A
cowboy is an animal
herder
who tends
cattle on
ranches in
North America,
traditionally on horseback, and often performs a multitude of other
ranch-related tasks. The historic American cowboy of the late 19th
century arose from the
vaquero
traditions of northern Mexico and became a figure of special
significance and legend. A subtype, called a
wrangler, specifically tends the
horses used to work cattle. In addition to
ranch work, some cowboys work for or participate in
rodeos.
Cowgirls, first defined as
such in the late 19th century, had a less-well documented
historical role, but in the modern world have established the
ability to work at virtually identical tasks and obtained
considerable respect for their achievements. There are also cattle
handlers in many other parts of the world, particularly
South America and
Australia, who perform work similar to the cowboy
in their respective nations.
The cowboy
has deep historic roots tracing back to Spain
and the
earliest settlers of the Americas.
Over the centuries, differences in terrain, climate and the
influence of cattle-handling traditions from multiple cultures
created several distinct styles of equipment, clothing and animal
handling. As the ever-practical cowboy adapted to the modern world,
the cowboy's equipment and techniques also adapted to some degree,
though many classic traditions are still preserved today.
Etymology and usage
The English word
cowboy has an origin from several earlier
terms that referred to both age and to cattle or cattle-tending
work.
The word "cowboy" appeared in the English language by 1725. It
appears to be a direct English translation of
vaquero, a
Spanish word for an individual who managed cattle while mounted on
horseback. It was derived from
vaca, meaning "cow." This
Spanish word has a long history, developed from the
Latin word
vacca. Another English word for a
cowboy,
buckaroo, is an
Anglicization of
vaquero.
At least
one linguist has speculated that the word "buckaroo" derives from
the Arabic word bakara or
bakhara, also meaning "heifer" or
"young cow", and may have entered Spanish during the centuries of
Islamic
rule
.
Originally, the term may have been intended literally - "a boy who
tends cows". By 1849 it had developed its modern sense as an adult
cattle handler of the American West. Variations on the word
"cowboy" appeared later. "Cowhand" appeared in 1852, and "cowpoke"
in 1881, originally restricted to the individuals who prodded
cattle with long poles to load them onto railroad cars for
shipping. Names for a cowboy in American English include
buckaroo, cowpoke, cowhand, and
cowpuncher.
"Cowboy"
is a term common throughout the west and particularly in the
Great
Plains
and Rocky Mountains,
"Buckaroo" is used primarily in the Great
Basin and California
, and "cowpuncher" mostly in Texas
and
surrounding states.
The word cowboy also had English language roots beyond simply being
a translation from Spanish. Originally, the
English word "cowherd" was used to describe
a cattle herder, (similar to "shepherd," a sheep herder) and often
referred to a preadolescent or early adolescent boy, who usually
worked on foot. (
Equestrianism
required skills and an investment in horses and equipment rarely
available to or entrusted to a child, though in some cultures boys
rode a
donkey while going to and from
pasture) This word is very old in the English language, originating
prior to the year 1000. In
Antiquity, herding of sheep, cattle and
goats was often the job of
minor, and
still is a task for young people in various
third world cultures.
Because of the time and physical ability needed to develop
necessary skills, the cowboy often did began his career as an
adolescent, earning wages as soon as he had enough skill to be
hired, (often as young as 12 or 13) and who, if not crippled by
injury, might handle cattle or horses for the rest of his working
life. In the United States, a few women also took on the tasks of
ranching and learned the necessary skills, though the "cowgirl"
(discussed
below) did not become widely recognized or
acknowledged until the close of the 19th century. On western
ranches today, the working cowboy is usually an adult.
Responsibility for herding cattle or other livestock is no longer
considered a job suitable for children or early adolescents.
However, both boys and girls growing up in a
ranch environment often learn to ride
horses and perform basic ranch skills as soon as they
are physically able, usually under adult supervision. Such youths,
by their late teens, are often given responsibilities for "cowboy"
work on the ranch, and ably perform work that requires a level of
maturity and levelheadedness that is not generally expected of
their urban peers.
History

American cowboy, circa 1888
The
origins of the cowboy tradition come from Spain
, beginning
with the hacienda system of medieval Spain. This style of cattle
ranching spread throughout much of the
Iberian
peninsula
and later,
was imported to the Americas. Both
regions possessed a dry climate with sparse grass, and thus large
herds of cattle required vast amounts of land in order to obtain
sufficient
forage. The need to cover
distances greater than a person on foot could manage gave rise to
the development of the horseback-mounted
vaquero.
Various
aspects of the Spanish equestrian
tradition can be traced back to Arabic rule in Spain
, including Moorish elements
such as the use of Oriental-type
horses, the la jineta riding
style characterized by a shorter stirrup,
solid-treed saddle and use of spurs, the heavy noseband or
hackamore, (Arabic šakīma,
Spanish jaquima) and other horse-related equipment and
techniques. Certain aspects of the Arabic tradition, such as
the hackamore, can in turn be traced to roots in
ancient Persia.
During the
16th century, the Conquistadors and
other Spanish settlers brought their cattle-raising traditions as
well as both horses and domesticated cattle to the Americas,
starting with their arrival in what today is Mexico
and Florida
.
The
traditions of Spain
were
transformed by the geographic, environmental and cultural
circumstances of New Spain, which later
became Mexico
and the
Southwestern United
States. In turn, the land and people of the Americas
also saw dramatic changes due to Spanish influence.
Thus,
though popularly considered American
, the
traditional cowboy began with the Spanish tradition, which evolved
further in what today is Mexico
and the
Southwestern United
States into the vaquero of
northern Mexico and the charro of
the Jalisco
and Michoacán
regions. Most
vaqueros were men of
mestizo and
Native American origin
while most of the
hacendados (ranch owners) were
ethnically
Spanish. Mexican
traditions spread both South and North, influencing equestrian
traditions from Argentina to Canada.
The arrival of horses was particularly significant, as
equines had been
extinct in
the Americas since the end of the prehistoric
ice age. However, horses quickly multiplied in
America and became crucial to the success of the Spanish and later
settlers from other nations. The earliest horses were originally of
Andalusian,
Barb and
Arabian
ancestry, but a number of uniquely American
horse breeds developed in North and
South America through selective breeding and by
natural selection of animals that escaped
to the wild. The
Mustang and other
colonial horse breeds are now called "wild," but in reality are
feral horses — descendants of
domesticated animals.
As
English-speaking traders and
settlers
expanded
westward, English and Spanish traditions, language and culture
merged to some degree.
Before the Mexican-American War in 1848, New England
merchants who traveled by ship to California
encountered both hacendados and vaqueros, trading
manufactured goods for the hides and tallow produced from vast
cattle ranches. American traders along
what later became known as the
Santa Fe
Trail had similar contacts with
vaquero life. Starting
with these early encounters, the lifestyle and language of the
vaquero began a transformation which merged with English
cultural traditions and produced what became known in American
culture as the "cowboy".
With the arrival of
railroads, and an
increased demand for
beef in the wake of the
American Civil War, the iconic
American cowboy evolved as the older traditions combined with the
need to
drive cattle from the ranches
where they were raised to the nearest
railheads, often hundreds of miles away.
