Joseph G. McCoy left a prosperous farm in Illinois and came to Kansas in 1867 where he planned to make his fortune in the cattle trade. He had heard reports of huge herds of cattle running wild in Texas after the Civil War. Their impoverished owners could not get the cattle to Northern Markets because the eastern trail had been closed by splenic fever, or “Texas Fever,” a disease brought north by ticks attached to longhorn cattle that killed thousands of domestic cattle. Farmers and ranchers north of Texas convinced state legislation to make quarantine lines that no longhorn was allowed to pass. McCoy devised a plan to drive the cattle to a railhead in Kansas outside the quarantine lines and then ship them back east where the market for beef was higher because of a scarcity of the product.
Joseph G. McCoy. This photograph was taken around the same time period that McCoy was in Abilene. Courtesy of the Dickinson County Historical Society. |
McCoy's Abilene stockyards were known as the Great Western Stockyards. Photograph by Alexander Gardner, 1867. Courtesy of the Dickinson County Historical Society. |
A map of the Chisholm Trail. Courtesy of the Dickinson County Historical Society. |
An illustration entitled "Abilene in its Glory." The building featured in this illustration is the Drover's Cottage. Courtesy of the Dickinson County Historical Society. |
1867 35,000
1868 75,000
1869 150,000
1870 300,000
1871 600,000
When McCoy made his agreement with the Union Pacific Railway, the railway initially agreed to pay him five dollars for each car in which cattle were shipped. This was a verbal agreement; no physical contract was signed by either party. After the second season of the cattle trade in 1868, over $200,000 was due to McCoy. The railway refused to pay this amount on the claim that the agreement was “improvidently made.” McCoy surrendered, on the agreement that a new contract would be made. This contract never came to fruition, and McCoy would not receive his payment until several years later after he sued the company for the amount due to him.
In 1868, Texas fever began making many of McCoy’s buyers from the east nervous about purchasing cattle from Abilene. McCoy had an incredible solution for this problem. The first part of his plan was to put on a show. He had a band of cowboys capture several native plains animals. After capturing several bison, elk, and wild horses, the cowboys travelled to St. Louis and Chicago showing their prowess in riding and roping the various animals. This show impressed many of McCoy’s buyers. Soon after, McCoy invited his buyers to visit Abilene and go on a buffalo hunt. After the hunt, he brought the men to his stockyards and greatly praised the thousands of longhorns waiting to be sold. These cattle were bought soon, and McCoy’s business was booming again.
In addition to McCoy’s businesses opening in Abilene, several other businesses began to be seen throughout Abilene’s cattle town era. By 1870 the community had ten boarding houses, eleven saloons, five general stores, and four hotels. The community had grown to accommodate over seventy-five businesses and over three thousand residents. Most of these businesses found their income from cowboys and cattle traders. As many as one thousand cowboys were being paid off in a single day during the cattle drive season, and they spent their money quickly in the many businesses that Abilene had to offer.
A great example that shows what the economy was like in Abilene is the First National Bank. McCoy referred many cattlemen to the First National Bank of Kansas City for their banking needs. When the facility opened a local bank in 1870 in Abilene, over $900,000 passed over the counter in the bank’s first two months. This amount would be the equivalent of over $15 million today.
In 1872, due to an increase in domestic livestock deaths related to Texas Fever and an ever growing problem with unlawful cowboys, Abilene passed an ordinance prohibiting Texas longhorns, making it necessary for ranchers to find new railheads to ship their cattle from. The following proclamation was issued: “We the undersigned most respectively request all who have contemplated driving cattle to Abilene to seek some other point for shipment, as the inhabitants of Dickinson County will no longer submit to the evils of the trade.” Joseph McCoy, who was Abilene mayor at the time, did not agree with this decision.
McCoy was left bitter towards what had happened in Abilene. He wrote of Abilene, “Four-fifths of her business houses became vacant, rents fell to a trifle, many of the leading hotels and business houses were either closed, or taken down and moved to other points. Property became unsalable. The luxuriant sunflower sprang up thick and flourished in the main streets, while the inhabitants, such as could not get away, passed their time sadly contemplating their ruin. Curses both loud and deep were freely bestowed on the political ring. The whole village assumed a desolate, forsaken and deserted appearance.”
A photograph of McCoy taken later in his life. Courtesy of the Dickinson County Historical Society. |
Further Reading:
There are a number of fantastic books on the Chisholm Trail. Many of these have information and details on all of the major Kansas cattle towns.
Historic Sketches of the Cattle Trade of the West and Southwest by Joseph G. McCoy: That’s right, McCoy wrote a book about all of this himself! Of what I have read, this book is rather interesting and it is invaluable learning about this topic from someone who was there. That said, if you read this, take some things with a grain of salt, McCoy views rather highly of himself.
The Cattle Towns by Robert Dykstra: In his book, Dykstra focuses on several different towns and is rather knowledgeable about this subject.
The Chisholm Trail by Wayne Gard
The Trail Drivers of Texas by J. Marvin Hunter
Cowtown Abilene by Stewart P. Verckler: I mentioned this one in another blog post, but it is a good book, and you can purchase it at the Dickinson County Heritage Center in Abilene. So there you go.
Enjoyed the article, thanks.
ReplyDeleteYou bet!
ReplyDeleteGood stuff. No, I stand corrected... GREAT stuff!
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