IN CONCLUSION
The subsequent history of the ill-fated
Cheyenne and Arapahoe Cattle Company is easily told.
Over ninety per cent of the cattle moved under the
President’s order were missing at the round-up
the following spring. What few survived were
pitiful objects, minus ears and tails, while their
horns, both root and base, were frozen until they drooped
down in unnatural positions. Compared to the previous
one, the winter of 1885-86, with the exception of
the great January blizzard, was the less severe of
the two. On the firm’s range in the Cherokee
Strip our losses were much lighter than during the
previous winter, owing to the fact that food was plentiful,
there being little if any sleet or snow during the
latter year. Had we been permitted to winter in
the Cheyenne and Arapahoe country, considering our
sheltered range and the cattle fully located, ten
per cent would have been a conservative estimate of
loss by the elements. As manager of the company
I lost five valuable years and over a quarter-million
dollars. Time has mollified my grievances until
now only the thorn of inhumanity to dumb beasts remains.
Contrasted with results, how much more humane it would
have been to have ordered out negro troops from Fort
Reno and shot the cattle down, or to have cut the
fences ourselves, and, while our holdings were drifting
back to Texas, trusted to the mercy of the Comanches.
I now understand perfectly why the
business world dreads a political change in administration.
Whatever may have been the policy of one political
party, the reverse becomes the slogan of the other
on its promotion to power. For instance, a few
years ago, the general government offered a bounty
on the home product of sugar, stimulating the industry
in Louisiana and also in my adopted State. A change
of administration followed, the bounty was removed,
and had not the insurance companies promptly canceled
their risks on sugar mills, the losses by fire would
have been appalling. Politics had never affected
my occupation seriously; in fact I profited richly
through the extravagance and mismanagement of the
Reconstruction régime in Texas, and again met the
defeat of my life at the hands of the general government.
With the demand for trail cattle on
the decline, coupled with two severe winters, the
old firm of Hunter, Anthony & Co. was ripe for dissolution.
We had enjoyed the cream of the trade while it lasted,
but conditions were changing, making it necessary to
limit and restrict our business. This was contrary
to our policy, though the spring of 1886 found us
on the trail with sixteen herds for the firm and four
from my own ranches, one half of which were under contract.
A dry summer followed, and thousands of weak cattle
were lost on the trail, while ruin and bankruptcy
were the portion of a majority of the drovers.
We weathered the drouth on the trail, selling our unplaced
cattle early, and before the beef-shipping season began,
our range in the Outlet, including good will, holding
of beeves, saddle horses, and general improvements,
was sold to a Kansas City company, and the old firm
passed out of existence. Meanwhile I had closed
up the affairs of the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Company,
returning a small pro rata of the original investment
to shareholders, charging my loss to tuition in rounding
out my education as a cowman.
The productive capacity of my ranches
for years past safely tided me over all financial
difficulties. With all outside connections severed,
I was then enabled to give my personal attention to
ranching in Texas. I was fortunate in having
capable ranch foremen, for during my almost continued
absence there was a steady growth, together with thorough
management of my mixed cattle. The improved herd,
now numbering over two thousand, was the pride of
my operations in live stock, while my quarter and
three-eighths blood steers were in a class by themselves.
We were breeding over a thousand half and three-quarters
blood bulls annually, and constantly importing the
best strains to the head of the improved herd.
Results were in evidence, and as long as the trail
lasted, my cattle were ready sellers in the upper range
markets. For the following few years I drove
my own growing of steers, usually contracting them
in advance. The days of the trail were numbered;
1889 saw the last herd leave Texas, many of the Northern
States having quarantined against us, and we were
afterward compelled to ship by rail in filling contracts
on the upper ranges.
When Kansas quarantined against Texas
cattle, Dodge was abandoned as a range market.
The trail moved West, first to Lakin and finally to
Trail City, on the Colorado line. In attempting
to pass the former point with four Pan-Handle herds
in the spring of 1888, I ran afoul of a quarantine
convention. The cattle were under contract in
Wyoming, and it was my intention not even to halt
the herds, but merely to take on supplies in passing.
But a deputation met us south of the river, notifying
me that the quarantine convention was in session, and
requesting me not to attempt to cross the Arkansas.