Ethnicity of the traditional cowboy

Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho youths
learning to brand cattle at the Seger Indian School, Oklahoma
Territory, ca. 1900.
American cowboys were drawn from multiple sources. By the late
1860s, following the
American Civil
War and the expansion of the cattle industry, former soldiers
from both the Union and Confederacy came west, seeking work, as did
large numbers of restless white men in general. A significant
number of
African-American freedmen also were drawn to cowboy life, in part
because there was not quite as much discrimination in the
west as in other areas of American
society at the time. A significant number of Mexicans and
American Indians
already living in the region also worked as cowboys.
Many early
vaqueros were Indian people trained to work for
the Spanish missions in caring for the mission herds. Later,
particularly after 1890, when American policy promoted
"assimilation" of Indian people, some Indian boarding schools also
taught ranching skills. Today, some Native Americans in the
western United States own
cattle and small ranches, and many are still employed as cowboys,
especially on ranches located near
Indian Reservations. The "Indian Cowboy"
also became a commonplace sight on the
rodeo
circuit.
Because cowboys ranked low in the
social structure of the period, there are
no firm figures on the actual proportion of various races. One
writer states that cowboys were "… of two classes—those recruited
from Texas and other States on the eastern slope; and Mexicans,
from the south-western region. …"
Census
records suggest that about 15% of all cowboys were of
African-American ancestry—ranging from about 25% on the trail
drives out of Texas, to very few in the northwest. Similarly,
cowboys of Mexican descent also averaged about 15% of the total,
but were more common in Texas and the southwest.
Regardless of ethnicity, most cowboys came from lower social
classes and the pay was poor. The average cowboy earned
approximately a dollar a day, plus food, and, when near the home
ranch, a bed in the
bunkhouse, usually a
barracks-like building with a single open
room.
Roundups
Large numbers of
cattle lived in a
semi-
feral, or semi-wild state on the
open range and were left to graze, mostly
untended, for much of the year. In many cases, different ranchers
formed "associations" and grazed their cattle together on the same
range. In order to determine the ownership of individual animals,
they were marked with a distinctive
brand, applied with a hot iron, usually
while the cattle were still young
calves. The
primary cattle breed seen on the open range was the
Longhorn, descended from the
original Spanish Longhorns imported in the 16th century, though by
the late 19th century, other breeds of cattle were also brought
west, including the meatier
Hereford, and often were
crossbred with Longhorns.
In order to find young calves for branding, and to sort out mature
animals intended for sale, ranchers would hold a roundup, usually
in the spring. A roundup required a number of specialized skills on
the part of both cowboys and horses. Individuals who separated
cattle from the herd required the highest level of skill and rode
specially trained "
cutting" horses,
trained to follow the movements of cattle, capable of stopping and
turning faster than other horses. Once cattle were sorted, most
cowboys were required to rope young calves and restrain them to be
branded and (in the case of most
bull calves)
castrated. Occasionally it was also
necessary to restrain older cattle for branding or other
treatment.
A large number of horses were needed for a roundup. Each cowboy
would require three to four fresh horses in the course of a day's
work. Horses themselves were also rounded up. It was common
practice in the west for young
foals to be born
of tame
mares, but allowed to grow up
"wild" in a semi-feral state on the open range. There were also
"wild" herds, often known as
mustangs. Both types were rounded up, and
the mature animals tamed, a process called
horse breaking, or "
bronco-busting," (
var. "bronc busting")
usually performed by cowboys who specialized in training horses. In
some cases, extremely brutal methods were used to tame horses, and
such animals tended to never be completely reliable. However, other
cowboys became aware of the need to treat animals in a more humane
fashion and modified their
horse
training methods, often re-learning techniques used by the
vaqueros, particularly those of the
Californio
tradition. Horses trained in a gentler fashion were more reliable
and useful for a wider variety of tasks.
Informal competition arose between cowboys seeking to test their
cattle and horse-handling skills against one another, and thus,
from the necessary tasks of the working cowboy, the sport of
rodeo developed.
Cattle drives
Prior to the mid-19th century, most ranchers primarily raised
cattle for their own needs and to sell surplus meat and hides
locally. There was also a limited market for hides, horns, hooves,
and
tallow in assorted manufacturing
processes. Nationally, prior to 1865, there was little demand for
beef.
At
the end of the American Civil
War, however, Philip Danforth
Armour opened a meat packing plant in Chicago
, which became known as Armour and Company, and with the
expansion of the meat packing
industry, the demand for beef increased significantly.
By 1866, cattle could be sold to northern markets for as much as
$40 per head, making it potentially profitable for cattle,
particularly from Texas, to be herded long distances to
market.
The first large-scale effort to drive cattle from Texas to the
nearest railhead for shipment to Chicago occurred in 1866, when
many Texas ranchers banded together to drive their cattle to the
closest point that railroad tracks reached, which at that time was
in Sedalia, Missouri. However, farmers in eastern Kansas, afraid
that Longhorns would transmit cattle fever to local animals as well
as trample crops, formed groups that threatened to beat or shoot
cattlemen found on their lands. Therefore, the 1866 drive failed to
reach the railroad, and the cattle herds were sold for low prices.
However,
in 1867, a cattle shipping facility was built west of farm country
around the railhead at Abilene, Kansas
, and became a center of cattle shipping, loading
over 36,000 head of cattle that year. The route from Texas
to Abilene became known as the
Chisholm
Trail, after
Jesse Chisholm, who
marked out the route.
It ran through present-day Oklahoma
, which then was Indian
Territory. However, in spite of Hollywood
portrayals of the west, there were relatively few
conflicts with Native Americans, who
usually allowed cattle herds to pass through for a toll of ten
cents a head. Later, other trails forked off to different
railheads, including those at Dodge City
and Wichita, Kansas
. By 1877, the largest of the cattle-shipping
boom towns, Dodge City, Kansas, shipped out 500,000 head of
cattle.
Cattle drives had to strike a balance between speed and the weight
of the cattle. While cattle could be driven as far as 25 miles in a
single day, they would lose so much weight that they would be hard
to sell when they reached the end of the trail. Usually they were
taken shorter distances each day, allowed periods to rest and graze
both at midday and at night. On average, a herd could maintain a
healthy weight moving about 15 miles per day. Such a pace meant
that it would take as long as two months to travel from a home
ranch to a railhead. The Chisholm trail, for example, was 1,000
miles long.
On average, a single herd of cattle on a drive numbered about 3,000
head. To herd the cattle, a crew of at least 10 cowboys was needed,
with three horses per cowboy. Cowboys worked in shifts to watch the
cattle 24 hours a day, herding them in the proper direction in the
daytime and watching them at night to prevent
stampedes and deter theft. The crew also included a
cook, who drove a
chuck wagon, usually
pulled by
oxen, and a horse
wrangler to take charge of the
remuda, or herd of spare horses. The
wrangler on a cattle drive was often a very young cowboy or one of
lower social status, but the cook was a particularly well-respected
member of the crew, as not only was he in charge of the food, he
also was in charge of medical supplies and had a working knowledge
of practical medicine.
