North Dakota almost escaped the War Between the States, but following the war, North Dakota benefitted from the lingering conflicts in Texas, Missouri, and Kansas.
(North and South Dakota, Montana and Wyoming were barely explored by fur traders and trappers when the War Between the States erupted. Army units were in North Dakota, but when the War Between the States started, they were protecting railroad workers, and families moving to the West Coat who were under attack by hostile Sioux nations such as Santee and Dakota. After the War Between the States, “Galvanized Yankees” settled in North Dakota forts such as Fort Rice. “Galvanized Yankees” were former Confederate soldiers who were released from war prisons to don Union blue and move north.)
Few people settled in North Dakota compared to the growing populations of Texas and other southern agriculture states. North Dakota escaped the mess of reconstruction, but it indirectly benefitted. Those destructive war years of heartbreak emptied out the working population of many southern states such as Texas. Ranches went untended, women folk packed up and moved to town. Livestock broke free and roamed the tall sagebrush plains of Texas. And so, the longhorn breed of cattle that were once feral returned to their range-fed freedom. These were cattle that had originally come from Asia, according to DNA tests. They’d been brought to Mexico by Spaniards, moved north and ended up roaming free.
After the Civil War ended, much of the nation, but especially Texas went through many social and economic changes. Displaced confederate soldiers wandered west to Texas, looking for work, some legitimate, some not so legitimate. All who survived the post-Civil war life in Texas, outlaws or not, developed a hardcore personality – good for handling longhorn cattle.
One of the lasting effects of the war was the disruption of food to the heavily populated Union states of the Northeast. The war destroyed the cattle industry in the East and there was a massive influx of immigrants into the East Coast cities. People needed a new source of meat (cattle). Union blockades during and after the Civil War and the destruction of southern rail lines prevented Texas cattlemen from moving beef to beef-hungry population centers and packing plants in Chicago. So, they had to find a way around the blockades and reach the rail lines that could haul their beef to the east.
Immediately following the War Between the States, railroads expanded to Kansas and Wyoming. To get their cattle to market, Texas cattle companies trailed their cattle north to a rail point so they could ship their cattle to eastern markets. Later, when railroads reached west Texas, the need for mass herds of cattle driven to rail lines in the north diminished.
However, before railroads caught up to population expansion, cowboys improvised and adapted. Enterprising cowboys rounded up wild Longhorns. With good business plans, they herded them north in the spring to follow the greening of the grass. Beginning in April and continuing until September, millions of Longhorn cattle moved north to North Dakota, Montana, Wyoming, and Kansas. There were no fences, no barbed wire, no property lines, no public land to avoid; herds were free to roam northward. And that’s how longhorns moved north on the Long X trail.
The Long X Cattle Company, west of Dallas was a brilliant economic venture by the Reynolds Brothers. They established Long X ranches in New Mexico, Arizona, Montana and North Dakota – the destination points for the longhorn cattle drives.
Good timing and bad men made it possible for the Reynolds to buy a ranch south of Watford City, north of Grassy Butte along the Little Missouri River.
When the Reynolds, in turn, lost their ranch they turned it over to a mismanaged company from Boston. That Boston cattle company lost money on the ranch and gave it up for sale After a while, the Long X Ranch with its stellar history of cattle production was gone from North Dakota, and in its place was the Theodore Roosevelt National Memorial Park. It was designed to extend as one unit from Watford City to Medora and developed to accommodate horseback tours and trips. The Long X Ranch was to be part of that huge national park. But plans changed. And that’s why there are Longhorn cattle at the North Unit, not in the South Unit.
What happened next is Part 3 of this Short History of Longhorns on the Long X Trail.
Here’s Part 1. Add your email to get a notice of when Part 3 is posted in February. The subscription box is on the upper right.
Here’s more on the Long X recreation trail south of Watford City, attached to the Maah Daah Hey trail.
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