About this ebook
"The men who ride the open range of the far West are known under a variety of names: vaquero, range rider, mustanger and buckaroo, but the name most commonly known is cowboy. The nature of a cowboy's work demands independence and toughness. He is a man of action; yet the long, lonely hours spent in the saddle provide ample time to develop a unique outlook on life. Simply put, a cowboy's tenet is, 'What cannot be cured is endured.' And endured with cheerfulness and good humor. It is far better to joke about the droughts, windstorms, blizzards, outlaw mustangs and loco cattle than to complain.
The cowboy would never have existed without his horse. Like the cowboy, the horse is referred to by an assortment of names: mustang, bronco, cayuse and, sometimes, jughead, broomtail, nag, hay burner, plug and other even less complimentary epithets. The ancestors of the western horse date back to the animals brought to America by Cortez and the conquistadores. As the Spanish mounts escaped, were lost or stolen, the horse began its phenomenal spread across western North America.
The high desert was first settled by daring stockmen who drove in foundation herds, numbering in the thousands. The cattle thrived on the native grasses and when the steers were ready for market, cowboys on horseback drove them to railroad towns in the Midwest. With the invention of barbed wire in 1874 and an influx of homesteaders who claimed waterholes and divided up the range, the heyday of the big outfits and their cowboys passed into history. But as long as there is open sky, rimrock, bunch grass, sagebrush and juniper, cowboys will still ride the range.
"
Rick Steber
RICK STEBER grew up in Alaska running sled dogs. He is the author of a number of nonfiction books set in the Pacific Northwest. He lives in Oregon.
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Tales of the Wild West - Rick Steber
Introduction
The men who ride the open range of the West are known under a variety of names: vaquero, range rider, mustanger and buckaroo; but the name most commonly known is cowboy.
The nature of a cowboy’s work demands independence and toughness. He is a man of action; yet the long, lonely hours spent in the saddle provide ample time to develop a unique outlook on life. Simply put, a cowboy’s tenet is, What cannot be cured is endured.
And endured with cheerfulness and good humor. It is far better to joke about the droughts, windstorms, blizzards, outlaw mustangs and loco cattle than to complain.
The cowboy could never exist without the horse. Like the cowboy, the horse is referred to by an assortment of names: mustang, bronco, cayuse and, sometimes, jughead, broomtail, nag, hay burner, plug and other even less complimentary epithets. The ancestors of the western horse date back to the animals brought to America by Cortez and the conquistadors. As the Spanish mounts escaped, were lost or stolen, the horse began its phenomenal spread across North America.
The West was first settled by daring stockmen who drove in foundation cattle herds, numbering in the thousands. The cattle thrived on the native grasses and when the steers were ready for market, cowboys on horseback drove them to railroad towns in the Midwest.
With the invention of barbed wire in 1874 and an influx of homesteaders who claimed waterholes and divided up the range, the heyday of the big outfits and the cowboys passed into history. But as long as there is open sky, rimrock, bunch grass, sagebrush and juniper, cowboys will still ride the range.
First Cattle Drive
Mountain man Ewing Young made himself a name and a fortune by driving the first herd of cattle overland to the Oregon Country.
In the fall of 1837 Young founded the Willamette Cattle Company. He selected nine Willamette Valley settlers (none of them had experience herding stock) to accompany him to California on a cattle buying mission.
Young began purchasing cattle near San Francisco Bay, paying $3 a head until his funds were depleted. With a herd numbering nearly 800 head they started north. But the Spanish long-horned cattle were difficult to handle and they had to be denied water and starved into submission before the drive could begin.
Rivers posed the greatest danger to the cowboys and the cattle. At the San Joaquin River crossing the cattle refused to go into the water. Young and the drivers had to rope the cattle and drag them to the other side. This process took a full week and nearly 100 animals were drowned.
The drive continued up the long valley and over the imposing Siskiyou mountain range. Eventually the herd was driven into the Willamette Valley where the settlers were eager to buy cattle. Of the 800 head that started the drive 632 survived. Young made a profit of 150% on the cattle he sold making him the wealthiest man in the Oregon Country.
The cattle belonging to Young were allowed to run wild into the foothills of the coast range. Upon his death there was no one to care for the cattle. They multiplied and within a few years became so troublesome to the settlers, frightening and chasing women and children, they were hunted and slaughtered for the meat.
Texas Cattle
Con Shea drifted down from Canada and worked for a while as a blacksmith in the Owyhee mines before being approached by a group of moneyed men — some say one of the madams of a Silver City house also was involved — to trail the first herd of longhorn cattle from Texas to Oregon.
Con, his brothers Jerry and Tim, and a small group of cowboys traveled to Texas where they put together a herd of 1,000 head. They drove them north to Kansas over established cattle trails and then swung west over the route of the Oregon Trail.
Con rode ahead to locate water and grass for noon camp while the cowboys moved the cattle: two on point — one on each side, two in the swing, two in the flank and the rest bringing up the drag. At the end of the day the cattle were allowed to graze at the bedding ground. The theory was if they were full they would not cause trouble during the