By the 1880s, the expansion of the cattle industry resulted the
need for additional open range. Thus many ranchers expanded into
the northwest, where there were still large tracts of unsettled
grassland. Texas cattle were herded north, into the
Rocky Mountain west and the Dakotas. The
cowboy adapted much of his gear to the colder conditions, and
westward movement of the industry also led to intermingling of
numerous regional traditions from California to Texas, often with
the cowboy taking the most useful elements of each.
End of the open range
Barbed wire, an innovation of the 1880s, allowed cattle to be
confined to designated areas to prevent
overgrazing of the range. In Texas and
surrounding areas, increased population required ranchers to fence
off their individual lands. In the north, overgrazing stressed the
open range, leading to insufficient winter
forage for the cattle and starvation, particularly
during the harsh winter of 1886–1887, when hundreds of thousands of
cattle died across the Northwest, leading to collapse of the cattle
industry.
By the 1890s, barbed wire fencing was also
standard in the northern plains, railroads had expanded to cover
most of the nation, and meat packing plants were built closer to
major ranching areas, making long cattle drives from Texas to the
railheads in Kansas
unnecessary. Hence, the age of the open range was gone and
large
cattle
drives were over. Smaller cattle drives continued at least into
the 1940s, as ranchers, prior to the development of the modern
cattle truck, still needed to herd
cattle to local railheads for transport to
stockyards and packing plants. Meanwhile, ranches
multiplied all over the developing West, keeping cowboy employment
high, if still low-paid, but also somewhat more settled.
Social world
Over time, the cowboys of the
American
West developed a personal culture of their own, a blend of
frontier and
Victorian values that even retained vestiges
of
chivalry. Such hazardous work in
isolated conditions also bred a tradition of self-dependence and
individualism, with great value put on
personal honesty, exemplified in
songs and
poetry.
However, some men were also drawn to the frontier because they were
attracted to men. Other times, in a region where men significantly
outnumbered women, even social events normally attended by both
sexes were at times all male, and men could be found partnering up
with one another for dances.
Homosexual
acts between young, unmarried men occurred, but cowboys culture
itself was and remains deeply homophobic. Though anti-sodomy laws
were common in the Old West, they often were only selectively
enforced.
Development of the modern cowboy image
The traditions of the working cowboy were further etched into the
minds of the general public with the development of
Wild West Shows in the late 19th and early
20th centuries, which showcased and romanticized the life of both
cowboys and
Native
Americans. Beginning in the 1920s and continuing to the present
day,
Western movies popularized the
cowboy lifestyle but also formed persistent
stereotypes, both positive and negative. In some
cases, the cowboy and the violent
gunslinger are often associated with one another.
On the other hand, some actors who portrayed cowboys promoted
positive values, such as the "cowboy code" of
Gene Autry, that encouraged honorable behavior,
respect and patriotism.
Likewise, cowboys in movies were often shown fighting with
American Indians.
However, the reality was that, while cowboys were armed against
both predators and human thieves, and often used their guns to run
off people of any race who attempted to steal, or
rustle
cattle, nearly all actual armed conflicts occurred between Indian
people and
cavalry units of the
U.S. Army.
In reality, working ranch hands past and present had very little
time for anything other than the constant, hard work involved in
maintaining a ranch.
Cowgirls
Fannie Sperry Steele, Champion Lady Bucking Horse Rider, Winnipeg
Stampede, 1913
The history of women in the west, and women who worked on cattle
ranches in particular, is not as well documented as that of men.
However,
institutions such as the National
Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame
have made significant efforts in recent years to
gather and document the contributions of women.

Modern western-style show attire for
women, inspired by cowgirl regalia
There are few records mentioning girls or women working to drive
cattle up the cattle trails of the Old West. However women did
considerable ranch work, and in some cases (especially when the men
went to war or on long cattle drives) ran them. There is little
doubt that women, particularly the wives and daughters of men who
owned small ranches and could not afford to hire large numbers of
outside laborers, worked side by side with men and thus needed to
ride horses and be able to perform related tasks.
The largely
undocumented contributions of women to the west were acknowledged
in law; the western states led the United States
in granting women the right to vote, beginning with
Wyoming
in 1869. Early photographers such as
Evelyn Cameron documented the life of
working ranch women and cowgirls during the late 19th and early
20th century.
While impractical for everyday work, the
sidesaddle was a tool that gave women the ability
to ride horses in "respectable" public settings instead of being
left on foot or confined to
horse-drawn vehicles. Following the
Civil War,
Charles Goodnight modified the traditional
English sidesaddle, creating a western-styled design.
The traditional
charras of Mexico
preserve a
similar tradition and ride sidesaddles today in charreada exhibitions on both sides of the
border.
It wasn't until the advent of
Wild West
Shows that "cowgirls" came into their own. These adult women
were skilled performers, demonstrating riding, expert marksmanship,
and trick roping that entertained audiences around the world. Women
such as
Annie Oakley became household
names. By 1900, skirts split for riding astride became popular, and
allowed women to compete with the men without scandalizing
Victorian Era audiences by wearing men's clothing or, worse yet,
bloomers. In the movies that
followed from the early 20th century on, cowgirls expanded their
roles in the popular culture and movie designers developed
attractive clothing suitable for riding Western saddles.
Independently of the entertainment industry, the growth of
rodeo brought about another type of cowgirl—the rodeo
cowgirl. In the early Wild West shows and rodeos, women competed in
all events, sometimes against other women, sometimes with the men.
Cowgirls
such as Fannie Sperry Steele
rode the same "rough stock" and took the same risks as the men (and
all while wearing a heavy split skirt that was still more
encumbering than men's trousers) and competed at major rodeos such
as the Calgary
Stampede
and Cheyenne
Frontier Days.
Rodeo competition for women changed after 1925 when Eastern
promoters started staging indoor rodeos in places like Madison
Square Garden. Women were generally excluded from the men's events
and many of the women's events were dropped. In today's rodeos, men
and women compete equally together only in the event of
team roping, though technically women today
could enter other open events. There also are all-women rodeos
where women compete in
bronc riding,
bull riding and all other traditional
rodeo events. However, in open rodeos, cowgirls primarily compete
in the timed riding events such as
barrel
racing, and most professional rodeos do not offer as many
women's events as men's events.
Boys and girls are more apt to compete against one another in all
events in high-school rodeos as well as
O-Mok-See competition, where even boys
can be seen in traditionally "women's" events such as
barrel racing. Outside of the rodeo world,
women compete equally with men in nearly all other
equestrian events, including the
Olympics, and
western riding events such as
cutting,
reining, and
endurance riding.
Today's working cowgirls generally use clothing, tools and
equipment indistinguishable from that of men, other than in color
and design, usually preferring a flashier look in competition.
Sidesaddles are only seen in exhibitions and a limited number of
specialty
horse show classes. A cowgirl
wears jeans, close-fitting shirts, boots, hat, and when needed,
chaps and gloves. If working on the ranch, they perform the same
chores as cowboys and dress to suit the situation.