I explained that my cattle were from above the dead
line in Texas, had heretofore gone unmolested wherever
they wished, and that it was out of my way to turn
west and go up through Colorado. The committee
was reasonable, looked over the lead herd, and saw
that I was driving graded cattle, and finally invited
me in to state my case before the convention.
I accompanied the men sent to warn me away, and after
considerable parley I was permitted to address the
assembly. In a few brief words I stated my destination,
where I was from, and the quality of cattle making
up my herds, and invited any doubters to accompany
me across the river and look the stock over.
Fortunately a number of the cattlemen in the convention
knew me, and I was excused while the assembly went
into executive session to consider my case. Prohibition
was in effect at Lakin, and I was compelled to resort
to diplomacy in order to cross the Arkansas River
with my cattle. It was warm, sultry weather in
the valley, and my first idea was to secure a barrel
of bottled beer and send it over to the convention,
but the town was dry. I ransacked all the drug
stores, and the nearest approach to anything that
would cheer and stimulate was Hostetter’s Bitters.
The prohibition laws were being rigidly enforced,
but I signed a “death warrant” and ordered
a case, which the druggist refused me until I explained
that I had four outfits of men with me and that we
had contracted malaria while sleeping on the ground.
My excuse won, and taking the case of bitters on my
shoulder, I bore it away to the nearest livery stable,
where I wrote a note, with my compliments, and sent
both by a darkey around to the rear door of the convention
hall.
On adjournment for dinner, my case
looked hopeless. There was a strong sentiment
against admitting any cattle from Texas, all former
privileges were to be set aside, and the right to quarantine
against any section or state was claimed as a prerogative
of a free people. The convention was patiently
listening to all the oratorical talent present, and
my friends held out a slender hope that once the different
speakers had relieved their minds they might feel easier
towards me, and possibly an exception would be made
in my case. During the afternoon session I received
frequent reports from the convention, and on the suggestion
of a friend I began to skirmish around for a second
case of bitters. There were only three drug stores
in the town, and as I was ignorant of the law, I naturally
went back to the druggist from whom I secured the
first case. To my surprise he refused to supply
my wants, and haughtily informed me that one application
a day was all the law permitted him to sell to any
one person. Rebuffed, I turned to another drug
store, and was greeted by the proprietor, who formerly
ran a saloon in Dodge. He recognized me, calling
me by name; and after we had pledged our acquaintance
anew behind the prescription case, I was confidentially
informed that I could have his whole house and welcome,
even if the State of Kansas did object and he had to
go to jail. We both regretted that the good old
days in the State were gone, but I sent around another
case of bitters and a box of cigars, and sat down
patiently to await results. With no action taken
by the middle of the afternoon, I sent around a third
installment of refreshments, and an hour later called
in person at the door of the convention. The
doorkeeper refused to admit me, but I caught his eye,
which was glassy, and received a leery wink, while
a bottle of bitters nestled cosily in the open bosom
of his shirt. Hopeful that the signs were favorable,
I apologized and withdrew, but was shortly afterwards
sent for and informed that an exception had been made
in my favor, and that I might cross the river at my
will and pleasure. In the interim of waiting,
in case I was successful, I had studied up a little
speech of thanks, and as I arose to express my appreciation,
a chorus of interruptions greeted me: “G’
on, Reed! G’ on, you d——d
old cow-thief! Git out of town or we’ll
hang you!”
With the trail a thing of the past,
I settled down to the peaceful pursuits of a ranchman.
The fencing of ranges soon became necessary, the Clear
Fork tract being first inclosed, and a few years later
owners of pastures adjoining the Double Mountain ranch
wished to fence, and I fell in with the prevailing
custom. On the latter range I hold title to a
little over one million acres, while there are two
hundred sections of school land included in my western
pasture, on which I pay a nominal rental for its use.
All my cattle are now graded, and while no effort
is made to mature them, the advent of cotton-seed
oil mills and other sources of demand have always afforded
me an outlet for my increase. I have branded as
many as twenty-five thousand calves in a year, and
to this source of income alone I attribute the foundation
of my present fortune. As a source of wealth
the progeny of the cow in my State has proven a perennial
harvest, with little or no effort on the part of the
husbandman. Reversing the military rule of moving
against the lines of least resistance, experience
has taught me to follow those where Nature lends its
greatest aid. Mine being strictly a grazing country,
by preserving the native grasses and breeding only
the best quality of cattle, I have always achieved
success. I have brought up my boys to observe
these economics of nature, and no plow shall ever
mar the surface where my cows have grazed, generation
after generation, to the profit and satisfaction of
their owner. Where once I was a buyer in carload
lots of the best strains of blood in the country,
now I am a seller by hundreds and thousands of head,
acclimated and native to the soil. One man to
his trade and another to his merchandise, and the mistakes
of my life justly rebuke me for dallying in paths remote
from my legitimate calling.
