Details for Last Great Panhandle Cattle Drive to Montana

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5065003044

Data

Marker Number 3044
Atlas Number 5065003044
Marker Title Last Great Panhandle Cattle Drive to Montana
Index Entry Last Great Panhandle Cattle Drive to Montana
Address
City White Deer
County Carson
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 304821
UTM Northing 3924127
Subject Codes ranches/ranching; cattle, cattle industry topics
Marker Year 1965
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location US 60, E. City Limits, White Deer
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Each Spring and Summer after 1880, many Texas herds went up the trail to Northern states for fattening. For the cowboys, trail drives meant hard work. They had to turn stampedes, ford rivers and quicksand streams, and fight Indians and cattle thieves. They endured hunger, thirst, and other physical hardships. The Last Great Texas Panhandle Drive was organized here at N Bar N (N-N) Headquarters. Ranch manager was J.L. Harrison; trail boss T.L. (Tom) Coffee. 100 cowboys drove 10 herds, each with 2500 cattle, or a total of 25,000 beeves, to Montana from April to September 1892. The cattle belonged to Niedringhaus Brothers, German tinsmiths of St. Louis, who put into ranching a fortune made in enamel granite household wares. From 1882 to1886, N Bar N leased range in Carson and neighboring counties from the Francklyn Land & Cattle Company, a British syndicate backed by Cunard Steamship Line. Afterward this range belonged to White Deer Land Company. The N Bar N outfit left here because White Deer Land Company wanted the range cleared of large herds. By 1907 the 650,000 acres of its land was offered for sale to small ranchers and farmers. It was fenced and the steam plow introduced to turn the rich, grassy sod.

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