Regional traditions within the United States
Geography, climate and cultural traditions caused differences to
develop in cattle-handling methods and equipment from one part of
the United States to another.
In the modern world, remnants of two major
and distinct cowboy traditions remain, known today as the "Texas
" tradition
and the "Spanish", "Vaquero", or "California
" tradition. Less well-known but equally distinct
traditions also developed in Hawaii
and Florida
.
Today, the various regional cowboy
traditions have merged to some extent, though a
few regional differences in equipment and riding style still
remain, and some individuals choose to deliberately preserve the
more time-consuming but highly skilled techniques of the pure
vaquero or "buckaroo" tradition. The popular "horse
whisperer" style of
natural
horsemanship was originally developed by practitioners who were
predominantly from California and the Northwestern states, clearly
combining the attitudes and philosophy of the California vaquero
with the equipment and outward look of the Texas cowboy.
Texas tradition
In the
early 1800s, the Spanish Crown, and later, independent Mexico
, offered
empresario grants in what would
later be Texas
to
non-citizens, such as settlers from the United States. In
1821,
Stephen F. Austin and his East Coast comrades became
the first Anglo-Saxon community speaking Spanish. Following
Texas independence in 1836, even
more Americans immigrated into the
empresario ranching
areas of Texas.
Here the settlers were strongly influenced
by the Mexican vaquero culture, borrowing vocabulary and attire from
their counterparts, but also retaining some of the
livestock-handling traditions and culture of the Eastern United
States and Great
Britain
. The Texas cowboy was typically a bachelor
who hired on with different outfits from season to season.
Following the
American Civil War,
vaquero
culture diffused eastward and
northward, combining with the cow herding traditions of the eastern
United States that evolved as settlers moved west.
Other influences
developed out of Texas as cattle trails were created to meet up
with the railroad lines of Kansas
and Nebraska
, in addition to expanding ranching opportunities in
the Great
Plains
and Rocky Mountain
Front, east of the Continental
Divide.
Thus, the Texas cowboy tradition arose from a combination of
cultural influences, in addition to the need for adaptation to the
geography and climate of west Texas and the need to conduct long
cattle drives to get animals to
market.
California tradition
The
vaquero, the Spanish or Mexican cowboy who
worked with young, untrained horses, arrived in the 1700s and
flourished in California
and bordering territories during the Spanish
Colonial period. Settlers from the United States did not
enter California until after the
Mexican-American War, and most early
settlers were miners rather than livestock ranchers, leaving
livestock-raising largely to the Spanish and Mexican people who
chose to remain in California. The California vaquero or buckaroo,
unlike the Texas cowboy, was considered a highly-skilled worker,
who usually stayed on the same ranch where he was born or had grown
up and raised his own family there. In addition, the geography and
climate of much of California was dramatically different from that
of Texas, allowing more intensive grazing with less open range,
plus cattle in California were marketed primarily at a regional
level, without the need (nor, until much later, even the logistical
possibility) to be driven hundreds of miles to railroad lines.
Thus, a horse- and livestock-handling culture remained in
California and the Pacific Northwest that retained a stronger
direct Spanish influence than that of Texas.
Cowboys of this tradition were dubbed
buckaroos by
English-speaking settlers. The term officially appeared in American
English in 1889 and is believed to have originated as an anglicized
version of
vaquero, though there is a
folk etymology that the term derived from
"
bucking", a behavior seen in some young or
fresh horses. The words "buckaroo" and
Vaquero are still
used on occasion in the
Great Basin,
parts of California and, less often, in the
Pacific Northwest.
Florida Cowhunter or "Cracker cowboy"

A cracker cowboy
artist: Frederick Remington.
The Florida "cowhunter" or "
cracker
cowboy" of the 19th and early 20th centuries was distinct from the
Texas and California traditions. Florida cowboys did not use
lassos to herd or capture cattle. Their
primary tools were
bullwhips and dogs.
Florida cattle and horses were small. The "cracker cow", also known
as the "native cow", or "scrub cow" averaged about 600 pounds, had
large horns and large feet.
Since the Florida cowhunter didn't need a saddle horn for anchoring
a
lariat, many did not use
Western saddles, instead using a
McClellan saddle. While some individuals
wore boots that reached above the knees for protection from
snakes, others wore
brogans. They usually wore inexpensive wool
or straw hats, and used
ponchos for
protection from rain.
Cattle and horses were introduced into Florida late in the 16th
century.
Throughout the 17th century, cattle ranches owned by Spanish
officials and missions operated in
northern Florida to supply the Spanish garrison in St.
Augustine
and markets in Cuba
.
These ranches brought in some vaqueros from Spain, but many of the
workers were
Timucua Indians. Diseases and
Spanish suppression of rebellions severely reduced the Timucua
population. By the beginning of the 18th century, raids by soldiers
from the
Province of Carolina
and their Indian allies reduced the Timucuas to a remnant and ended
the Spanish ranching era.
In the 18th century,
Creek,
Seminole, and other Indian people moved into the
former Timucua areas and started herding the cattle left from the
Spanish ranches. In the 19th century, most tribes in the area were
dispossessed of their land and cattle and pushed south or west by
white settlers and the United States government. By the middle of
the 19th century white ranchers were running large herds of cattle
on the extensive open range of central and southern Florida. The
hides and meat from Florida cattle became such a critical supply
item for the
Confederacy during the
American Civil War that a "Cow
Cavalry" was organized to round up and protect the herds from
Union raiders.
After the
Civil War, Florida cattle were periodically driven to ports on the
Gulf of
Mexico
and shipped to market in Cuba
.
Hawaiian Paniolo
The
Hawaiian cowboy, the
paniolo, is also a direct descendant of the
vaquero of California and Mexico. Experts in Hawaiian
etymology believe "Paniolo" is a Hawaiianized pronunciation of
español. (The
Hawaiian
language has no /s/ sound, and all
syllables and words must end in a vowel.) Paniolo,
like cowboys on the mainland of North America, learned their skills
from Mexican
vaqueros.
By the early 1800s, Capt.
George
Vancouver's gift of cattle to
Pai`ea Kamehameha, monarch of the Hawaiian
Kingdom, had multiplied astonishingly, and were wreaking havoc
throughout the countryside. About 1812, John Parker, a sailor who
had jumped ship and settled in the islands, received permission
from Kamehameha to capture the wild cattle and develop a beef
industry.
The Hawaiian style of ranching originally included capturing wild
cattle by driving them into pits dug in the forest floor. Once
tamed somewhat by hunger and thirst, they were hauled out up a
steep ramp, and tied by their horns to the horns of a tame, older
steer (or
ox) that knew where the
paddock with food and water was located. The
industry grew slowly under the reign of Kamehameha's son Liholiho
(
Kamehameha II).
Later, Liholiho's brother, Kauikeaouli (
Kamehameha III), visited California, then
still a part of Mexico. He was impressed with the skill of the
Mexican vaqueros, and invited several to Hawai`i in 1832 to teach
the Hawaiian people how to work cattle.
