The American Nation A History of the United States, Combined Volume (14th Edition)

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Open-Range Ranching 451

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Little Big Horn, 1876

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LOUISIANA

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KANSAS

NEBRASKA

MISSOURI

IOWA

ILLINOIS

WISCONSIN

MINNESOTA

TEXAS

SOUTH DAKOTA

NORTH DAKOTA

NEW MEXICO
TERRITORY

OKLAHOMA
TERR.

MONTANA

WYOMING

COLORADO

ARIZONA
TERRITORY

UTAH
NEVADA

OREGON

WASHINGTON

CALIFORNIA

IDAHO

Portland

Seattle

Everett
Spokane

Butte

Helena

Salt
Lake
City

Ogden

San
Francisco

Sacramento Virginia City

Promontory
Cheyenne

Leadville

Denver

Pueblo
Dodge
City

Ellsworth
Wichita

Kansas
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Grand
Forks

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Los Angeles

Yuma

Santa Fé
Albuquerque

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Houston

Shreveport

St. Louis
Sedalia

Chicago

Duluth

New
Orleans
San Antonio

Austin

WorthFort Dallas

St. Joseph
Atchison
Abilene

Cattle trail
Railroad
Mining center
Range of buffalo herds
by 1870

MEXICO

CANADA

Squeezing the Indians Economically, 1850–1893The construction of the railroads, the rise of mining and commercial farming, and vast
open-range herding all weakened the Indians economically and drove them from their lands.


Open-Range Ranching


Soon cattlemen discovered that the hardy Texas
stock could survive the winters of the northern
plains. Attracted by the apparently limitless forage,
they began to bring up herds to stock the vast
regions where the buffalo had so recently roamed.
Introducing pedigreed Hereford bulls, they improved
the stock without weakening its resistance to harsh
conditions. By 1880 some 4.5 million head had
spread across the sea of grass that ran from Kansas to
Montana and west to the Rockies.
The prairie grasses offered ranchers a bonanza
almost as valuable as the gold mines. Open-range


ranching required actual ownership of no more
than a few acres along some watercourse. In this
semiarid region, control of water enabled a rancher
to dominate all the surrounding area back to the
divide separating his range from the next stream
without investing a cent in the purchase of land.
His cattle, wandering freely on the public domain,
fattened on grass owned by all the people, were to
be turned into beefsteak and leather for the profit
of the rancher.
Theoretically, anyone could pasture stock on the
open range, but without access to water it was impos-
sible to do so. “I have 2 miles of running water,” a
cattleman said in testifying before the Public Land
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