Up the Trail

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781421425894

How Texas Cowboys Herded Longhorns and Became an American Icon

Price:
Sale price$135.00
Stock:
Out of Stock - Available to backorder
 More payment options

By Tim Lehman
Imprint:
JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:

Weight:

Pages:
184

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Cattle drives were the largest, longest, and ultimately the last of the great forced animal migrations in human history. Spilling out of Texas, they spread longhorns, cowboys, and the culture that roped the two together throughout the American West. In cities like Abilene, Dodge City, and Wichita, buyers paid off ranchers, ranchers paid off wranglers, and railroad lines took the cattle east to the packing plants of St. Louis and Chicago.

The cattle drives of our imagination are filled with colorful cowboys prodding and coaxing a line of bellowing animals along a dusty path through the wilderness. These sturdy cowhands always triumph over stampedes, swollen rivers, and bloodthirsty Indians to deliver their mighty-horned companions to market'but Tim Lehman's Up the Trail reveals that the gritty reality was vastly different. Far from being rugged individualists, the actual cow herders were itinerant laborers'a proletariat on horseback who connected cattle from the remote prairies of Texas with the nation's industrial slaughterhouses.

Lehman demystifies the cowboy life by describing the origins of the cattle drive and the extensive planning, complicated logistics, great skill, and good luck essential to getting the cows to market. He reveals how drives figured into the larger story of postwar economic development and traces the complex effects the cattle business had on the environment. He also explores how the premodern cowboy became a national hero who personified the manly virtues of rugged individualism and personal independence. Grounded in primary sources, this absorbing book takes advantage of recent scholarship on labor, race, gender, and the environment. The lively narrative will appeal to students of Texas and western history as well as anyone interested in cowboy culture.

Prologue
1 How Cowboys and Longhorns Came to Texas
2 How the Cattle Market Boomed and Busted
3 How to Organize the Largest, Longest Cattle Drive Ever
4 How Kansas Survived the Longhorn Invasion
5 How the Trails Died and the Cowboy Lived On
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliographic Essay
Index

""This concise synthesis of life on the nineteenth-century trail drives north from Texas is ideal for the general reader as well as students in Texas or western American history classes. Tim Lehman deftly brings the long drives to life, thanks to copious primary source quotations from nineteenth-century reminiscences, diaries, publications, and newspaper accounts... Up the Trail does an admirable job of taking readers behind the tall tales to see the real lives of real cowboys on the great cattle drives as well as showing their transition from history to mythology.""

You may also like

Recently viewed