Even today, traditional paniolo dress, as well as certain styles of
Hawaiian formal attire, reflect the Spanish heritage of the
vaquero. The traditional Hawaiian saddle, the
noho lio,
and many other tools of the cowboy's trade have a distinctly
Mexican/Spanish look and many Hawaiian ranching families still
carry the names of the vaqueros who married Hawaiian women and made
Hawai`i their home.
Other
Montauk, New
York
, on Long
Island
makes a somewhat debatable claim of having the
oldest cattle operation in what today is the United States, having
run cattle in the area since European settlers purchased land from
the Indian
people of the area in 1643. Although there were
substantial numbers of cattle on Long Island, as well as the need
to herd them to and from common grazing lands on a seasonal basis,
no consistent "cowboy" tradition developed amongst the cattle
handlers of Long Island, who actually lived with their families in
houses built on the pasture grounds. The only actual "cattle
drives" held on Long Island consisted of one drive in 1776, when
the Island's cattle were moved in a failed attempt to prevent them
from being captured by the British during the
American Revolution, and three or four
drives in the late 1930s, when area cattle were herded down Montauk
Highway to pasture ground near Deep Hollow Ranch.
Today,
the "Salt Water Cowboys" are known for rounding up the feral Chincoteague
Ponies from Assateague Island
and driving them across Assateague Channel into pens on Chincoteague
Island
, Virginia
during the annual Pony
Penning.
Cowboys in Canada
Ranching
in Canada has traditionally been dominated by one province,
Alberta
. The most successful early settlers of the
province were the ranchers, who found Alberta's
foothills to be ideal for raising cattle. Most of
Alberta's ranchers were
English
settlers, but cowboys such as
John Ware —
who brought the first cattle into the province in 1876 — were
American.
American style open range dryland ranching
began to dominate southern Alberta
(and, to a lesser extent, southwestern Saskatchewan
) by the 1880s. The nearby city of
Calgary
became the centre of the Canadian cattle industry,
earning it the nickname "Cowtown". The cattle industry is
still extremely important to Alberta, and cattle outnumber people
in the province. While cattle ranches defined by barbed wire fences
replaced the open range just as they did in the US, the cowboy
influence lives on. Canada's first rodeo, the
Raymond Stampede, was established in 1902.
In 1912,
the Calgary
Stampede
began, and today it is the world’s richest cash
rodeo. Each year, Calgary’s northern rival Edmonton
, Alberta stages the Canadian Finals Rodeo, and dozens of
regional rodeos are held through the province.
Cowboys outside North America
In
addition to the original Mexican vaquero, the Mexican charro, the North American cowboy, and the
Hawaiian paniolo, the Spanish also exported their
horsemanship and knowledge of cattle ranching to the gaucho of Argentina
, Uruguay
, Paraguay
and (with the spelling gaúcho) southern
Brazil
, the
chalan in Peru
, the
llanero of Venezuela
, and the huaso of
Chile
.
In
Australia, which has a large ranch
(
station) culture,
cowboys are known as
stockmen and
drovers (with trainee stockmen referred
to as
jackaroos and
jillaroos). The Spanish
tradition also influenced Australia, both via concepts adapted from
the Americas, and traditions brought directly from Spain, each of
which arrived along with imports of various breeds of horses,
cattle, sheep and other livestock .
The idea of
horseback riders who guard
herds of cattle, sheep or horses is common wherever wide, open land
for grazing exists.
In the French Camargue
, riders called "gardians"
herd cattle. In Hungary
, csikós guard horses and
gulyás tend to cattle.
The
herders in the region of Maremma
, in Tuscany (Italy
) are called
butteros. The
Asturian pastoral population is referred to as
Vaqueiros de
alzada.
Modern working cowboys
On the ranch, the cowboy is responsible for feeding the livestock,
branding and earmarking cattle
(horses also are branded on many ranches), plus tending to animal
injuries and other needs. The working cowboy usually is in charge
of a small group or "string" of horses and is required to routinely
patrol the rangeland in all weather conditions checking for damaged
fences, evidence of
predation, water
problems, and any other issue of concern.
They also move the livestock to different pasture locations, or
herd them into corrals and onto trucks for transport. In addition,
cowboys may do many other jobs, depending on the size of the
"outfit" or
ranch, the
terrain, and the number of livestock. On a smaller
ranch with fewer cowboys—often just family members, cowboys are
generalists who perform many all-around tasks; they repair fences,
maintain ranch equipment, and perform other odd jobs. On a very
large ranch (a "big outfit"), with many employees, cowboys are able
to specialize on tasks solely related to cattle and horses. Cowboys
who
train horses often specialize in
this task only, and some may
"Break"
or train young horses for more than one ranch.
The
United States Bureau of
Labor Statistics collects no figures for cowboys, so the exact
number of working cowboys is unknown. Cowboys are included in the
2003 category,
Support activities for animal production,
which totals 9,730 workers averaging $19,340 per annum. In addition
to cowboys working on ranches, in
stockyards, and as staff or competitors at
rodeos, the category includes farmhands
working with other types of livestock (
sheep,
goats,
hogs,
chickens, etc.). Of those 9,730 workers, 3,290 are
listed in the subcategory of
Spectator sports which
includes rodeos,
circuses, and theaters
needing livestock handlers.
Attire
Most cowboy attire, sometimes termed
Western wear, grew out of practical need
and the environment in which the cowboy worked. Most items were
adapted from the Mexican
vaqueros, though sources from
other cultures, including
Native Americans and
Mountain Men contributed.
- Cowboy hat; High crowned hat with a
wide brim to protect from sun, overhanging brush, and the elements.
There are many styles, initially influenced by John B. Stetson's Boss
of the plains, which was designed in response to the climatic
conditions of the West.
- Bandanna; a large cotton neckerchief that had a myriad of uses from
mopping up sweat to masking the face from dust storms. In modern
times, is now more likely to be a silk neckscarf for decoration and
warmth.
- Cowboy boots; a boot with a high top
to protect the lower legs, pointed toes to help guide the foot into
the stirrup, and high heels to keep the foot
from slipping through the stirrup while working in the saddle; with
or without detachable spurs.
- Chaps (usually pronounced "shaps") or
chinks protect the rider's legs while on
horseback, especially riding through heavy brush or during rough
work with livestock.
- Jeans or other sturdy, close-fitting
trousers made of canvas or denim, designed to protect the legs and
prevent the trouser legs from snagging on brush, equipment or other
hazards. Properly made cowboy jeans also have a smooth inside seam
to prevent blistering the inner thigh and knee while on
horseback.
- Gloves, usually of deerskin or other
leather that is soft and flexible for working purposes, yet
provides protection when handling barbed wire, assorted tools or
clearing native brush and vegetation.
Many of these items show marked regional variations. Parameters
such as hat brim width, or chap length and material were adjusted
to accommodate the various environmental conditions encountered by
working cowboys.
Tools

Modern Texas cowboys.
Note that their clothes are similar to those of the 19th
century cowboy above
- Lariat; from the Spanish "la riata,"
meaning "the rope," sometimes called a lasso, especially
in the East, or simply, a "rope". This is a tightly twisted stiff
rope, originally of rawhide or leather, now often of nylon, made
with a small loop at one end called a "hondo." When the rope is run
through the hondo, it creates a loop that slides easily, tightens
quickly and can be thrown to catch animals.
