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Title | Creator | Date Made Visible | None
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Bradford Robbins Grimes and Captain "Dick" Grimes, grandfather
Grimes, Daisy Ferguson
This is a history of Bradford Robbins Grimes and his grandfather, Captain "Dick" Grimes. The history covers cattle and cattle drives and the Indian presence that both men encountered.
previewB. R. Grimes' mess wagon, Ashland, Kansas
Steele, F. M. (Francis Marion), 1866-1936
This is a view of cowboys eating a meal by the B. R. Grime's chuck wagon in Ashland, Kansas.
previewB. R. Grimes' mount and day herd, Woodward County, Oklahoma Territory
Steele, F. M. (Francis Marion), 1866-1936
View of cowboys on their horses with the mount and day herd. Cowboys changed horses two to three times a day, so the mount and day herd was a supply of rested animals. In the background, is a cattle herd with strays that were gathered up from different pastures. Two chuckwagons are visible in the background.
previewCattle in a fenced pasture
Steele, F. M. (Francis Marion), 1866-1936
View of cattle in a fenced pasture, next to a barn, on an unidentified farm presumed to be in Haskell County, Kansas. Also visible in the photograph are a man afoot, a horse-drawn carriage, a farmhouse and outlying farm buildings, and a man and boys astride horses.
previewCattle round-up on M. C. Campbell's ranch near Ashland, Kansas
Steele, F. M. (Francis Marion), 1866-1936
This is a herd of cattle on the M. C. Campbell ranch near Ashland, Kansas. Also visible are a horse-drawn carriage and cowboys on horses.
previewChalkey McCarty Beeson
A photograph showing Chalkey McCarty Beeson seated on his horse. He came to Dodge City from Colorado in 1875. During his life, he owned the Long Branch Saloon and a cattle ranch, organized the Cowboy Band, served as sheriff and was a state legislator representing District 101 Dodge City and Ford County for the sessions 1903, SS1903, 1905, 1907, SS1908.
previewChronology of the Iowa and Sac and Fox Indians in Doniphan County, Kansas
This chronology details major events occurring between 1837-1855 among the Iowa and Sac and Fox Indians who had been relocated to Kansas after the Indian Removal Act of 1830. Topics mentioned within the chronology include warfare among relocated tribes, the arrival of white emigrants, disease, mission buildings, and treaties ceding land to the United States government. During the period covered in this item unfolded a large number of white settlers began moving into the lands that the tribes occupied, especially after the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854.
previewCowboys at a chuck wagon
This sepia colored photograph shows a group of cowboys eating at a chuck wagon.
previewCowboys camped out on the trail
Steele, F. M. (Francis Marion), 1866-1936
View of a round-up crew seated on the ground eating a meal near a chuck wagon. Rolled up canvasses and horses are also visible in the photograph.
previewCowboys in Beaver County, Oklahoma Territory
Steele, F. M. (Francis Marion), 1866-1936
View of Lon Ford (left) and Pearl Gillian (right, from Englewood, Kansas) on horses and leading pack animals. They were getting ready for a round-up in the eastern part of Beaver County, Oklahoma Territory.
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