The Old West: Range Wars

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When the average modern American thinks of the Old West, they often think of cattle drives, outlaws and lawmen, and John Wayne; things they see in western movies. Another staple in western movies is the range war, it is important for modern Americans to know which parts of the west were true and which were false. The range wars of the late 1800’s were important to rights and responsibilities because they changed the way many people lived in the west and midwest, finally stating the concept of private and public property.
Range wars were fought for a number of reasons. Some were fought between cattle ranchers and sheep herders, some between cattle ranchers and farmers, some between “free grazers” (people who moved their cattle around on the open range- ground nobody owned) and cattle ranchers, and even some between competing ranchers.
Some of the biggest range wars were well known and covered by newspapers in big cities such as Denver, San Fransisco, and even as far away as Chicago. One of the most famous of these conflicts was the Lincoln County War of 1878, in Lincoln County, New Mexico. It actually wasn’t over cattle at all, it was fought over control of the dry goods business. One side was led by Lawrence Murphy and James Dolan. Murphy had a dry goods monopoly and therefore could control prices on everything. They faced opposition from John Tunstall, and englishman, and his business partner Alexander McSween, a lawyer. Tunstall and McSween were backed by John Chisum, one of the biggest ranchers in the county, who was tired of paying Murphy’s prices for goods. The Lincoln County war was also the beginning of the infamous feud between Sheriff Pat Garret and the outlaw Billy the Kid, who worked for Tunstall before the eng...

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... today have their brands recorded and the records are kept in every state by brand inspection agencies. There is no more “free range”, all of the land is either owned by private landowners or companies, or by the state and national government as state parks, national parks, state and national forests, and national grasslands. Rustling still happens today, though it is rare. Instead of heavily armed bandits stealing cattle on horseback, modern rustlers usually pose as truck drivers and sell the cattle under a false name on a sort of black market. While the days of the range war are over, they are still a big part of Hollywood and literature. Many western movies are based on actual range wars, and books by authors such as Louis L’amour and Zane Grey have romanticized the range wars of the late 1800’s. They will forever be an important part of our nation’s history.

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