- Spurs; metal devices attached to the heel
of the boot, featuring a small metal shank, usually with a small
serrated wheel attached, used to allow the rider to provide a
stronger (or sometimes, more precise) leg cue to the horse.
- Firearms: Modern cowboys often have access to a rifle, used to protect the livestock from predation by
wild animals, more often carried inside a pickup truck than on horseback, though rifle
scabbards are manufactured, and allow a
rifle to be carried on a saddle. A pistol is more often carried when on horseback. The
modern ranch hand often uses a .22 caliber "varmit" rifle for
modern ranch hazards, such as rattlesnakes, coyotes, and
rabid skunks. In areas
near wilderness, a ranch cowboy may carry
a higher-caliber rifle to fend off larger predators such as
mountain lions. In contrast, the
cowboy of the 1880s usually carried a heavy caliber revolver such
as the single action .44-40 or
.45 Colt Peacemaker (the civilian version
of the 1872 Single Action Army).
The working cowboy of the 1880s rarely carried a long arm, as they
could get in the way when working cattle, plus they added extra
weight. However, many cowboys owned rifles, and often used them for
market hunting in the off season. Though many models were used,
Cowboys who were part-time market hunters preferred rifles that
could take the widely available .45-70 "Government" ammunition,
such as certain Sharps, Remington, Springfield models, as well as
the Winchester 1876. However, by far the single most popular long
arms were the lever-action repeating Winchesters, particularly
lighter models such as the Model 1873 chambered for the same .44/40
ammunition as the Colt, allowing the cowboy to carry only one kind
of ammunition.
- Knife; cowboys have traditionally favored
some form of pocket knife, specifically
the folding cattle knife or stock knife. The knife has multiple
blades, usually including a leather punch and a "sheepsfoot"
blade.
- Other weapons; while the modern American cowboy came to
existence after the invention of gunpowder, cattle herders of earlier times were
sometimes equipped with heavy polearms, bows or lances.
Horses
The traditional means of transport for the cowboy, even in the
modern era, is by
horseback.
Horses can travel over terrain that vehicles cannot
access. Horses, along with
mules and
burros, also serve as
pack
animals. The most important horse on the ranch is the everyday
working ranch horse that can perform a wide variety of tasks;
horses trained to specialize exclusively in one set of skills such
as
roping or
cutting are very rarely used on ranches.
Because the rider often needs to keep one hand free while working
cattle, the horse must
neck rein and have
good
cow sense—it must instinctively know how to
anticipate and react to cattle.

A stock type horse suitable for cattle
work
A good
stock horse is on the small side,
generally under 15.2
hands (62 inches)
tall at the
withers and often under 1000
pounds, with a short back, sturdy legs and strong muscling,
particularly in the hindquarters. While a
steer roping horse may need to be larger and
weigh more in order to hold a heavy adult
cow,
bull or
steer on a rope,
a smaller, quick horse is needed for herding activities such as
cutting or
calf roping. The horse has to be intelligent,
calm under pressure and have a certain degree of 'cow sense" -- the
ability to anticipate the movement and behavior of cattle.
Many
breeds of horse make good stock horses, but the most common today
in North America is the American
Quarter Horse, which is a horse
breed developed primarily in Texas
from a
combination of Thoroughbred bloodstock
crossed on horses of Mustang and
other Iberian horse ancestry, with
influences from the Arabian horse and
horses developed on the east coast, such as the Morgan horse and now-extinct breeds such as the Chickasaw and Virginia
Quarter-Miler.
Horse equipment or tack

A western saddle
Equipment used to ride a horse is referred to as
tack and includes:
- Western saddle; a saddle
specially designed to allow horse and rider to work for many hours and to provide
security to the rider in rough terrain or when moving quickly in
response to the behavior of the livestock being herded. A western
saddle has a deep seat with high pommel and
cantle that provides a secure seat. Deep,
wide stirrups provide comfort and security
for the foot. A strong, wide saddle tree of
wood, covered in rawhide (or made of a modern synthetic material)
distributes the weight of the rider across a greater area of the
horse's back, reducing the pounds carried per square inch and
allowing the horse to be ridden longer without harm. A horn sits low in front of the rider, to which
a lariat can be snubbed, and assorted dee
rings and leather "saddle strings" allow additional equipment to be
tied to the saddle.
- Saddle blanket; a blanket or pad
is required under the Western saddle to provide comfort and
protection for the horse.
- Saddle bags (leather or nylon) can be mounted to the saddle,
behind the cantle, to carry various sundry items and extra
supplies. Additional bags may be attached to the front or the
saddle.
- Bridle; a Western bridle usually has a
curb bit and long split reins to control the horse in many different
situations. Generally the bridle is open-faced, without a noseband, unless the horse is ridden with a
tiedown. Young ranch horses
learning basic tasks usually are ridden in a jointed, loose-ring
snaffle bit, often with a running martingale. In some areas,
especially where the "California" style of the vaquero or
buckaroo tradition is still strong, young horses are often
seen in a bosal style hackamore.
- Martingales of various are
seen on horses that are in training or have behavior problems.
Vehicles
The most common motorized vehicle driven in modern ranch work is
the
pickup truck. Sturdy and roomy,
with a high ground clearance, and often
four-wheel drive capability, it has an open
box, called a "bed," and can haul supplies from town or over rough
trails on the ranch. It is used to pull stock trailers transporting
cattle and livestock from one area to another and to market. With a
horse trailer attached, it carries
horses to distant areas where they may be needed. Motorcycles are
sometimes used instead of horses for some tasks, but the most
common smaller vehicle is the
four-wheeler. It will carry a single
cowboy quickly around the ranch for small chores. In areas with
heavy snowfall,
snowmobiles are also
common. However, in spite of modern mechanization, there remain
jobs, particularly those involving working cattle in rough terrain
or in close quarters, that are best done by cowboys on
horseback.
Rodeo cowboys
The word
rodeo is from the Spanish
rodear (to
turn), which means
roundup. In the beginning there was no
difference between the working cowboy and the
rodeo cowboy, and in fact, the term
working
cowboy did not come into use until the 1950s. Prior to that it
was assumed that all cowboys were working cowboys. Early cowboys
both worked on ranches and displayed their skills at the
roundups.
The advent of professional rodeos allowed cowboys, like many
athletes, to earn a living by
performing their skills before an audience. Rodeos also provided
employment for many working cowboys who
were needed to handle livestock. Many rodeo cowboys are also
working cowboys and most have working cowboy experience.
The dress of the rodeo cowboy is not very different from that of
the working cowboy on his way to town. Snaps, used in lieu of
buttons on the cowboy's shirt, allowed the cowboy to escape from a
shirt snagged by the horns of
steer or
bull. Styles were often adapted from the
early movie industry for the rodeo. Some rodeo competitors,
particularly women, add sequins, colors, silver and long fringes to
their clothing in both a nod to tradition and showmanship. Modern
riders in "rough stock" events such as
saddle bronc or
bull
riding may add safety equipment such as
kevlar vests or a neck brace, but use of
safety helmets in lieu of the
cowboy hat is yet to be accepted, in spite of
constant risk of injury.
