Changes in cowboys, Ranchers vs homesteaders Flashcards
Who were cowboys?
mostly young single men from different races
Many were former soldiers or drifters
some were criminals on the run
what were cowboys like
tough, hard-working and often hard-drinking
How long did cowboys ride for on long trials
between 12 and 24 hours a day in all weathers
Why could life as a cowboy be lonely?
because they often worked miles apart
ranches vs trails: work period
trails : work was seasonal, from spring round - up to the long drive in the autumn
Ranches: work was year- round and full- time, but fewer were needed
what did cowboys on the trials do as their job?
- they rounded up, branded and drove cattle hundreds of miles.
- looked after sick and injured cattle
what did cowboys on the ranches do as their job?
- rounded up, branded and drove to the market over much smaller distances
- checked ranch boundaries
- mended fences
- looked after sick and injured cattle
What were the dangers of working on the trail? (7)
stampeding cattle,
wild animals,
crossing rivers
quicksand,
rustlers,
hostile Indians
extreme weather
What were the dangers of working on the ranch?
rustlers, wild animals and Indian attacks were still threats even though there were fewer dangers than on the trails
ranches vs trails: habitat
Trails: slept in the open air and cooked on campfires
Ranches: bunkhouses and use cookhouses
How did trail cowboys spend their free time?
visited saloons and brothels in cow town
How did ranch cowboys spend their free time?
drinking, gambling, guns and knives were banned. many struggled to adapt to this lifestyle.
Explain ranchers reliance on public land
Ranching on the open range needed a lot of land (at least 2,000 acres) in order for cattle to roam around and have a lot to eat
Federal law said everyone could pasture livestock on public land for free
ranchers divided up the range between themselves
What was the rancher’s problem with homesteaders?
Under the homestead act, people started filing claims to turn 160-acre plots of public land into homesteads which threatened ranching
What were the tactics that the ranchers used to block homesteaders?
- Filing homestead claims themselves to all the parts of the range that homesteaders might be interested in
- Buying and fencing just enough land to block off access to other plots
- taking homesteaders to court over rights to the land, knowing that homesteader s were too poor to pay court fees
- threatening homesteaders with violence, damaging their crops and accused them of rustling cows from the ranch’s herd : this resulted in severe punishments