Introduction: The Chisholm Trail was no one’s idea. No single individual cut a path from Texas to Kansas. No one person emerged from the instability and confusion of the postbellum Great Plains to say, “This is how the cattle industry can thrive today.” No one could claim he discovered the trail; no one could claim it as his
Introduction: Of all the archetypes and folk heroes that populate American culture, none looms large...
This paper addresses how the cattle trails affected the Native American tribes in Indian Territory. ...
Introduction: In the late nineteenth century, thousands sought adventure and fortune on the cattle t...
Introduction: It all began with grass, large expanses of unbroken ground that had sustained bison an...
Introduction: During the eighteen years that Texas cattle were driven north on the Chisholm Trail, a...
Introduction: The Kansas portion of the Chisholm Trail, located just west of the Flint Hills, ran ro...
Introduction: Before the Civil War, most Texas cattle were driven in small herds to markets by their...
Introduction: The nineteenth century created the cattle business, but it also created cattle, or at ...
Introduction: Oral history tells of a site on the banks of McDowell Creek in northeast Geary (forme...
Introduction: As the Chisholm trail became the thoroughfare for millions of Texas cattle coming to r...
Article describes the path of the Chisholm Trail from 1867 to 1871. There were two pathways used by ...
Introduction: Cattle ranching among tribes in Indian Territory, which later became Oklahoma, began d...
The big Texas-to-Kansas trail drives in the openrange era that followed the Civil War gave birth to ...
Introduction: In 1867 the only thing standing between the prized stock of westward-marching settlers...
The cattle industry of the Flint Hills had its origin along the Rio Grande River nearly four centuri...
Introduction: Of all the archetypes and folk heroes that populate American culture, none looms large...
This paper addresses how the cattle trails affected the Native American tribes in Indian Territory. ...
Introduction: In the late nineteenth century, thousands sought adventure and fortune on the cattle t...
Introduction: It all began with grass, large expanses of unbroken ground that had sustained bison an...
Introduction: During the eighteen years that Texas cattle were driven north on the Chisholm Trail, a...
Introduction: The Kansas portion of the Chisholm Trail, located just west of the Flint Hills, ran ro...
Introduction: Before the Civil War, most Texas cattle were driven in small herds to markets by their...
Introduction: The nineteenth century created the cattle business, but it also created cattle, or at ...
Introduction: Oral history tells of a site on the banks of McDowell Creek in northeast Geary (forme...
Introduction: As the Chisholm trail became the thoroughfare for millions of Texas cattle coming to r...
Article describes the path of the Chisholm Trail from 1867 to 1871. There were two pathways used by ...
Introduction: Cattle ranching among tribes in Indian Territory, which later became Oklahoma, began d...
The big Texas-to-Kansas trail drives in the openrange era that followed the Civil War gave birth to ...
Introduction: In 1867 the only thing standing between the prized stock of westward-marching settlers...
The cattle industry of the Flint Hills had its origin along the Rio Grande River nearly four centuri...
Introduction: Of all the archetypes and folk heroes that populate American culture, none looms large...
This paper addresses how the cattle trails affected the Native American tribes in Indian Territory. ...
Introduction: In the late nineteenth century, thousands sought adventure and fortune on the cattle t...