The Cattle Kingdom

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  • The Cattle Kingdom
    • The open range
      • Ranches on the Great Plains were 'open range' - no fences and cattle were free to graze wherever
      • Herds mingled without supervision
        • At the spring and autumn round up calves were branded with the same mark as their mothers
        • Breeding cows were set free for another year and steers (castrated males) set aside for the drive to the railway
    • Cattlemen and Homesteaders often clashed
      • Longhorn cattle carried a tick which carried a disease called Texas Fever
        • The tough Longhorns were immune to it but homesteaders' cattle weren't
          • Meant Homesteaders often lost cattle when herds were driven across their land
            • Lack of wood for fences meant many crops were also destroyed by passing herds
      • From 1874 the introduction of barbed wire  made stock-proof fencing cheap
        • Homesteaders fenced their land, reducing cattlemen's access to water and making cattle drives much harder
    • Changing tastes and hard winter ended the Bonanza
      • Eastern markets began to demand higher quality of meat than the Longhorn could provide
        • Ranchers like Iliff and Goodnight started crossbreeding Longhorns with Herefords-meatier but less resistant to harsh conditions
      • States passed quarantine laws-from 1885 Kansas shut its borders to Texas cattle between March and November
      • The herds became to big for grazing areas. Meant underfed cattle entered the terrible winter of 1886-7 in weakened conditions
        • Homesteaders' fences became death traps as cattle piled against them during blizzards
      • Businesses which survived the 1880s economised by raising better-quality animals on smaller land units,shifting towards a more managed environment
        • Ranching now depends on the ability to feed livestock in winter, so dependence on irrigation increased
      • More intensive ranching also favoured smaller scale operations- family owned rather than corporate
      • Ranchers, like homesteaders, now use barbed wire enclosures
        • Cowboys became domesticated ranch hands with the change from open range to fenced pasture

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