HOLDING THE FORT
As in many other lines of business,
there were ebb and flood tides in cattle. The
opening of the trail through to the extreme Northwest
gave the range live stock industry its greatest impetus.
There have always been seasons of depression and advances,
the cycles covering periods of ten to a dozen years,
the duration of the ebb and stationary tides being
double that of the flood. Outside influences have
had their bearing, and the wresting of an empire from
its savage possessors in the West, and its immediate
occupancy by the dominant race in ranching, stimulated
cattle prices far beyond what was justified by the
laws of supply and demand. The boom in live stock
in the Southwest which began in the early ’80’s
stands alone in the market variations of the last
half-century. And as if to rebuke the folly of
man and remind him that he is but grass, Nature frowned
with two successive severe winters, humbling the kings
and princes of the range.
Up to and including the winter of
1883-84 the loss among range cattle was trifling.
The country was new and open, and when the stock could
drift freely in advance of storms, their instincts
carried them to the sheltering coulees, cut banks,
and broken country until the blizzard had passed.
Since our firm began maturing beeves ten years before,
the losses attributable to winter were never noticed,
nor did they in the least affect our profits.
On my ranches in Texas the primitive law of survival
of the fittest prevailed, the winter-kill falling sorest
among the weak and aging cows. My personal loss
was always heavier than that of the firm, owing to
my holdings being mixed stock, and due to the fact
that an animal in the South never took on tallow enough
to assist materially in resisting a winter. The
cattle of the North always had the flesh to withstand
the rigors of the wintry season, dry, cold, zero weather
being preferable to rain, sleet, and the northers
that swept across the plains of Texas. The range
of the new company was intermediate between the extremes
of north and south, and as we handled all steer cattle,
no one entertained any fear from the climate.
I passed a comparatively idle winter
at my home on the Clear Fork. Weekly reports
reached me from the new ranch, several of which caused
uneasiness, as our fences were several times cut on
the southwest, and a prairie fire, the work of an
incendiary, broke out at midnight on our range.
Happily the wind fell, and by daybreak the smoke arose
in columns, summoning every man on the ranch, and the
fire was soon brought under control. As a precaution
to such a possibility we had burned fire-guards entirely
around the range by plowing furrows one hundred feet
apart and burning out the middle. Taking advantage
of creeks and watercourses, natural boundaries that
a prairie fire could hardly jump, we had cut and quartered
the pasture with fire-guards in such a manner that,
unless there was a concerted action on the part of
any hirelings of our enemies, it would have been impossible
to have burned more than a small portion of the range
at any one time. But these malicious attempts
at our injury made the outfit doubly vigilant, and
cutting fences and burning range would have proven
unhealthful occupations had the perpetrators, red or
white, fallen into the hands of the foreman and his
men. I naturally looked on the bright side of
the future, and in the hope that, once the entire range
was fenced, we could keep trespassers out, I made preparations
for the spring drive.
With the first appearance of grass,
all the surplus horses were ordered down to Texas
from the company ranch. There was a noticeable
lull at the cattle convention that spring, and an absence
of buyers from the Northwest was apparent, resulting
in little or no trouble in contracting for delivery
on the ranch, and in buying on company account at
the prevailing prices of the spring before. Cattle
were high enough as it was; in fact the market was
top-heavy and wobbling on its feet, though the brightest
of us cowmen naturally supposed that current values
would always remain up in the pictures. As manager
of the new company, I bought and contracted for fifty
thousand steers, ten herds of which were to be driven
on company account. All the cattle came from
the Pan-Handle and north Texas, above the quarantine
line, the latter precaution being necessary in order
to avoid any possibility of fever, in mixing through
and northern wintered stock. With the opening
of spring two of my old foremen were promoted to assist
in the receiving, as my contracts called for everything
to be passed upon on the home range before starting
the herds. Some little friction had occurred
the summer before with the deliveries at the company
ranch in an effort to turn in short-aged cattle.
All contracts this year and the year before called
for threes, and frequently several hundred long twos
were found in a single herd, and I refused to accept
them unless at the customary difference in price.
More or less contention arose, and, for the present
spring, I proposed to curb all friction at home, allotting
to my assistants the receiving of the herds for company
risk, and personally passing on seven under contract.
The original firm was still in the
field, operating exclusively in central Texas and
Pan-Handle cattle. Both my ranches sent out their
usual contribution of steers and cows, consigned to
the care of the firm, which was now giving more attention
to quality than quantity. The absence of the
men from the Northwest at the cattle convention that
spring was taken as an omen that the upper country
would soon be satiated, a hint that retrenchment was
in order, and a better class of stock was to receive
the firm’s attention in its future operations.
