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Unit One: The Wild West

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Unit One: The Wild West The Cattle Kingdom The Cattle Kingdom The next mass movement of people into the West was into the Southern Plains area of Texas and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unit One: The Wild West


1
Unit One The Wild West
  • The Cattle Kingdom

2
The Cattle Kingdom
  • The next mass movement of people into the West
    was into the Southern Plains area of Texas and
    surrounding areas to ranch and herd cattle on
    what was called the Cattle Frontier.
  • At the end of the Civil War and after the cattle
    industry in the East was destroyed by the war and
    there was a massive influx of immigrants into the
    Eastern Coast cities, a new source of meat
    (cattle) was needed.
  • These conditions and the rising prices in cattle
    led to cattle herding on the Great Plains and the
    growth of the Cattle Kingdom.

3
The Cattle Kingdom
  • The Cattle Kingdom developed on large open field
    estates called ranches in Texas.
  • The Texas ranchers rounded up
    wild cattle herds that roamed the
    area after the Spanish had left
    called Texas Longhorns.
  • The Texas Longhorns were rough durable, but
    were known as the butchers nightmare eight
    pounds of hamburger on 800 pounds of bone and
    horn.
  • To identify cattle herds, a brand
    was burned into the cows side
    with a hot iron poker.

4
The Cattle Kingdom
  • The people who worked on the cattle ranches were
    mostly Civil War veterans that included Freedmen
    (blackmen), Native Americans, and Hispanics known
    as Cowboys or Wranglers. (buckaroo, cowpoke,
    cowhand, and cowpuncher)
  • The Cattle were herded on the open range (large
    public domain grassland of the Plains) and
    allowed to graze across it known as free range
    cattle.
  • Cattle found with no brandings were called
    mavericks and were claimed by anyone who found
    them.

5
Cowboy Terminology
  • Lariat a rope used to catch cattle. (the loop
    is called a hondo)
  • Lasso the action of roping a cow.
  • Spurs metal device placed on a boot to aid in
    walking and riding.
  • Chaps leather wore on the legs to provide
    protection.
  • Bandana cloth worn on face to block out dust.
  • Saddle a leather seat attached to a horse.
  • Stirrup hung from the saddle to place feet in
    while riding.

6
Cowboy Terminology
  • Cowboy Hat various size hats that developed
    from the Mexican sombrero, invented by John
    Stetson called the Boss of the Plains.
  • Rodeo was a competition between cowboys on
    various skills.
  • Mustang or Bronco A wild untamed horse that
    roamed the open range, was broke or busted
    for riding. (stallion-male, mare-female)
  • Bridle placed around the horses head to
    control (reins leather straps used to steer the
    horse)
  • Gun most used a Colt .45 peacemaker (usually a
    six shooter), some also carried a long arm or
    rifle (most popular was the Winchester repeater).

7
Cowboy Equipment
8
Cattle Kingdom
  • The cattle needed to be driven from the Plains
    region to railhead cities (place where the train
    stopped) to be shipped back east to be butchered.
  • To get the cattle to the railheads, cowboys took
    the cattle on long drives (marches).
  • The long drives were lonely, dangerous, and hard
    on the cowboys.
  • The long drives were hard on the cattle causing
    weight loss, also during the transportation to
    regional slaughtering centers like Chicago
    (Armour and Swift slaughterhouses and meatpacking
    companies) cattle would die or become sick.

9
Cattle Kingdom
  • One thing that helped the Cattle Kingdom develop
    into a major business was the invention of the
    refrigerated railway car by Gustavus Swift
    (actually designed by Andrew Chase).
  • This allowed slaughtered meat to be transported
    to further locations allowing for the meat
    packing industry to grow, thus creating demand
    for more meat.
  • Before cow the choice meat of Americans was pork.
    (was smoked and salted, highly unhealthy)

10
Cattle Kingdom
  • The long drive crews included a trail captain,
    chuck wagon (cook), pointers (led the herd) and
    drags (prevented stragglers or weak cattle).
  • The four most dominate cattle trails of the long
    drives were the Sedalia and Baxter Trail,
    Chisholm Trail, Western Trail, and
    Goodnight-Loving Trail.
  • During a long drive if the cattle became scared
    or spooked and ran uncontrollably this was called
    a stampede.

