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  1. During three decades it had moved over ten million cattle and one million range horses, stamped the entire West with its character, given economic and personality prestige to Texas, made the longhorn historic, glorified the cowboy over the globe, and endowed America with its most romantic tradition relating to any occupation.

  2. Jun 20, 2017 · Within a year of returning home from the battlefield, Texas cowboys drove an estimated quarter-million cattle north, making Texas the world’s undisputed ranching and cattle capital.

    • Ron Soodalter
  3. Apr 23, 2012 · The book Trail Driving Days, by Dee Brown and Martin F. Schmitt, offers a very detailed look at the mechanics of driving a herd of cattle hundreds of miles to a rail head. A typical drive of 3,500 head of cattle, and there were drives of many more head, might require eighteen cowboys.

  4. Sep 8, 2021 · The history of cattle drives can teach us a lot about life on the American frontier. Few time periods produced as many iconic figures as the American West during the 19th century. Mountain men, cowboys, Oregon Trail pioneers, horseback Native American warriors; they all found glory during that brie

  5. Mar 14, 2022 · Cowboys herded cattle, cared for horses, made repairs to fences and buildings, worked cattle drives and sometimes lived in frontier towns. They were not always welcome as they travelled, as they had reputations of being drunk, disorderly and even violent.

    • Shannon Callahan
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  6. Apr 26, 2010 · Cowboys originated with the Spanish settlers in modern Mexico, before becoming synonymous with the American West during the cattle drives of the 1800s.

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  8. Instead of taking herds to Kansas, cowboys increasingly drove them to Wyoming, Montana, and the Dakotas, where cattle companies hoped to fatten improved breeds on the free grass of the public domain. Low costs and high prices promised dependable profits of 40 percent annually, encouraging a stampede to cover every acre of the former “buffalo ...

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