The inquiry was over before noon.
A lieutenant detailed a few men and made a pretense
of taking possession of Lovell. But once the
special commissioner was out of sight, the farce was
turned into an ovation, and nearly every officer in
the post came forward and extended his sympathy.
Old man Don was visibly affected by the generous manifestations
of the military men in general, and after thanking
each one personally, urged that no unnecessary demonstration
should be made, begging that the order of escort beyond
the boundary of the reservation be countermanded.
No one present cared to suggest it, but gave assurance
that it would be so modified as not in any way to
interfere with the natural movement of the herds.
Some little time would be required to outfit the forage-wagons
to accommodate the cavalry companies, during which
my brother rode up, leading Lovell’s horse,
permission was given to leave in advance of the escort,
and we all mounted and quietly rode away.
The sudden turn of affairs had disconcerted
every man in the three outfits. Just what the
next move would be was conjecture with most of us,
though every lad present was anxious to know.
But when we were beyond the immediate grounds, Lovell
turned in his saddle and asked which one of us foremen
wanted to winter in the North. No one volunteered,
and old man Don continued: “Anticipating
the worst, I had a long talk this morning with Sanders,
and he assured me that our cattle would go through
any winter without serious loss. He suggested
the Little Missouri as a good range, and told me of
a hay ranch below the mouth of the Beaver. If
it can be bought reasonably, we would have forage for
our horses, and the railroad is said to be not over
forty miles to the south. If the government can
afford to take the risk of wintering cattle in this
climate, since there is no other choice, I reckon
I’ll have to follow suit. Bob and I will
take fresh horses and ride through to the Beaver this
afternoon, and you fellows follow up leisurely with
the cattle. Sanders says the winters are dry
and cold, with very little if any snowfall. Well,
we’re simply up against it; there’s no
hope of selling this late in the season, and nothing
is left us but to face the music of a Northern winter.”
As we turned in to ford the Missouri,
some one called attention to a cavalry company riding
out from their quarters at the post. We halted
a moment, and as the first one entered the road, the
second one swung into view, followed by forage-wagons.
From maps in our possession we knew the southern boundary
of the Fort Buford military reservation must be under
twenty miles to the south, and if necessary, we could
put it behind us that afternoon. But after crossing
the river, and when the two troops again came in view,
they had dropped into a walk, passing entirely out
of sight long before we reached Forrest’s camp.
Orders were left with the latter to take the lead and
make a short drive that evening, at least far enough
to convince observers that we were moving. The
different outfits dropped out as their wagons were
reached, and when my remuda was sighted, old man Don
ordered it brought in for a change of horses.
One of the dayherders was at camp getting dinner,
and inviting themselves to join him, my employer and
my brother helped themselves while their saddles were
shifted to two of my well-rested mounts. Inquiry
had been made of all three of the outfits if any ranch
had been sighted on the Beaver while crossing that
creek, but the only recollection among the forty-odd
men was that of Burl Van Vedder, who contended that
a dim trail, over which horses had passed that summer,
ran down on the south side of the stream.
With this meagre information Lovell
and my brother started. A late dinner over and
the herders relieved, we all rode for the nearest
eminence which would afford us a view. The cavalry
were just going into camp below O’Brien’s
ranch, their forage-train in sight, while Forrest’s
cattle were well bunched and heading south. Sponsilier
was evidently going to start, as his team was tied
up and the saddle stock in hand, while the herd was
crossing over to the eastern side of the Yellowstone.
We dismounted and lay around for an hour or so, when
the greater portion of the boys left to help in the
watering of our herd, the remainder of us doing outpost
duty. Forrest had passed out of sight, Sponsilier’s
wagon and remuda crossed opposite us, going up the
valley, followed by his cattle in loose grazing order,
and still we loitered on the hill. But towards
evening I rode down to where the cavalry was encamped,
and before I had conversed very long with the officers,
it was clear to me that the shorter our moves the
longer it would extend their outing. Before I
left the soldier camp, Sanders arrived, and as we
started away together, I sent him back to tell the
officers to let me know any time they could use half
a beef. On reaching our wagon, the boys were just
corralling the saddle stock for their night-horses,
when Sanders begged me to sell him two which had caught
his fancy. I dared not offer them; but remembering
the fellow’s faithful service in our behalf,
and that my employer expected to remember him, I ordered
him to pick, with Don Lovell’s compliments, any
horse in the remuda as a present.