My personal contingent of steers would have passed
muster in any country, and as to my consignment of
cows, they were pure velvet, and could defy competition
in the upper range markets. Everything moved out
with the grass as usual, and when the last of the
company herds had crossed Red River, I rode through
to the new ranch. The north and east line of
fence was nearing completion, the western string was
joined to the original boundary, and, with the range
fully inclosed, my ranch foreman, the men, and myself
looked forward to a prosperous future.
The herds arrived and were located,
the usual round-up outfits were sent out wherever
there was the possibility of a stray, and we settled
down in pastoral security. The ranch outfit had
held their own during the winter just passed, had
trailed down stolen cattle, and knew to a certainty
who the thieves were and where they came from.
Except what had been slaughtered, all the stock was
recovered, and due notice given to offenders that
Judge Lynch would preside should any one suspected
of fence-cutting, starting incendiary fires, or stealing
cattle be caught within the boundaries of our leases.
Fortunately the other cowmen were tiring of paying
tribute to the usurpers, and our determined stand
heartened holders of cattle on the reservation, many
of whom were now seeking leases direct from the tribes.
I made it my business personally to see every other
owner of live stock occupying the country, and urge
upon them the securing of leases and making an organized
fight for our safety. Lessees in the Cherokee
Strip had fenced as a matter of convenience and protection,
and I urged the same course on the Cheyenne and Arapahoe
reservation, offering the free use of our line fences
to any one who wished to adjoin our pastures.
In the course of a month, nearly every acre of the
surrounding country was taken, only one or two squaw-men
holding out, and these claiming their ranges under
Indian rights. The movement was made so aggressive
that the usurpers were driven into obscurity, never
showing their hand again until after the presidential
election that fall.
During the summer a deputation of
Cheyennes and Arapahoes visited me at ranch headquarters.
On the last lease taken, and now inclosed in our pasture,
there were a number of wild plum groves, covering
thousands of acres, and the Indians wanted permission
to gather the ripening fruit. Taking advantage
of the opportunity, in granting the request I made
it a point to fortify the friendly relations, not only
with ourselves, but with all other cattlemen on the
reservation. Ten days’ permission was given
to gather the wild plums, camps were allotted to the
Indians, and when the fruit was all gathered, I barbecued
five stray beeves in parting with my guests. The
Indian agent and every cowman on the reservation were
invited, and at the conclusion of the festival the
Quaker agent made the assembled chiefs a fatherly
talk. Torpid from feasting, the bucks grunted
approval of the new order of things, and an Arapahoe
chief, responding in behalf of his tribe, said that
the rent from the grass now fed his people better
than under the old buffalo days. Pledging anew
the fraternal bond, and appointing the gathering of
the plums as an annual festival thereafter, the tribes
took up their march in returning to their encampment.
I was called to Dodge but once during
the summer of 1884. My steers had gone to Ogalalla
and were sold, the cows remaining at the lower market,
all of which had changed owners with the exception
of one thousand head. The demand had fallen off,
and a dull close of the season was predicted, but
I shaded prices and closed up my personal holdings
before returning. Several of the firm’s
steer herds were unsold at Dodge, but on the approach
of the shipping season I returned to my task, and
we began to move out our beeves with seven outfits
in the saddle. Four round trips were made to the
crew, shipping out twenty thousand double and half
that number of single wintered cattle. The grass
had been fine that summer, and the beeves came up in
prime condition, always topping the market as range
cattle at the markets to which they were consigned.
That branch of the work over, every energy was centred
in making the ranch snug for the winter. Extra
fire-guards were plowed, and the middles burned out,
cutting the range into a dozen parcels, and thus,
as far as possible, the winter forage was secured
for our holdings of eighty thousand cattle. Hay
and grain contracts had been previously let, the latter
to be freighted in from southern Kansas, when the
news reached us that the recent election had resulted
in a political change of administration. What
effect this would have on our holding cattle on Indian
lands was pure conjecture, though our enemies came
out of hiding, gloating over the change, and swearing
vengeance on the cowmen on the Cheyenne and Arapahoe
reservation.
The turn of the tide in cattle prices
was noticeable at all the range markets that fall.
A number of herds were unsold at Dodge, among them
being one of ours, but we turned it southeast early
in September and wintered it on our range in the Outlet.
The largest drive in the history of the trail had
taken place that summer, and the failure of the West
and Northwest to absorb the entire offerings of the
drovers made the old firm apprehensive of the future.
There was a noticeable shrinkage in our profits from
trail operations, but with the supposition that it
was merely an off year, the matter was passed for
the present. It was the opinion of the directors
of the new company that no dividends should he declared
until our range was stocked to its full capacity,
or until there was a comfortable surplus. This
suited me, and, returning home, I expected to spend
the winter with my family, now increased to four girls
and six boys.