American Revolution
The term "cowboy" was used during the
American Revolution to describe American
fighters who opposed the movement for independence.
Claudius Smith, an outlaw identified with the
Loyalist cause, was
referred to as the "Cow-boy of the Ramapos" due to his penchant for
stealing oxen, cattle and horses from colonists and giving them to
the British.
In the same period, a number of guerilla bands operated in Westchester
County
, which marked the dividing line between the British
and American forces. These groups were made up of local
farmhands who would ambush convoys and carry out raids on both
sides. There were two separate groups: the "skinners" fought for
the pro-independence side; the "cowboys" supported the
British.
Popular culture
As the frontier ended, the cowboy life came to be highly
romanticized. Exhibitions such as those of
Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show helped
to popularize the image of the cowboy as an idealized
representative of the tradition of
chivalry.
In today's society, there is little understanding of the daily
realities of actual agricultural life. Cowboys are more often
associated with (mostly fictitious) Indian-fighting than with their
actual life of
ranch work and cattle-tending.
Actors such as
John Wayne are thought of
as exemplifying a cowboy ideal, even though
western movies seldom bear much resemblance
to real cowboy life. Arguably, the modern
rodeo competitor is much closer to being an actual
cowboy, as many were actually raised on ranches and around
livestock, and the rest have needed to learn livestock-handling
skills on the job.
However, in the United States and the Canadian West, as well as
Australia,
guest
ranches offer people the opportunity to ride horses and get a
taste of the western life—albeit in far greater comfort. Some
ranches also offer vacationers the opportunity to actually perform
cowboy tasks by participating in cattle drives or accompanying
wagon trains. This type of
vacation was popularized by the 1991 movie
City Slickers, starring
Billy Crystal.
The cowboy is also portrayed as a masculine ideal via images
ranging from the
Marlboro Man to the
Village People.
Symbolism
The long history of the West in popular culture tends to define
those clothed in Western clothing as cowboys or cowgirls whether
they have ever been on a horse or not. This is especially true when
applied to entertainers and those in the public arena who wear
western wear as part of their
persona.
However, many people, particularly in the West, wear elements of
Western clothing, particularly
cowboy
boots or hats, as a matter of form even though they have other
jobs, up to and including lawyers, bankers, and other
white collar professionals. Conversely,
some people raised on ranches do not necessarily define themselves
cowboys or cowgirls unless they feel their primary job is to work
with livestock or if they compete in rodeos.
Actual cowboys have derisive expressions for individuals who adopt
cowboy mannerisms as a fashion pose without any actual
understanding of the culture. For example, a "drugstore cowboy"
means someone who wears the clothing but cannot actually ride
anything but the stool of the
drugstore
soda fountain--or, in modern times, a
bar stool. The phrase, "all hat and no
cattle," is used to describe someone (usually male) who boasts
about himself, far in excess of any actual accomplishments. The
word "dude" (or the now-archaic term "greenhorn") indicates an
individual unfamiliar with cowboy culture, especially one who is
trying to pretend otherwise.
Outside of the United States, the cowboy became an archetypal
symbol of American individualism.
In the late 1950s, a Congolese
youth subculture calling themselves the Bills based their style and outlook on Hollywood
's depiction of cowboys in movies.
Something
similar occurred with the term "Apache,"
which in early twentieth century Parisian
society was a slang term for an
outlaw.
Negative associations
The word "cowboy" is also used in a negative sense. Originally this
derived from the behavior of some cowboys in the boomtowns of
Kansas, at the end of the trail for long cattle drives, where
cowboys developed a reputation for violence and wild behavior due
to the inevitable impact of large numbers of cowboys, mostly young
single men, receiving their pay in large lump sums upon arriving in
communities with many drinking and gambling establishments.
"Cowboy" as an adjective for "reckless" developed in the 1920s.
"Cowboy" is sometimes used today in a derogatory sense to describe
someone who is reckless or ignores potential risks, irresponsible
or who heedlessly handles a sensitive or dangerous task.
TIME Magazine referred to President
George W. Bush's foreign policy as "
Cowboy diplomacy," and Bush has been
described in the press, particularly in Europe, as a "cowboy".
"Mr Bush goes to Europe," European Press Review,
BBC Online 14 June,
2001
Schwabe, Alexander. "The Cowboy and the
Shepherd." Spiegel, April 16, 2008. Online
International edition, accessed May 4 2008.
Westcott, Kathryn. "Bush revels in cowboy speak"
BBC Online Accessed May 4, 2008.
In the
British
Isles
, Australia and New Zealand
, "cowboy" is used as an adjective when applied to
tradesmen whose work is of shoddy and
questionable value, e.g., "a cowboy plumber". Similar usage is seen in the United
States to describe someone in the skilled trades who operates
without proper training or licenses. In the eastern United States,
"cowboy" as a noun is sometimes used to describe a fast or careless
driver on the highway.
In art and culture
- Fashion: Western wear, Rhinestone Cowboy
- Film: Western, List of Western movies
- Fine art: Frederic Remington,
Charles Russell, Earl W. Bascom,
Cowboy Artists of
America
- Literature: Western fiction,
List of Western fiction
authors, Cowboy poetry
- Music: Western
Music, Western swing, List of famous Cowboy songs
- Television: TV Western
- Sports: Cowboy action
shooting, Rodeo, Indian rodeo, Charreada.
See also
Footnotes
- Malone, J., p. 1.
- Cowgirl Hall
of Fame website.
- Definition of "cowboy".
- Royal Spanish Academy Dictionary.
- Cassidy, F.G., Hill, A.A. "Buckaroo Once More."
American Speech, Vol. 54, No. 2 (Summer, 1979), pp.
151–153 doi:10.2307/455216.
- Cassidy, F.G. "Another Look at Buckaroo,"
American Speech, Vol. 53, No. 1 (Spring, 1978), pp. 49–51
doi:10.2307/455339.
- Cow. Assorted terms. Online Etymology
Dictionary, accessed May 5, 2008.
- Vernam, p. 294.
- Draper, p. 121.
- Definition of "Cowherd".
- The American Heritage Dictionary of the English
Language, Fourth Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004. 24 Feb.
2008. Dictionary.com
- Bennett, pp. 54-55
- Vernam, p. 190.
- Haeber, Jonathan."Vaqueros: The First Cowboys of
the Open Range." National Geographic News. August 15,
2003. Web page accessed September 2, 2007.
- Denhardt, p. 20.
- Malone J., p. 3.
- Malone, J., p. 7.
- Malone, J., p. 8.
- Malone, J., p. 48.
- Ambulo, John. "The Cattle on a Thousand Hills" The Overland
Monthly March 1887.
- Malone, J., p. 27.
- Malone, p. 10.
- Malone, p. 2.
- Malone, J., p. 45.
- Malone, J., p. 11.
- Malone, J., p. 13.
- Malone, J., p. 22.
- Malone, J., p. 19.