There is a close relationship between
a cowman and his herds. My insight into cattle
character exceeds my observation of the human family.
Therefore I wish to confess my great love for the cattle
of the fields. When hungry or cold, sick or distressed,
they express themselves intelligently to my understanding,
and when dangers of night and storm and stampede threaten
their peace and serenity, they instinctively turn
to the refuge of a human voice. When a herd was
bedded at night, and wolves howled in the distance,
the boys on guard easily calmed the sleeping cattle
by simply raising their voices in song. The desire
of self-preservation is innate in the animal race,
but as long as the human kept watch and ward, the sleeping
cattle had no fear of the common enemy. An incident
which I cannot explain, but was witness to, occurred
during the war. While holding cattle for the
Confederate army we received a consignment of beeves
from Texas. One of the men who accompanied the
herd through called my attention to a steer and vouchsafed
the statement that the animal loved music,—that
he could be lured out of the herd with singing.
To prove his assertion, the man sang what he termed
the steer’s favorite, and to the surprise of
every soldier present, a fine, big mottled beef walked
out from among a thousand others and stood entranced
over the simple song. In my younger days my voice
was considered musical; I could sing the folk-songs
of my country better than the average, and when the
herdsmen left us, I was pleased to see that my vocal
efforts fascinated the late arrival from Texas.
Within a week I could call him out with a song, when
I fell so deeply in love with the broad-horn Texan
that his life was spared through my disloyalty.
In the daily issue to the army we kept him back as
long as possible; but when our supply was exhausted,
and he would have gone to the shambles the following
day, I secretly cut him out at night and drove him
miles to our rear, that his life might be spared.
Within a year he returned with another consignment
of beef; comrades who were in the secret would not
believe me; but when a quartette of us army herders
sang “Rock of Ages,” the steer walked
out and greeted us with mute appreciation. We
enjoyed his company for over a month, I could call
him with a song as far as my voice reached, and when
death again threatened him, we cut him to the rear
and he was never spoken again. Loyal as I was
to the South, I would have deserted rather than have
seen that steer go to the shambles.
In bringing these reminiscences to
a close, I wish to bear testimony in behalf of the
men who lent their best existence that success should
crown my efforts. Aside from my family, the two
pleasantest recollections of my life are my old army
comrades and the boys who worked with me on the range
and trail. When men have roughed it together,
shared their hardships in field and by camp-fire like
true comrades, there is an indescribable bond between
them that puts to shame any pretense of fraternal
brotherhood. Among the hundreds, yes, the thousands,
of men who worked for our old firm on the trail, all
feel a pride in referring to former associations.
I never leave home without meeting men, scattered
everywhere, many of them prosperous, who come to me
and say, “Of course you don’t remember
me, but I made a trip over the trail with your cattle,—from
San Saba County in ’77. Jake de Poyster
was foreman. By the way, is your old partner,
the little Yankee major, still living?” The
acquaintance, thus renewed by chance, was always a
good excuse for neglecting any business, and many
a happy hour have I spent, living over again with one
of my old boys the experiences of the past.
I want to say a parting word in behalf
of the men of my occupation. Sterling honesty
was their chief virtue. A drover with an established
reputation could enter any trail town a month in advance
of the arrival of his cattle, and any merchant or
banker would extend him credit on his spoken word.
When the trail passed and the romance of the West
was over, these same men were in demand as directors
of banks or custodians of trust funds. They were
simple as truth itself, possessing a rugged sense
of justice that seemed to guide and direct their lives.
On one occasion a few years ago, I unexpectedly dropped
down from my Double Mountain ranch to an old cow town
on the railroad. It was our regular business
point, and I kept a small bank account there for current
ranch expenses. As it happened, I needed some
money, but on reaching the village found the banks
closed, as it was Labor Day. Casually meeting
an old cowman who was a director in the bank with
which I did business, I pretended to take him to task
over my disappointment, and wound up my arraignment
by asking, “What kind of a jim-crow bank are
you running, anyhow?”