The proposition stunned Sanders, but
I insisted that if old man Don was there, he would
make him take something. He picked a good horse
out of my mount and stayed until morning, when he was
compelled to return, as the probabilities were that
they would receive the other cattle some time during
the day. After breakfast, and as he was starting
to return, he said, “Well, boys, tell the old
man that I don’t expect ever to be able to return
his kindness, though I’d ride a thousand miles
for the chance. One thing sure, there isn’t
a man in Dakota who has money enough to tempt me to
part with my pelon. If you locate down on the
Little Missouri, drop me a line where you are at, and
if Lovell wants four good men, I can let him have
them about the first of December. You through
lads are liable to be scared over the coming winter,
and a few acclimated ones will put backbone in his
outfit. And tell the old man that if I can ever
do him a good turn just to snap his fingers and I’ll
quit the government—he’s a few shades
whiter than it, anyhow.”
The herd had already left the bed-ground,
headed south. About five miles above O’Brien’s,
we recrossed to the eastern side of the Yellowstone,
and for the next three days moved short distances,
the military always camped well in our rear. The
fourth morning I killed a beef, a forage-wagon came
forward and took half of it back to the cavalry camp
with our greetings and farewell, and we parted company.
Don Lovell met us about noon, elated as a boy over
his purchase of the hay ranch. My brother had
gone on to the railroad and thence by train to Miles
City to meet his remuda and outfit. “Boys,
I have bought you a new home,” was the greeting
of old man Don, as he dismounted at our noon camp.
“There’s a comfortable dugout, stabling
for about ten horses, and seventy-five tons of good
hay in the stack. The owner was homesick to get
back to God’s country, and he’ll give us
possession in ten days. Bob will be in Little
Missouri to-day and order us a car of sacked corn
from Omaha, and within a month we’ll be as snug
as they are down in old Medina. Bob’s outfit
will go home from Miles, and if he can’t sell
his remuda he’ll bring it up here. Two
of these outfits can start back in a few days, and
afterward the camp will be reduced to ten men.”
Two days later Forrest veered off
and turned his cattle loose below the junction of
the Beaver with the Little Missouri. Sponsilier
crossed the former, scattering his beeves both up and
down the latter, while I cut mine into a dozen bunches
and likewise freed them along the creek. The
range was about ten miles in length along the river,
and a camp was established at either end where men
would be stationed until the beeves were located.
The commissaries had run low, there was a quiet rivalry
as to which outfits should go home, and we all waited
with bated breath for the final word. I had Dorg
Seay secretly inform my employer that I had given
Sanders a horse without his permission, hoping that
it might displease him. But the others pointed
out the fact that my outfit had far the best remuda,
and that it would require well-mounted men to locate
and hold that number of cattle through the winter.
Old man Don listened to them all, and the next morning,
as all three of us foremen were outlining certain
improvements about the hay ranch with him, he turned
to me and said:
“Tom, I hear you gave Sanders
a horse. Well, that was all right, although it
strikes me you were rather liberal in giving him the
pick of a choice remuda. But it may all come right
in the long run, as Bob and I have decided to leave
you and your outfit to hold these cattle this winter.
So divide your men and send half of them down to Quince’s
camp, and have your cook and wrangler come over to
Dave’s wagon to bring back provision and the
horses, as we’ll start for the railroad in the
morning. I may not come back, but Bob will, and
he’ll see that you are well fixed for the winter
before he goes home. After he leaves, I want you
to write me every chance you have to send a letter
to the railroad. Now, I don’t want any
grumbling out of you or your men; you’re a disgrace
to the state that raised you if you can’t handle
cattle anywhere that any other man can.”
I felt all along it would fall to
me, the youngest of six foremen; and my own dear brother
consigning me to a winter in the North, while he would
bask in the sunshine of our own sunny South!
