The Western Range Livestock Industry

The Western Range Livestock Industry

Author: Marion Clawson

Publisher:

Published: 1950

Total Pages: 426

ISBN-13:

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What is range? Range livestock in the nation. Division of the range region. Climate of the range region. Plant cover in relation to range livestock production. Other natural factors. General economic structure of the range region. Land ownership. Administration of federal range lands. Livestock numbers and production rates. Economic utilization of feed and forage. Range livestock fattening and marketing. General characteristics of ranches. Ranch organization and management principles. Cattle ranches. Sheep ranches. Ranch values and income. Grazing land values and grazing fees. Credit for the range livestock industry. Meat consumption. Geography of meat and animal prices.


The Kansas Beef Industry

The Kansas Beef Industry

Author: Charles L. Wood

Publisher: University Press of Kansas

Published: 2021-10-08

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13: 0700631798

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This book relates the modern development of the Kansas beef cattle industry, combining both the history of production—including specific business problems and the significant work in upbreeding—and an examination of the marketing aspects of the industry that became so important during the twentieth century. Sharpest focus is on the period 1890 to 1940, after the Western beef industry had passed through the transition from using the expansive, open-range method of beef production to the more rational and organized methods of today. Wood presents a detailed discussion of the history of upbreeding. He points out the little-known fact that the fine-blooded animals—especially Herefords—that moved out from the Midwest were probably more important in stocking the ranges of the Plains and the Southwest than the many thousands of Longhorns driven from Texas. He emphasizes the interregional aspect of beef production and the unique role played by Kansas. On the threshold of the Great Plains, Kansas received cattle from both the Midwest and the Southwest for many years—upbred cattle moving South, and stocker cattle moving from the South or Southwest into Kansas for additional maturing before being shipped to the Midwest for fattening or for slaughter. Wood also looks closely at the relationship of cattlemen to government and to big business—railroads, stockyards, and packers. He sees the cattlemen as agricultural producers and business managers, rather than as romantic, self-reliant giants of the earth. Taking issue with the popular myth that cattlemen were and are ruggedly individualistic and disdainful of outside help, Wood discusses the cattlemen’s repeated demands for aid, especially during the 1930s. Included in the book is the history of the Kansas Livestock Association, which the author credits as being one of the most significant stock associations in the West during this century. Wood sets the KLA’s growth within the context of the larger organizational revolution in the nation’s business world. A concluding chapter surveys major developments after World War II, including the development of feedlots and irrigation, the new cross-breeding, decentralization of packers, and the advent of trucking to replace railroads. There has been scant information on these topics in the general literature of the Great Plains.