|
 
Legends Home
Site Map
What's New!!
Content Categories:
American History
Destinations-States
Ghost Towns
Ghostly Legends
Historic People
Native Americans
Old West
Route 66
Travel Center
Treasure Tales
Legends Of America's

Old West Mercantile
Route 66 Emporium
TeePee Trading Post
Book Shelf
DVDs
Postcard Rack
Tin Signs
and
Much More!

Legends Of
America's Photo Print Shop

Ghost Town Prints
Native American
Prints
Old West Prints
Route 66 Prints
and
Much More!!

About Us
Advertising
Article/Photo
Use
Copyright
Information
Blog
Forum
Guestbook
Links
Newsletter
Privacy Policy
Writing Credits
We welcome corrections
and feedback!
Contact Us
| |
|
|
Desperado of the Plains - Page
2 |
|

|
|
<<
Previous
1 2
Next >> |
|
"It is very easy to see how temptation
was offered to the cow thief and 'brand blotter.' Here were all these wild
cattle running loose over the country. The imprint of a hot iron on a hide
made the creature the property of the brander, provided no one else had
branded it before. The time of priority was matter of proof. With the
handy "running-iron" or straight rod, which was always attached to his
saddle when he rode out, could not the cow thief erase a former brand and
put over it one of his own? Could he not, for instance, change a U into
an O, or a V into a diamond, or a half-circle into a circle? Could he not,
moreover, kill and skin an animal and sell the beef as his own? Between
him and the owner was only this little mark. Between him and changing this
mark was nothing but his moral principles. The range was very wide. Hardly
a figure would show on that un-winking horizon all day long. And what was a
heifer here and there?"
Such was the temptation and opportunity which
led many a man to step over the line between right and wrong. Their excuse
lies in the fact that the line was newly drawn and that it was often vague
and inexact.
|

This diagram illustrates
the manner in which cow brands were changed.
The original brand
appears in each case to the left, and the various alterations follow.
|
|
It was easy, from
killing or re-branding an occasional cow, to see the profits of larger
operation. The faithful
cowboys who cared for these herds and protected
them even with their lives in the interest of absent owners began in time
to tire of working on a salary, and settled down into little ranches of
their own, starting with a herd of cattle lawfully purchased and branded.
An occasional maverick came across their range and they branded it. A
brand was faint and not legible, and they put their own iron over it. They
learned that pyrography with a hot poker was very profitable. The rest was
easy. The first step was the one that counted; but who could tell where
that first step was taken? At any rate, cattle owners began to take notice
of their cows as the prices went up, and they had laws made to protect
property rapidly enhancing in value. Cow owners were required to have
fixed or stencil-irons, and were forbidden to trace a pattern with a
straight iron or "running-iron." Each ranch must have its own iron or
stencil.
Texas as early as the
'60's and 'yo's passed laws forbidding the
use of the running-iron altogether, so that after that it was not safe to
be caught riding the range with a straight iron under the saddle flap. Any
man so discovered had to do some quick explaining. The next step after
this was the organization of the cattle associations in the several
territories and states which made the home of the cattle trade. These
associations banded together in a national association. Detectives were
placed at the stockyards in Chicago and Kansas City, charged with the
finding of cattle stolen on the range and shipped with or without clean
brands. In short, there had now grown up an armed and legal warfare
between the cow men themselves -- in the first place very large-handed
thieves -- and the rustlers and "little fellows" who were accused of being
too liberal with their brand blotching. The prosecution of these men was
undertaken with something of the old vigor that characterized the pursuit
of horse thieves, with this difference, that, whereas all the world had
hated a horse thief as a common enemy, very much of the world found excuse
for the so-called rustler, who was known to be doing only what his
accusers had done before him.
There may be a certain interest attaching to the methods of the
range riders of this day, and those who care to go into the history of the
cattle trade in its early days are referred to the work earlier quoted,
where the matter is more fully covered.
The rustler might brand with his own straight
running-iron, as it were, writing over again the brand he wished to
change; but this was clumsy and apt to be detected, for the new wound
would slough and look suspicious. A piece of red-hot hay wire or telegraph
wire was a better tool, for this could be twisted into the shape of almost
any registered brand, and it would so cunningly connect the edges of both
that the whole mark would seem to be one scar of the same date.
|
|
|
|

Rustlers |
The
fresh burn fitted in with the older one so that it was impossible to swear
that it was not a part of the first brand mark. Yet another way of
softening a fresh and fraudulent brand was to brand through a wet blanket
with a heavy iron, which thus left a wound deep enough, but not apt to
slough, and so betray a brand done long after the round-up, and hence
subject to scrutiny.
As to the ways in which brands were altered in their lines,
these were many and most ingenious. A sample page will be sufficient to
show the possibilities of the art by which the rustler set over to his own
herds on the free range the cows of his far-away neighbor, whom, perhaps,
he did not love as himself.
|
|
Such, then, was the burglar of the
range, the rustler, to whom most of the mysterious and untraceable crimes
were ascribed. Such also were the excuses to be offered for some of the
men who did what to them did not seem wrong acts. The sudden hostility of
the newly-come cow men embittered and inflamed them, and from this it was
easy and natural to the arbitrament of arms.
The bad men of the plains dates to
this era, and his acts may be attributed to these causes. There were to be
found among these men many refugees and
outlaws, as well as many better
men gone wrong through point of view. Fierce and far were the battles
between the rustlers and the cow barons. Commerce had its way at last. The
lawless man had to go, and he had to go even before the law had come.
The
vigilantes of the cattle range,
organizing first in
Montana and working southward, made a clean sweep in
their work. In one campaign they killed somewhere between sixty and eighty
men accused of cattle rustling. They hung thirteen men on one railroad
bridge one morning in northwestern
Nebraska. The statement is believed to
be correct that, in the ten years from 1876 to 1886, they executed more
men without process of law than have been executed under the law in all
the United States since then. These lynchings also were against the law.
In short, it may perhaps begin to appear to those who study into the
history of our earlier civilization that the term "law" is a very wide and
lax and relative one, and one extremely difficult of exact application.
Go To Next Chapter -
Wild Bill Hickok
Compiled and
edited by
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated March,
2010.
|
Other Works by Emerson Hough:
The Story of
the Outlaw - A Study of the Western Desperado - Entire Text
The Cattle Kings
The Cattle Trails
Cowboys on the American Frontier
The Frontier In History
The Indian Wars
Mines of
Idaho & Montana
Pathways To the West
The Range of
the American West
|
About the Author: Excerpted from
the book The Story of the
Outlaw; A Study of the Western Desperado, by
Emerson Hough;
Outing Publishing Company, New York, 1907. This story is not verbatim as
it has been edited for clerical errors and updated for the modern reader.
About the Author:
Emerson Hough (1857–1923).was an
author and journalist who wrote factional accounts and historical novels
of life in the
American
West. His works helped establish the Western as a popular genre in
literature and motion pictures.
For years,
Hough wrote the feature "Out-of-Doors" for the Saturday
Evening Post and contributed to other major magazines.
|
|
<<
Previous
1 2
Next >> |
|
From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Old
West Postcards - If you
love collecting postcards of the
Old West,
you're going to love these. All of these postcards are very unique
and we have only one of them, so don't miss the opportunity to buy now.
To see them all, click
HERE!
 |
|
|