It was hard to face; but I remembered that the fall
before it had been my lot to drive a thousand saddle
horses home to the ranch, and that I had swaggered
as a trail foreman afterward as the result. It
had always been my luck to have to earn every little
advance or promotion, while others seemed to fall into
them without any effort. Bob Quirk never saw the
day that he was half the all-round cowman that I was;
yet he was above me and could advise, and I had to
obey.
On the morning of the 25th of September,
1884, the two outfits started for the railroad, leaving
the remainder of us in a country, save for the cattle,
so desolate that there was no chance even to spend
our wages. I committed to memory a curtain lecture
for my brother, though somehow or other it escaped
me and was never delivered. We rode lines between
the upper and lower wagons, holding the cattle loosely
on a large range. A delightful fall favored us,
and before the first squall of winter came on, the
beeves had contented themselves as though they had
been born on the Little Missouri. Meanwhile Bob’s
wagon and remuda arrived, the car of corn was hauled
to our headquarters, extra stabling was built, and
we settled down like banished exiles. Communication
had been opened with Fort Buford, and in the latter
part of October the four promised men arrived, when
Bob Quirk took part of my outfit and went home, leaving
me ten men. Parent remained as cook, the new
men assimilated easily, a fiddle was secured, and
in fulfillment of the assertion of Sanders, we picked
up courage. Two grain-fed horses, carefully stabled,
were allowed to each man, the remainder of our large
number of saddle stock running free on the range.
To that long winter on the Little
Missouri a relentless memory turns in retrospect.
We dressed and lived like Eskimos. The first
blizzard struck us early in December, the thermometer
dropped sixty degrees in twelve hours, but in the
absence of wind and snow the cattle did not leave
the breaks along the river. Three weeks later
a second one came, and we could not catch the lead
animals until near the railroad; but the storm drove
them up the Little Missouri, and its sheltering banks
helped us to check our worst winter drift. After
the first month of wintry weather, the dread of the
cold passed, and men and horses faced the work as
though it was springtime in our own loved southland.
The months rolled by scarcely noticed. During
fine weather Sanders and some of his boys twice dropped
down for a few days, but we never left camp except
to send letters home.
An early spring favored us. I
was able to report less than one per cent. loss on
the home range, with the possibility of but few cattle
having escaped us during the winter. The latter
part of May we sold four hundred saddle horses to
some men from the upper Yellowstone. Early in
June a wagon was rigged out, extra men employed, and
an outfit sent two hundred miles up the Little Missouri
to attend the round-ups. They were gone a month
and came in with less than five hundred beeves, which
represented our winter drift. Don Lovell reached
the ranch during the first week in July. One
day’s ride through the splendid cattle, and old
man Don lost his voice, but the smile refused to come
off. Everything was coming his way. Field,
Radcliff & Co. had sued him, and the jury awarded
him one-hundred thousand dollars. His bankers
had unlimited confidence in his business ability;
he had four Indian herds on the trail and three others
of younger steers, intended for the Little Missouri
ranch. Cattle prices in Texas had depreciated
nearly one half since the spring before—“a
good time for every cowman to strain his credit and
enlarge his holdings,” my employer assured me.
Orders were left that I was to begin
shipping out the beeves early in August. It was
the intention to ship them in two and three train-load
lots, and I was expecting to run a double outfit,
when a landslide came our way. The first train-load
netted sixty dollars a head at Omaha—but
they were beeves; cods like an ox’s heart and
waddled as they walked. We had just returned
from the railroad with the intention of shipping two
train-loads more, when the quartermaster and Sanders
from Fort Buford rode into the ranch under an escort.
The government had lost forty per cent. of the Field-Radcliff
cattle during the winter just passed, and were in
the market to buy the deficiency. The quartermaster
wanted a thousand beeves on the first day of September
and October each, and double that number for the next
month. Did we care to sell that amount? A
United States marshal, armed with a search-warrant,
could not have found Don Lovell in a month, but they
were promptly assured that our beef steers were for
sale. It is easy to show prime cattle. The
quartermaster, Sanders, and myself rode down the river,
crossed over and came up beyond our camp, forded back
and came down the Beaver, and I knew the sale was
made. I priced the beeves, delivered at Buford,
at sixty-five dollars a head, and the quartermaster
took them.
Then we went to work in earnest.
