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Trailing the Longhorns

Trailing the Longhorns
Author: Sue Flanagan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 209
Release: 1974-01-01
Genre: Cattle trade
ISBN: 9780890520338

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In this book, Sue Flanagan focuses her camera skillfully on the three major cattle trails to capture "the lasting spell cast by a land that is different from drover days, yet the same.


Trailing the Longhorns

Trailing the Longhorns
Author: Sue Flanagan
Publisher: Madrona Pub
Total Pages: 290
Release: 1974-06-01
Genre: Cattle Trade - West (U.S.) - History
ISBN: 9780890520086

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Trailing the Longhorns

Trailing the Longhorns
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 240
Release: 1974
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

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In this book, Sue Flanagan focuses her camera skillfully on the three major cattle trails to capture "the lasting spell cast by a land that is different from drover days, yet the same.


The Long Trail of the Texas Longhorns

The Long Trail of the Texas Longhorns
Author: Ruth Whitehead Chorlian
Publisher:
Total Pages: 62
Release: 1986
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780890155400

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Describes the history of longhorn cattle in the New World from their arrival from Spain in 1493 to their eventual home on the range lands of Texas and other parts of the United States.


Texas Women on the Cattle Trails

Texas Women on the Cattle Trails
Author: Sara R. Massey
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 348
Release: 2006
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781585445431

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Tells the stories of sixteen women who drove cattle up the trail from Texas during the last half of the nineteenth century.


Up the Trail

Up the Trail
Author: Tim Lehman
Publisher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 259
Release: 2018-08-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 1421425912

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How did cattle drives come about—and why did the cowboy become an iconic American hero? Cattle drives were the largest, longest, and ultimately the last of the great forced animal migrations in human history. Spilling out of Texas, they spread longhorns, cowboys, and the culture that roped the two together throughout the American West. In cities like Abilene, Dodge City, and Wichita, buyers paid off ranchers, ranchers paid off wranglers, and railroad lines took the cattle east to the packing plants of St. Louis and Chicago. The cattle drives of our imagination are filled with colorful cowboys prodding and coaxing a line of bellowing animals along a dusty path through the wilderness. These sturdy cowhands always triumph over stampedes, swollen rivers, and bloodthirsty Indians to deliver their mighty-horned companions to market—but Tim Lehman’s Up the Trail reveals that the gritty reality was vastly different. Far from being rugged individualists, the actual cow herders were itinerant laborers—a proletariat on horseback who connected cattle from the remote prairies of Texas with the nation’s industrial slaughterhouses. Lehman demystifies the cowboy life by describing the origins of the cattle drive and the extensive planning, complicated logistics, great skill, and good luck essential to getting the cows to market. He reveals how drives figured into the larger story of postwar economic development and traces the complex effects the cattle business had on the environment. He also explores how the premodern cowboy became a national hero who personified the manly virtues of rugged individualism and personal independence. Grounded in primary sources, this absorbing book takes advantage of recent scholarship on labor, race, gender, and the environment. The lively narrative will appeal to students of Texas and western history as well as anyone interested in cowboy culture.


The Long Trail

The Long Trail
Author: Gardner Soule
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Companies
Total Pages: 376
Release: 1976
Genre: History
ISBN:

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To survive after the Civil War, settlers in Texas turned to raising, rounding up, and driving cattle to railheads in Kansas, or to on-the-spot buyers elsewhere in the midwest. This is the story of that heyday.


Up the Trail from Texas

Up the Trail from Texas
Author: James Frank Dobie
Publisher:
Total Pages: 196
Release: 1955
Genre: African American cowboys
ISBN:

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Cowboys who drove herds of Texas cattle up the Chisholm Trail have interested readers, both young and old, for more than seventy-five years. Now the true story of trail-driving has been written by J. Frank Dobie, authority on the history and tradition of range life in the West. In the period following the Civil War, longhorns were driven north by the hundreds of thousands each year to be sold in rollicky cow towns and to stock vast ranges taken from the buffaloes. Indians, scarcity of water, floods, lightning, stampedes--these were only some of the dangers confronting trail drivers. There were no fences. Grass was free--and so was life. Among the characters in the book are Joseph G. McCoy, who established the first cattle market in Abilene, Kansas--terminus of the Chisholm Trail Walter Billingsley, who bossed "the biggest trail herd" for mighty King Ranch; and Charles Goodnight and Oliver Loving, who blazed a trail to New Mexico. When he was young, Mr. Dobie knew many old-time trail drivers and took down their stories. Here he gives them, along with a wealth of information and anecdotes concerning the remuda men, chuck wagon cooks, trail bosses, cow horses, bell mares, longhorned steers and other types of trail-driving history. Here is the real story of the real cowboy of the old West at the peak of his career -- Book jacket.


Longhorn Trail

Longhorn Trail
Author: Lauran Paine
Publisher: Center Point
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2009
Genre: Cattle drives
ISBN: 9781602856097

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A Western Duo: The Killing at Pipestone and Longhorn Trail.


Longhorn Trail

Longhorn Trail
Author: Kenneth Ulyatt
Publisher: Puffin
Total Pages: 336
Release: 1974-01-01
Genre: Children's stories
ISBN: 9780140307221

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