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Author Topic: A little something about Cowboys, Guns, and Cattle Drives  (Read 69 times)

Online Uncle Russ

  • TMA Contributing Member
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  • TMA Founder. Walk softly & carry a big Smoothbore!
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  • Location: Columbia Basin, Washington State
A little something about Cowboys, Guns, and Cattle Drives
« on: November 05, 2018, 07:14:32 PM »

THE COWBOY
The historic American cowboy of the late 19th century arose from the vaquero traditions of northern Mexico. The cowboy's distinctive working gear captured the public's image.
The crowned cowboy hat, high-heeled boots, leather chaps, pistol, lariat, and spurs were functional and necessary. As the cowboy adapted to the  differences in terrain, climate, cattle-handling techniques and time, the cowboy's equipment and techniques also adapted, though many classic traditions are still preserved today.
The word Cowboy took on many different names, in 1852 "Cowhand" might have been used, or "cowpoke" in 1881, other names such as Cowpuncher. Wrangler or Buckaroo were also used. "Cowboy" is a term common throughout the west and particularly in the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains, "Buckaroo" is used primarily in the Great Basin and California, and "cowpuncher" mostly in Texas and surrounding states.

HAND GUNS
Samuel Colt patented the first commercial firearm employing a revolving cylinder with multiple chambers aligned with a single stationary barrel in February 1836. The ”Paterson” a 5 shot revolver in .28 caliber, was the first, with a .36 caliber model following a year later. 
Beginning in 1847 Samuel Colt brought the percussion pistol (Cap & Ball) into the fullness of its development.
Colt produced a wide variety of black powder Cap & Ball revolvers between 1847 and 1873.  They included the 1847 Walker, the First, Second, and Third Model Dragoons, the 1862 Pocket Police, the 1848 Baby Dragoon, the 1865 Pocket Navy, the 1860 Army, and the 1851 and 1861 Navy’s. Of course there was other guns, to include Rifles, and Smooth bores or Shotguns, but the Colt side arm was their favorite.

CATTLE DRIVES
Driving Cattle to market from Texas became a regular occupation in 1836 before Texas broke away from Mexico. The first trails delivered cattle to New Orleans then in the 1840s it expanded to Missouri. The Westward expansion during the 1850s caused a demand for oxen. It has been recorded that freight companies utilized some 40,000 oxen to pull the freight wagons to points west.
At the close of the Civil War in 1865, Texas had probably five million cattle—but no market. A few cattleman tried to find markets North without a much financial success. However, in 1865 Philip Danforth Armour opened a meat packing plant in Chicago known as Armour and Company.
The first large-scale effort to drive cattle from Texas to Sedalia, Missouri, the nearest railhead, for shipment to the new packing plant in Chicago occurred in 1866.
The drive failed to reach the rail head due to farmers in Eastern Kansas afraid that transient animals would trample crops and transmit cattle fever to local cattle, formed groups that threatened to beat or shoot cattlemen found on their lands.
By the next year, a cattle shipping facility was built west of farm country around the railhead at Abilene, Kansas, and became a center of cattle shipping, loading over 36,000 head of cattle in its first year. The route from Texas to Abilene became known as the Chisholm Trail, named for Jesse Chisholm who marked out the route. Later, other trails forked off to different railheads, including those at Dodge City and Wichita, Kansas.
By 1877, the largest of the cattle-shipping boom towns, Dodge City, Kansas, shipped out 500,000 head of cattle.
The typical drive comprised 1,500-2,500 head of cattle. The typical outfit consisted of a boss, from ten to fifteen Cowboys, each of whom had a string of from five to ten horses; a horse wrangler who handled the horses, and a Cook, who drove the Chuck Wagon.
The wagon carried the Bedrolls; tents were considered excess luxury.
Ten or twelve miles was considered a good day's drive, as the cattle had to thrive on the route, as Market Value went up and down depending on condition.
The Cowboys menu consisted of bread, meat, beans with bacon, and coffee.
Wages were about $40 a month, paid when the herd was sold.

(Copy & Paste from the Possibles Shop)

Russ...
It's the many things we don't do that totally sets us apart.
TMA Co-Founder / Charter Member# 4

Online Winter Hawk

Re: A little something about Cowboys, Guns, and Cattle Drives
« Reply #1 on: November 05, 2018, 08:58:24 PM »
Got a ten dollar horse,
and a forty dollar saddle,
I'm on my way to punch Texas cattle!
Come a ti yi yippee yippee yay, yippee yay,
Come a ti yi yippee yippee yay!

 :laffing :laffing :laffing

~Kees~
NMLRA Life
"All you need for happiness is a good gun, a good horse and a good wife." - D. Boone
USN June 1962-Nov. 65, USS Philip, DD-498

Dues paid to 02 Jan. 2027

Online Uncle Russ

  • TMA Contributing Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 7345
  • Total likes: 77
  • TMA Founder. Walk softly & carry a big Smoothbore!
  • TMA Member: Founder / Charter Member #004
  • Location: Columbia Basin, Washington State
Re: A little something about Cowboys, Guns, and Cattle Drives
« Reply #2 on: November 05, 2018, 09:41:07 PM »
Got a ten dollar horse,
and a forty dollar saddle,
I'm on my way to punch Texas cattle!
Come a ti yi yippee yippee yay, yippee yay,
Come a ti yi yippee yippee yay!

 :laffing :laffing :laffing

~Kees~

 :lol sign

Yup! Come a ti yi yippee yippee yay!

Russ...
It's the many things we don't do that totally sets us apart.
TMA Co-Founder / Charter Member# 4