Sanders remained to receive the first contingent for
Buford, which would leave our range on the 25th of
each month. A single round-up and we had the beeves
in hand. The next morning after Splann left for
the mouth of the Yellowstone, I started south for
the railroad with two train-loads of picked cattle.
Professional shippers took them off our hands at the
station, accompanied them en route to market, and
the commission house in Omaha knew where to remit the
proceeds. The beef shipping season was on with
a vengeance. Our saddle stock had improved with
a winter in the North, until one was equal to two
Southern or trail horses. Old man Don had come
on in the mean time, and was so pleased with my sale
to the army post that he returned to Little Missouri
Station at once and bought two herds of three-year-olds
at Ogalalla by wire. This made sixteen thousand
steer cattle en route from the latter point for Lovell’s
new ranch in Dakota.
“Tom,” said old man Don,
enthusiastically, “this is the making of a fine
cattle ranch, and we want to get in on the flood-tide.
There is always a natural wealth in a new country,
and the goldmines of this one are in its grass.
The instinct that taught the buffalo to choose this
as their summer and winter range was unerring, and
they found a grass at hand that would sustain them
in any and all kinds of weather. This country
to-day is just what Texas was thirty years ago.
All the early settlers at home grew rich without any
effort, but once the cream of the virgin land is gone,
look out for a change. The early cowmen of Texas
flatter themselves on being shrewd and far-seeing—just
about as much as I was last fall, when I would gladly
have lost twenty-five thousand dollars rather than
winter these cattle. Now look where I will come
out, all due to the primitive wealth of the land.
From sixty to sixty-five dollars a head beats thirty-seven
and a half for our time and trouble.”
The first of the through cattle arrived
early in September. They avoided our range for
fear of fever, and dropped in about fifteen miles
below our headquarters on the Little Missouri.
Dorg Seay was one of the three foremen, Forrest and
Sponsilier being the other two, having followed the
same route as our herds of the year before. But
having spent a winter in the North, we showed the
through outfits a chilling contempt. I had ribbed
up Parent not even to give them a pleasant word about
our wagon or headquarters; and particularly if Bob
Quirk came through with one of the purchased herds,
he was to be given the marble heart. One outfit
loose-herded the new cattle, the other two going home,
and about the middle of the month, my brother and
The Rebel came trailing in with the last two herds.
I was delighted to meet my old bunkie, and had him
remain over until the last outfit went home, when
we reluctantly parted company. Not so, however,
with Bob Quirk, who haughtily informed me that he
came near slapping my cook for his effrontery.
“So you are another one of these lousy through
outfits that think we ought to make a fuss over you,
are you?” I retorted. “Just you wait
until we do. Every one of you except old Paul
had the idea that we ought to give you a reception
and ask you to sleep in our beds. I’m glad
that Parent had the gumption to give you a mean look;
he’ll ride for me next year.”
The month of October finished the
shipping. There was a magic in that Northern
climate that wrought wonders in an animal from the
South. Little wonder that the buffalo could face
the blizzard, in a country of his own choosing, and
in a climate where the frost king held high revel
five months out of the twelve. There was a tonic
like the iron of wine in the atmosphere, absorbed alike
by man and beast, and its possessor laughed at the
fury of the storm. Our loss of cattle during
the first winter, traceable to season, was insignificant,
while we sold out over two hundred head more than
the accounts called for, due to the presence of strays,
which went to Buford. And when the last beef was
shipped, the final delivery concluded to the army,
Don Lovell was a quarter-million dollars to the good,
over and above the contract price at which he failed
to deliver the same cattle to the government the fall
before.
As foreman of Lovell’s beef
ranch on the Little Missouri I spent five banner years
of my life. In ’89 the stock, good-will,
and range were sold to a cattle syndicate, who installed
a superintendent and posted rules for the observance
of its employees. I do not care to say why, but
in a stranger’s hands it never seemed quite
the same home to a few of us who were present when
it was transformed into a cattle range. Late that
fall, some half-dozen of us who were from Texas asked
to be relieved and returned to the South. A traveler
passing through that country to-day will hear the
section about the mouth of the Beaver called only
by the syndicate name, but old-timers will always lovingly
refer to it as the Don Lovell Ranch.