“Well, now, Reed,” said
he in apology, “I really don’t know why
the bank should close to-day, but there must be some
reason for it. I don’t pay much attention
to those things, but there’s our cashier and
bookkeeper,—you know Hank and Bill,—the
boys in charge of the bank. Well, they get together
every once in a while and close her up for a day.
I don’t know why they do it, but those old boys
have read history, and you can just gamble your last
cow that there’s good reasons for closing.”
The fraternal bond between rangemen
recalls the sad end of one of my old trail bosses.
The foreman in question was a faithful man, working
for the firm during its existence and afterwards in
my employ. I would have trusted my fortune to
his keeping, my family thought the world of him, and
many was the time that he risked his life to protect
my interests. When my wife overlooks the shortcomings
of a man, it is safe to say there is something redeemable
in him, even though the offense is drinking.
At idle times and with convivial company, this man
would drink to excess, and when he was in his cups
a spirit of harmless mischief was rampant in him,
alternating with uncontrollable flashes of anger.
Though he was usually as innocent as a kitten, it
was a deadly insult to refuse drinking with him, and
one day he shot a circle of holes around a stranger’s
feet for declining an invitation. A complaint
was lodged against him, and the sheriff, not knowing
the man, thoughtlessly sent a Mexican deputy to make
the arrest. Even then, had ordinary courtesy
been extended, the unfortunate occurrence might have
been avoided. But an undue officiousness on the
part of the officer angered the old trail boss, who
flashed into a rage, defying the deputy, and an exchange
of shots ensued. The Mexican was killed at the
first fire, and my man mounted his horse unmolested,
and returned to the ranch. I was absent at the
time, but my wife advised him to go in and surrender
to the proper authorities, and he obeyed her like a
child.
We all looked upon him as one of the
family, and I employed the best of counsel. The
circumstances were against him, however, and in spite
of an able defense he received a sentence of ten years.
No one questioned the justice of the verdict, the
law must be upheld, and the poor fellow was taken
to the penitentiary to serve out the sentence.
My wife and I concealed the facts from the younger
children, who were constantly inquiring after his
return, especially my younger girls, with whom he
was a great favorite. The incident was worse than
a funeral; it would not die out, as never a day passed
but inquiry was made after the missing man; the children
dreamed about him, and awoke from their sleep to ask
if he had come and if he had brought them anything.
The matter finally affected my wife’s nerves,
the older boys knew the truth, and the younger children
were becoming suspicious of the veracity of their
parents. The truth was gradually leaking out,
and after he had served a year in prison, I began a
movement with the view of securing his pardon.
My influence in state politics was always more or
less courted, and appealing to my friends, I drew up
a petition, which was signed by every prominent politician
in that section, asking that executive clemency be
extended in behalf of my old foreman. The governor
was a good friend of mine, anxious to render me a
service, and through his influence we managed to have
the sentence so reduced that after serving two years
the prisoner was freed and returned to the ranch.
He was the same lovable character, tolerated by my
wife and fondled by the children, and he refused to
leave home for over a year. Ever cautious to remove
temptation from him, both my wife and I hoped that
the lesson would last him through life, but in an
unguarded hour he took to drink, and shot to death
his dearest friend.
For the second offense he received
a life sentence. My regret over securing his
pardon, and the subsequent loss of human life, affected
me as no other event has ever done in my career.
This man would have died for me or one of mine, and
what I thought to be a generous act to a man in prison
proved a curse that haunted me for many years.
But all is well now between us. I make it a point
to visit him at least once a year; we have talked
the matter over and have come to the conclusion that
the law is just and that he must remain in confinement
the remainder of his days. That is now the compact,
and, strange to say, both of us derive a sense of
security and peace from our covenant such as we had
never enjoyed during the year of his liberty.
The wardens inform me that he is a model prisoner,
perfectly content in his restraint; and I have promised
him that on his death, whether it occurs before or
after mine, his remains will be brought back to the
home ranch and be given a quiet grave in some secluded
spot.
For any success that I may have achieved,
due acknowledgment must be given my helpmate.
