Cowboys
“Here was all these cheap long-horned steers over-running
Texas; here was the rest of the country crying out for beef -- and no
railroads in Texas to get them out. So they trailed them out, across
hundreds of miles of wild country."
Teddy Blue Abbott
From the southernmost tip of Texas, cattle trails
pointed north -- the Shawnee, the Chisholm, the Western, the
Goodnight-Loving. They all led to railheads, where the cattle were
loaded into freight cars bound for eastern markets.
In less than two decades six million steers and cows were
moved along them; so many, one trail driver said, that in places the
dust was knee-deep to the cattle. The men who brought them to the
railroads were given a new name "cowboys."
They were a mixed group: former Confederate
cavalry men and immigrants who had only recently learned to ride; there
were Indian cowboys and African-Americans -- and Mexican vaqueros,
whose ancestors had introduced cattle to the West centuries earlier. A
cowboy, one westerner observed, is "just a plain bowlegged human who
smelled very horsey at times."
"In person the cowboys were mostly medium-sized men...
quick and wiry, and as a rule very good-natured; in fact, it did not
pay to be anything else. In character, their like never was or will be
again."
Teddy Blue Abbott
Edward C. Abbott was born in Cranwich, England, and brought to
the West by his parents as a boy. Hoping the open air would improve his
frail health, his father let him help drive a herd of cattle from Texas
to Nebraska when he was just 10 years old. The experience, Abbott said
later, "made a cowboy out of me. Nothing could have changed me after
that."
"My family and I went separate ways, and they
stayed separate forever after. My father was all for farming... and all
my brothers turned out farmers except one, and he ended up the worst of
the lot -- a sheep-man, and a Republican."
Teddy Blue Abbott
The cowboys' average age was 24. They were paid so badly, and
worked so hard, that two-thirds of them made only one trail drive
before finding something better to do. They owned their saddle, but not
the horse they rode -- and they rode it day and night.
For a man to be stove up at thirty may sound strange to
some people, but many a cowboy has been so bunged up that he has to
quit riding that early in life... My advice to any young man or boy is
to stay at home and not be a rambler, as it won't buy you anything.
James Emmit McCauley
"If a storm come and the cattle started running -- you'd
hear that low rumbling noise along the ground... then you'd jump for
your horse and get out there in the lead, trying to head them and get
them into a mill before they scattered to hell and gone. It was riding
at a dead run in the dark, with cut banks and prairie dog holes all
around you, not knowing if the next jump would land you in a shallow
grave."
"The singing was
supposed to soothe the cattle and it did... The two men on guard would
circle around with their horses on a walk, if it was a clear night and
the cattle was bedded down and quiet, and one man would sing a verse of
a song, and his partner on the other side of the herd would sing
another verse; and you'd go through a whole song that way... I had a
crackerjack of a partner in '79. I'd sing and he'd answer, and we'd
keep it up like that for two hours. But he was killed by lightning."
Teddy Blue Abbott
After up to four straight months in the saddle, often in the
same clothes every day, eating every meal at the chuck wagon, drinking
nothing but coffee and water, the cowboy's job was finally done -- he
was paid for his work, and turned loose in town.
"I bought some new
clothes and got my picture taken... I had a new white Stetson hat that
I paid ten dollars for, and new pants that cost twelve dollars, and a
good shirt and fancy boots. Lord, I was proud of those clothes! When my
sister saw me, she said: "Take your pants out of your boots and put
your coat on. You look like an outlaw." I told her to go to hell. And I
never did like her after that. "
Teddy Blue Abbott
Cowboys were big spenders, but while businesses profited, all
the cowtowns soon became wilder than their permanent residents liked.
The Marshal has posted up printed
notices, informing all persons that the ordinance against carrying
firearms or other weapons in Abilene
will be enforced. That's right. There's no bravery in carrying
revolvers in a civilized community.
Abilene Chronicle
Gun control ordinances were common; cowboys who insisted on
carrying their six-shooters in town risked fines and imprisonment. To
make sure the laws were obeyed, some cowtowns resorted to hiring
notorious gunmen -- Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, and Wild Bill Hickok --
to keep the peace.
Morally, as a class, cowboys are
foulmouthed, blasphemous, drunken, lecherous, utterly corrupt. Usually
harmless on the plains when sober, they are dreaded in towns, for then
liquor has an ascendancy over them.
Cheyenne Daily Leader
One by one, the cowtowns would declare themselves off-limits
to the Texas herds and the cowboys who came with them.
"Then I went home. After I got home my father said to me
one night: 'You can take old Morgan... and plow the west ridge
tomorrow.' Like hell I'd plow the west ridge. And when he woke up next
morning, Teddy was gone."
Teddy Blue Abbott
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