But a cowman can promise himself little
rest or pleasure. After a delightful week spent
on my western ranch, I returned to the Clear Fork,
and during the latter part of November a terrible norther
swept down and caught me in a hunting-camp twenty-five
miles from home. My two oldest boys were along,
a negro cook, and a few hands, and in spite of our
cosy camp, we all nearly froze to death. Nothing
but a roaring fire saved us during the first night
of its duration, and the next morning we saddled our
horses and struck out for home, riding in the face
of a sleet that froze our clothing like armor.
Norther followed norther, and I was getting uneasy
about the company ranch, when I received a letter
from Major Hunter, stating that he was starting for
our range in the Outlet and predicting a heavy loss
of cattle. Headquarters in the Indian Territory
were fully two hundred and fifty miles due north,
and within an hour after receiving the letter, I started
overland on horseback, using two of my best saddlers
for the trip. To have gone by rail and stage would
have taken four days, and if fair weather favored
me I could nearly divide that time by half. Changing
horses frequently, one day out I had left Red River
in my rear, but before me lay an uninhabited country,
unless I veered from my course and went through the
Chickasaw Nation. For the sake of securing grain
for the horses, this tack was made, following the old
Chisholm trail for nearly one hundred miles. The
country was in the grip of winter, sleet and snow
covering the ground, with succor for man and horse
far apart. Mumford Johnson’s ranch on the
Washita River was reached late the second night, and
by daybreak the next morning I was on the trail, making
Quartermaster Creek by one o’clock that day.
Fortunately no storms were encountered en route, but
King Winter ruled the range with an iron hand, fully
six inches of snow covering the pasture, over which
was a crusted sleet capable of carrying the weight
of a beef. The foreman and his men were working
night and day to succor the cattle. Between storms,
two crews of the boys drifted everything back from
the south line of fence, while others cut ice and
opened the water to the perishing animals. Scarcity
of food was the most serious matter; being unable
to reach the grass under its coat of sleet and snow,
the cattle had eaten the willows down to the ground.
When a boy in Virginia I had often helped cut down
basswood and maple trees in the spring for the cattle
to browse upon, and, sending to the agency for new
axes, I armed every man on the ranch with one, and
we began felling the cottonwood and other edible timber
along the creeks and rivers in the pasture. The
cattle followed the axemen like sheep, eating the
tender branches of the softer woods to the size of
a man’s wrist, the crash of a falling tree bringing
them by the dozens to browse and stay their hunger.
I swung an axe with the men, and never did slaves
under the eye of a task-master work as faithfully or
as long as we did in cutting ice and falling timber
in succoring our holding of cattle. Several times
the sun shone warm for a few days, melting the snow
off the southern slopes, when we took to our saddles,
breaking the crust with long poles, the cattle following
to where the range was bared that they might get a
bit of grass. Had it not been for a few such
sunny days, our loss would have been double what it
was; but as it was, with the general range in the clutches
of sleet and snow for over fifty days, about twenty
per cent, of our holdings were winter-killed, principally
of through cattle.
Our saddle stock, outside of what
was stabled and grain-fed, braved the winter, pawing
away the snow and sleet in foraging for their subsistence.
A few weeks of fine balmy weather in January and February
followed the distressing season of wintry storms, the
cattle taking to the short buffalo-grass and rapidly
recuperating. But just when we felt that the
worst was over, simultaneously half a dozen prairie
fires broke out in different portions of the pasture,
calling every man to a fight that lasted three days.
Our enemies, not content with havoc wrought by the
elements, were again in the saddle, striking in the
dark and escaping before dawn, inflicting injuries
on dumb animals in harassing their owners. That
it was the work of hireling renegades, more likely
white than red, there was little question; but the
necessity of preserving the range withheld us from
trailing them down and meting out a justice they so
richly deserved. Dividing the ranch help into
half a dozen crews, we rode to the burning grass and
began counter-firing and otherwise resorting to every
known method in checking the consuming flames.
One of the best-known devices, in short grass and
flank-fires, was the killing of a light beef, beheading
and splitting it open, leaving the hide to hold the
parts together. By turning the animal flesh side
down and taking ropes from a front and hind foot to
the pommels of two saddles, the men, by riding apart,
could straddle the flames, virtually rubbing the fire
out with the dragging carcass. Other men followed
with wet blankets and beat out any remaining flames,
the work being carried on at a gallop, with a change
of horses every mile or so, and the fire was thus constantly
hemmed in to a point. The variations of the wind
sometimes entirely checked all effort, between midnight
and morning being the hours in which most progress
was accomplished. No sooner was one section of
the fire brought under control than we divided the
forces and hastened to lend assistance to the next
nearest section, the cooks with commissaries following
up the firefighters. While a single blade of
grass was burning, no one thought of sleeping, and
after one third of the range was consumed, the last
of the incendiary fires was stamped out, when we lay
down around the wagons and slept the sleep of exhaustion.