I was blessed with a wife such as falls to the lot
of few men. Once children were born to our union
and a hearthstone established, the family became the
magnet of my life. It mattered not where my occupation
carried me, or how long my absence from home, the
lodestar of a wife and family was a sustaining help.
Our first cabin, long since reduced to ashes, lives
in my memory as a palace. I was absent at the
time of its burning, but my wife’s father always
enjoyed telling the story on his daughter. The
elder Edwards was branding calves some five miles
distant from the home ranch, but on sighting the signal
smoke of the burning house, he and his outfit turned
the cattle loose, mounted their horses, and rode to
the rescue at a break-neck pace. When they reached
the scene our home was enveloped in flames, and there
was no prospect of saving any of its contents.
The house stood some distance from the other ranch
buildings, and as there was no danger of the fire
spreading, there was nothing that could be done and
the flames held undisputed sway. The cause of
the fire was unknown, my wife being at her father’s
house at the time; but on discovering the flames,
she picked up the baby and ran to the burning cabin,
entered it and rescued the little tin trunk that held
her girlhood trinkets and a thousand certificates
of questionable land scrip. When the men dashed
up, my wife was sitting on the tin trunk, surrounded
by the children, all crying piteously, fully unconscious
of the fact that she had saved the foundation of my
present landed holdings. The cabin had cost two
weeks’ labor to build, its contents were worthless,
but I had no record of the numbers of the certificates,
and to my wife’s presence of mind or intuition
in an emergency all credit is given for saving the
land scrip. Many daughters have done virtuously,
but thou excellest them all. The compiling of
these memoirs has been a pleasant task. In this
summing-up of my active life, much has been omitted;
and then again, there seems to have been a hopeless
repetition with the recurring years, for seedtime
and harvest come to us all as the seasons roll round.
Four of my boys have wandered far afield, forging out
for themselves, not content to remain under the restraint
of older brothers who have assumed the active management
of my ranches. One bad general is still better
than two good ones, and there must be a head to a
ranch if it is to be made a success. I still keep
an eye over things, but the rough, hard work now falls
on younger shoulders, and I find myself delegated
to amuse and be amused by the third generation of
the Anthonys. In spite of my years, I still enjoy
a good saddle horse, scarcely a day passing but I
ride from ten to twenty miles. There is a range
maxim that “the eyes of the boss make a fat horse,”
and at deliveries of cattle, rounds-ups, and branding,
my mere presence makes things move with alacrity.
I can still give the boys pointers in handling large
bodies of cattle, and the ranch outfits seem to know
that we old-time cowmen have little use for the modern
picturesque cowboy, unless he is an all-round man and
can deliver the goods in any emergency.
With but a few years of my allotted
span yet to run, I find myself in the full enjoyment
of all my faculties, ready for a romp with my grandchildren
or to crack a joke with a friend. My younger girls
are proving splendid comrades, always ready for a
horseback ride or a trip to the city. It has
always been a characteristic of the Anthony family
that they could ride a horse before they could walk,
and I find the third generation following in the footsteps
of their elders. My grandsons were all expert
with a rope before they could read, and it is one
of the evidences of a merciful providence that their
lives have been spared, as it is nearly impossible
to keep them out of mischief and danger. To forbid
one to ride a certain dangerous horse only serves
to heighten his anxiety to master the outlaw, and to
banish him from the branding pens means a prompt return
with or without an excuse. On one occasion, on
the Double Mountain ranch, with the corrals full of
heavy cattle, I started down to the pens, but met two
of my grandsons coming up the hill, and noticed at
a glance that there had been trouble. I stopped
the boys and inquired the cause of their tears, when
the youngest, a barefooted, chubby little fellow, said
to me between his sobs, “Grandpa, you’d—you’d—you’d
better keep away from those corrals. Pa’s
as mad as a hornet, and—and—and
he quirted us—yes, he did. If you
fool around down there, he’ll—he’ll—he’ll
just about wear you out.”
Should this transcript of my life
ever reach the dignity of publication, the casual
reader, in giving me any credit for success, should
bear in mind the opportunities of my time. My
lot was cast with the palmy days of the golden West,
with its indefinable charm, now past and gone and
never to return. In voicing this regret, I desire
to add that my mistakes are now looked back to as the
chastening rod, leading me to an appreciation of higher
ideals, and the final testimony that life is well
worth the living.