- Malone, p. 18.
- Malone, J., p. 21.
- Connell, Ed (1952) Hackamore Reinsman. The Longhorn
Press, Cisco, Texas. Fifth Printing, August, 1958.
- Malone, J., p. 37.
- Malone, J., p. 5.
- Malone, J., p. 6.
- Malone, J., pp. 38-39.
- Malone, p. 40.
- Malone, J., p. 42.
- Malone, J., p. 70.
- Malone, J., pp. 46–47.
- Malone, J., p. 52.
- Malone, J., pp. 48–50.
- Malone, J., p. 76.
- Malone, J., p. 79.
- Malone, Michael P., and Richard B. Roeder. Montana: A
History of Two Centuries. University of Washington Press;
Revised edition, 1991. ISBN 0295971290, ISBN 978-0295971292.
- Atherton, Lewis The Cattle Kings, Lincoln, NE:
University of Nebraska Press 1961 ISBN0-8032-5759-7 pp.
241-262.
- John D’Emilio and Estelle Freedman In Intimate Matters: A
History of Sexuality in America.
- Wilke, Jim. Frontier comrades: homosexuality in the America
West. pp.164-172; In Out in all directions: the almanac of
gay and lesbian America. Edited by Lynn Witt, Sherry Thomas
and Eric Marcus. New York: Warner Books, 1995. 635 p.
- Garceau, Dee. "Nomads, bunkies, cross-dressers, and family men:
cowboy identity and the gendering of ranch work." p. 149-168. In
Across the great divide: cultures of manhood in the American
West. Edited by Matthew Basso, Laura McCall and Dee Garceau.
New York: Routledge, 2001. 308 p.
- Malone, J., p. 82.
- "Gene Autry's Cowboy Code" © Autry Qualified Interest
Trust. Web page accessed February 3, 2009.
- "This Day in History 1869: Wyoming grants women the
vote".
- McKelvey Puhek, Lenore. "Fannie Sperry Made the
Ride of Her Life".
- from The American Heritage Dictionary of
the English Language, Fourth Edition, Houghton Mifflin
Company:2000. Web site accessed January 19, 2007.
- Vernam, p. 289.
- Stewart, kara L. "The Vaquero Way", web site
accessed November 18, 2007.
- "Buckaroos: Views of a Western Way of Life", web
page accessed November 18, 2007.
- Tasker, Georgia. 2007. "Rancher preserves Florida's
Cracker history". Miami Herald. February 06, 2007. Web
site. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
- Tinsley, Jim Bob. 1990. Florida Cow Hunter. University
of Central Florida Press. ISBN 0-8130-0985-5 pp. 42–3.
- Friends of Payne's Prairie: Spanish Florida retrieved
February 21,
2007.
- Florida Cracker Cattle and Cracker Horse
Program retrieved February 22, 2007.
- Raid on Gopher Ridge retrieved February 21, 2007.
- Tinsley, Jim Bob. 1990. Florida Cow Hunter. University
of Central Florida Press. ISBN 0-8130-0985-5 pp. 47–51.
- Ochs, Ridgeley. "Ride 'em, Island Cowboy,"
Newsday,. Accessed May 5, 2008.
- Government of Alberta - About Alberta - History.
- Atherton, Lewis The Cattle Kings Lincoln, NE:
University of Nebraska Press 1961 ISBN0-8032-5759-7 p. 243.
- Atherton, Lewis The Cattle Kings Lincoln, NE:
University of Nebraska Press 1961 ISBN0-8032-5759-7 p. 244.
- Rickey, Don, Jr. $10 Horse, $40 Saddle: Cowboy Clothing,
Arms, Tools and Horse Gear of the 1880's The Old Army Press,
First printing, 1976. LC no. 76-9411.
- Snyder, Jeffrey B. (1997) Stetson Hats and the John B.
Stetson Company 1865-1970. p. 50 ISBN 0-7643-0211-6.
- Cassidy, Frederic G., ed. Dictionary of American
Regional English, vol. I. Cambridge/London:Belknap Press of
Harvard University Press, 1985 ISBN 0-674-20511-1 (vol I).
- Vernam, p. 297.
- Rickey, p. 67.
- Rickey, pp. 80–81.
- Rickey, pp. 81–86.
- Rickey, pp. 85–86.
- Vernam, p. 298-299.
- Vernam, pp. 394-395.
- North Jersey Highlands Historical Society. Web
page accessed May 5, 2008.
- Pictorial History of the Wild West by James D. Horan
and Paul Sann, ISBN 0600031039, ISBN 978-0600031031.
- definition of cowboy from Answers.com [1].
- Malone, p. 58.
- cowboy. Dictionary.com. The American Heritage
Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Houghton
Mifflin Company, 2004 and Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random
House, Inc. Accessed: May 04, 2008.
- Allen, Mike and Romesh Ratnesar. "The End of Cowboy
Diplomacy: Why George W. Bush's Grand Strategy for Remaking the
World Had to Change" Time, July 9, 2006.
Accessed May 4, 2008.
- cowboy. Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random
House, Inc. Accessed: May 04, 2008.
References
- Bennett, Deb (1998) Conquerors: The Roots of New World
Horsemanship. Amigo Publications Inc; 1st edition. ISBN
0-9658533-0-6
- Denhardt, Robert M. The Horse of the Americas Norman:
University of Oklahoma Press 1947.
- Draper, Robert. "21st -Century Cowboys: Why the Spirit
Endures." National Geographic, December 2007, pp.
114–135.
- Malone, John William. An Album of the American Cowboy.
New York: Franklin Watts, Inc., 1971. SBN: 531-01512-2.
- Malone, Michael P., and Richard B. Roeder. Montana: A
History of Two Centuries. University of Washington Press;
Revised edition, 1991. ISBN 0295971290, ISBN 978-0295971292.
- Rickey, Don, Jr. $10 Horse, $40 Saddle: Cowboy Clothing,
Arms, Tools and Horse Gear of the 1880s The Old Army Press,
First printing, 1976. LC no. 76-9411.
- Vernam, Glenn R. Man on Horseback New York: Harper
& Row 1964.
Further reading
- Beck, Warren A., Haase, Ynez D.; Historical Atlas of the
American West. University of Oklahoma Press, Oklahoma, 1989.
ISBN 0-8061-2193-9.
- Jordan, Teresa; Cowgirls: Women of the American West.
University of Nebraska Press, 1992. ISBN 0-8032-7575-7.
- Nicholson, Jon. Cowboys: A Vanishing World. Macmillan,
2001. ISBN 0-333-90208-4.
- Phillips, Charles; Axlerod, Alan; editor. The Encyclopedia
of the American West. Simon & Schuster, New York, 1996.
ISBN 0028974956.
- Roach, Joyce Gibson; The Cowgirls. University of North
Texas Press, 1990. ISBN 0-929398-15-7.
- Slatta, Richard W. The Cowboy Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO,
California, 1994. ISBN 0-87436-738-7.
- Ward, Fay E.; The Cowboy at Work: All About His Job and How
He Does It. University of Oklahoma Press, Oklahoma, 1987. ISBN
0-8061-2051-7.