There was still enough range saved
to bring the cattle safely through until spring.
Leaving the entire ranch outfit to ride the fences—several
lines of which were found cut by the renegades in
entering and leaving the pasture—and guard
the gates, I took train and stage for the Grove.
Major Hunter had returned from the firm’s ranch
in the Strip, where heavy losses were encountered,
though it then rested in perfect security from any
influence except the elements. With me, the burning
of the company range might be renewed at any moment,
in which event we should have to cut our own fences
and let the cattle drift south through an Indian country,
with nothing to check them except Red River.
A climax was approaching in the company’s existence,
and the delay of a day or week might mean inestimable
loss. In cunning and craftiness our enemies were
expert; they knew their control of the situation fully,
and nothing but cowardice would prevent their striking
the final, victorious blow. My old partner and
I were a unit as to the only course to pursue,—one
which meant a dishonorable compromise with our enemies,
as the only hope of saving the cattle. A wire
was accordingly sent East, calling a special meeting
of the stockholders. We followed ourselves within
an hour. On arriving at the national capital,
we found that all outside shareholders had arrived
in advance of ourselves, and we went into session
with closed doors and the committee on entertainment
and banquets inactive. In as plain words as the
English language would permit, as general manager
of the company, I stated the cause for calling the
meeting, and bluntly suggested the only avenue of escape.
Call it tribute, blackmail, or what you will, we were
at the mercy of as heartless a set of scoundrels as
ever missed a rope, whose mercenaries, like the willing
hirelings that they were, would cheerfully do the
bidding of their superiors. Major Hunter, in his
remarks before the meeting, modified my rather radical
statement, with the more plausible argument that this
tribute money was merely insurance, and what was five
or ten thousand dollars a year, where an original
investment of three millions and our surplus were in
jeopardy? Would any line—life, fire,
or marine—carry our risk as cheaply?
These men had been receiving toll from our predecessors,
and were then in a position to levy tribute or wreck
the company.
Notwithstanding our request for immediate
action, an adjournment was taken. A wire could
have been sent to a friend in Fort Reno that night,
and all would have gone well for the future security
of the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Cattle Company.
But I lacked authority to send it, and the next morning
at the meeting, the New England blood that had descended
from the Puritan Fathers was again in the saddle,
shouting the old slogans of no compromise while they
had God and right on their side. Major Hunter
and I both keenly felt the rebuke, but personal friends
prevented an open rupture, while the more conservative
ones saw brighter prospects in the political change
of administration which was soon to assume the reins
of government. A number of congressmen and senators
among our stockholders were prominent in the ascendant
party, and once the new régime took charge, a general
shake-up of affairs in and around Fort Reno was promised.
I remembered the old maxim of a new broom; yet in spite
of the blandishments that were showered down in silencing
my active partner and me, I could almost smell the
burning range, see the horizon lighted up at night
by the licking flames, hear the gloating of our enemies,
in the hour of their victory, and the click of the
nippers of my own men, in cutting the wire that the
cattle might escape and live.
I left Washington somewhat heartened.
Major Hunter, ever inclined to look on the bright
side of things, believed that the crisis had passed,
even bolstering up my hopes in the next administration.
It was the immediate necessity that was worrying me,
for it meant a summer’s work to gather our cattle
on Red River and in the intermediate country, and
bring them back to the home range. The mysterious
absence of any report from my foreman on my arrival
at the Grove did not mislead me to believe that no
news was good news, and I accordingly hurried on to
the front. There was a marked respect shown me
by the civilians located at Fort Reno, something unusual;
but I hurried on to the agency, where all was quiet,
and thence to ranch headquarters. There I learned
that a second attempt to burn the range had been frustrated;
that one of our boys had shot dead a white man in the
act of cutting the east string of fence; that the
same night three fires had broken out in the pasture,
and that a squad of our men, in riding to the light,
had run afoul of two renegade Cheyennes armed with
wire-nippers, whose remains then lay in the pasture
unburied. Both horses were captured and identified
as not belonging to the Indians, while their owners
were well known. Fortunately the wind veered
shortly after the fires started, driving the flames
back against the plowed guards, and the attempt to
burn the range came to naught. A salutary lesson
had been administered to the hirelings of the usurpers,
and with a new moon approaching its full, it was believed
that night marauding had ended for that winter.
None of our boys recognized the white man, there being
no doubt but he was imported for the purpose, and
he was buried where he fell; but I notified the Indian
agent, who sent for the remains of the two renegades
and took possession of the horses. The season
for the beginning of active operations on trail and
for ranch account was fast approaching, and, leaving
the boys to hold the fort during my absence, I took
my private horses and turned homeward.