11
The Cattle Trails
12
Cattle Kingdom
  • Along the Western railways railhead towns called
    cow towns developed for the purpose of holding,
    selling, and distribution of cattle.
  • Cow towns worked on the same boom and bust system
    as mining towns and looked just the same.
  • The different cow towns that developed were
    Abilene (first started by Joseph McCoy), Dodge
    City, Laramie, Ellsworth, Sedalia and etc.

13
Cattle Kingdom
  • Cow towns were rough and dangerous places which
    were controlled mostly by vigilante lynch mob
    justice.
  • In Texas law enforcement was taken care of by the
    Texas Rangers.
  • For most of the Plains region federal law
    enforcement was taken care of by U.S. Marshals.
  • The frontier life of the Wild West created a
    national phenomenon of stories and myths of life
    in the West. (the West was only Wild for less
    than thirty years)

14
Wild West Fact vs. Myth
  • The Western frontier created famous marshals such
    as Wyatt Earp and Wild Bill Hickok.
  • Wild Bill Hickok was gunned down in Deadwood
    Colorado by Jack McCall while playing poker. (he
    was holding the deadmans hand, pair of aces and
    eights, all black)
  • Wyatt Earp was famous for jobs in Dodge City, and
    the shoot out at the OK Corral in Tombstone with
    Doc Holiday and his brothers against a group of
    Cowboys recognized by their red sashes.

15
Famous Marshals
Wyatt Earp
Wild Bill Hickok
16
Wild West Fact vs. Myth
  • The West also created famous outlaws such as
    Calamity Jane, Jesse James, Billy the Kid, and
    Butch Cassidy.
  • Calamity Jane was a gunfighter and companion of
    Wild Bill Hickok.
  • Jesse James became famous for robbing trains and
    banks after the Civil War with the James-Younger
    Gang, he was killed by Robert Ford.

17
Famous Outlaws
Jesse James
Calamity Jane
18
Wild West Fact vs. Myth
  • Billy the Kid (aka William H. Bonney) became
    famous during the well- known Lincoln County Wars
    (Range War) between Tuntsall/McSween
    (ranchers/regulators) and the Murphys (General
    store monopoly).
  • Billy the Kid was shot and killed by Pat
    Garrett.
  • Robert LeRoy Parker (Butch Cassidy) was the
    leader of the famous bank/train robbing Wild
    Bunch Gang.
  • Butch Cassidy and Harry Alonzo Longabaugh
    (Sundance Kid) were shot together in a standoff
    with police in Bolivia.

19
Famous Outlaws
The Wild Butch
Billy the Kid
20
Wild West Fact vs. Myth
  • The myth of the wild west was spread by small
    books called dime novels that were widely read
    during the time.
  • One was a famous series of novels wrote by Edward
    Wheeler about a fictional character called
    Deadwood Dick. (thought to be a black cowboy Nat
    Love)
  • Another was the Western novel The Virginian by
    Owen Wister (father of western fiction) that
    romanticized the cowboy life.
  • William F. Buffalo Bill Cody also expanded the
    idea of the Wild West through his Wild West Shows
    featuring fighting cowboys and Indians, Chief
    Sitting Bull, and cowgirl Annie Oakley.

21
Wild West Fact vs. Myth
  • The Dime novels and the Wild West Shows developed
    the stereotype (exaggerated or oversimplified)
    story of the Western Frontier.
  • In 1893 historian Frederick Jackson Turner
    introduced the Turner Thesis stating that the
    American Frontier life had shaped and modeled the
    character of American people, but excluded the
    effect of various ethnic groups and business
    involvement.
  • He also said that the frontier acted as a safety
    valve for discontented city people as an
    opportunity for success and kept down uprisings
    in cities.

22
End of the Open Range
  • The Open Range came to a halt when the bubble on
    cattle prices fell and bad weather conditions,
    but the biggest cause was the fencing off of the
    Plains by farmers due to the invention
    of barb wire by Joseph Gilden.
  • The effect of the Cattle Kingdom was the
    increased mileage of railroads, the creation of
    towns to civilize the west for famers, but the
    biggest was the mass destruction of the wild
    Buffalo.

23
The End of the Buffalo
  • During the 1840s to 1880s the Buffalo were hunted
    to almost extinction with as few as 1,100 left in
    1889.
  • The Buffalo were killed in huge
    numbers for their hide and
    tongues.
  • Many buffalo were just shot
    by people from trains, just for
    sport. (the carcass was left to rot)
  • The mass killing of the buffalo
    was also a direct cause of the Indian Wars during
    this period.
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