fences were everywhere...Cattle were quarantined (enforced isolation) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 18 Ranching and Farming


1
Chapter 18Ranching and Farming
  • Section 1 Origins of the Cattle Kingdom

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Spanish Introduce Cattle
  • The cattle first brought to America arrived on
    the ships of Spanish explores in the 1500s.
  • Some of the cattle escaped from the range, and
    the herds of the wild cattle eventually grazed
    throughout parts of Texas.
  • The climate, abundant water supply, and
    nutritious grass made Texas ideal cattle country.
  • The Rio Grande, San Antonio, and Nueces River
    were the places that the Spanish built cattle
    ranches.
  • The Spanish cattle were tall and hardy animals
    they had horns that grew six feet or more across.
    Ranchers bred these cattle with other types,
    giving rise to the famous longhorns.
  • Ranchers could raise their cattle on open range
    or public land, which was free to use by anyone.
  • Spanish ranchers often drove herds to market in
    Louisiana. Cowboys and vaqueros herded and drove
    cattle into pens or corrales.

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Early Ranchers Use the OpenRange
  • Anglo Ranchers used the Vaquero way of herding
    cattle by using horses, roping skills, and used
    saddles with horns.
  • In the late 1700s and early 1800s the ranching
    industry flourished in South Texas between the
    Nueces and Colorado Rivers.
  • Richard King, a New Yorker, bought the Santa
    Gertrudis, an old Spanish land grant of 15,500
    acresLater, it became known as the King Ranch
    which, today, contains more than 1 million acres
  • Theft and drought were common problems for Anglo
    ranchers they understood that a product without
    a market is of little worth.
  • Most cattle were slaughtered for their hides and
    tallow (fat) which could be easily shippedThese
    products brought little profit compared to what
    beef would bring in an eastern cityThe key was
    to get the cattle to the eastern cities

7
Trial Driving Opens the Cattle Market
  • Cattle herds, neglected during the Civil War,
    roamed wild on the plains and multiplied.
  • While the price of cattle in the Southwest was
    about 4 a head, people in the North and East
    paid 30 to 40 a head.
  • When the railroads expanded westward, ranchers
    saw their opportunity.
  • Texas ranchers needed to get their cattle to
    Chicago and St. Louis stockyards.
  • They would drive, or move, the cattle in large
    herds to the railroad towns, which were connected
    to stockyards by rail.
  • Cowhands could drive more than 2,000 heads of
    cattle at a cost lower than 1 a head
  • The longhorns were driven north in the spring,
    when grass was plentiful, so the animals could
    feed off the natural vegetation.

8
Drovers Follow Major Cattle Trials
  • All along the trail, drovers, or people who move
    cattle, found trouble.
  • Missouri farmers complained that the cattle herds
    destroyed their crops and feared that the Texas
    cattle had a disease known as Texas Fever
  • The longhorns were immune to the disease, but the
    ticks carried the disease to other cattle.
  • Angry farmers blocked the trails by building
    fences and barricades.
  • Railroads were persuaded to build new towns with
    everything to house the drovers and their herds
  • Drovers were persuaded to drive their herds
    farther west on the Chisholm Trail to avoid
    MissouriDrovers also used the Great Western
    Trail and the Goodnight-Loving Trail.

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Life Along the Trail Drives
  • The days, which began at sunup, were long and
    hard. A brief noon meal interrupted the days
    travel, which ended just before sundown.
  • Two skillful cowhands rode in front of the herd
    to lead the cattle. Other cowboys rode on each
    side of the herd, while two or three had the
    dusty drag position behind the herd.
  • The distance traveled each day was usually 10 to
    12 miles. At night the cowboys took turns riding
    herd.
  • Trail drivers had to pay tolls to cross the
    Indian Territory usually it cost them several
    old, sick head of cattle that couldnt keep up
    with the herd

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  • Herds of 2,000 to 3,000 were also common. For
    herds that size, usually 8 to 12 cowhands were
    needed, a trial boss, a cook and a wrangler, to
    take care of horses.
  • The cattle towns of Kansas were rowdy places
    where cowhands let of steam after being paid.
  • Many cowhands wisely saved their wages to buy a
    ranch of their own
  • 1885Trail drives endedThe supply of cattle
    became greater than the demandPrices fell
  • Barbed wire fences were everywhereCattle were
    quarantined (enforced isolation) if they were
    suspected of carrying disease
  • Late 1800, Railroads were built in Texas,
    eliminating the need for long cattle drives.

12
Ranching Fact and Fiction
  • The cowboy became an important figure in art,
    literature, music, and movies.
  • The reality of ranching was that it was hard,
    unglamorous work. Cowhands worked long hours.
  • During roundups and trail drives, they often
    spent 18 hours a day in the saddle. Many found
    themselves unemployed in the winter.
  • The typical cowboy was young, single, and poorA
    few made money by performing in rodeos1/6 (17)
    of all cowhands were Mexican AmericanSome were
    African American
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