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Spring 2017

Texas LAND

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TEXAS LAND / Roundup Issue<br />

When the American Civil War was over, thousands of<br />

Confederate soldiers, being without home or job,<br />

went west to Texas to work on the frontier as cattle<br />

hands for the early cattlemen who chose that wonderful area of<br />

free grass.<br />

They took innovation with them: skills as mule skinners, wild<br />

game hunters, craftsmen of all kinds, and, most important, the<br />

desire to live and work outside.<br />

They acquired new skills of riding stock horses and handling<br />

herds of free-range cattle.<br />

To this new and exciting industry they lent the well-worn “rebel<br />

yell” to the driving of cattle, a yell that was feral in nature and<br />

that would soon become the early version of the cattle call. With<br />

this yell, used to coerce cattle to change directions or just move<br />

forward, these men of renown drove the big herds north from<br />

deep South Texas to northern markets. From this era a new “job<br />

title” was coined—cowboy.<br />

Within 10 years, these strong young men would find<br />

themselves handling a<br />

newly invented ferrous<br />

material, barbed wire.<br />

This new metal product<br />

would forever change<br />

the cattle industry by<br />

fencing the open range.<br />

The open range years<br />

were over. Large crews of<br />

former cowboys suddenly<br />

became ranch fence<br />

builders. They traded<br />

their stock horses for<br />

teams of mules, supply<br />

wagons and post-hole<br />

diggers.<br />

They slept on the ground in all types of weather. The great XIT<br />

Ranch of the Texas Panhandle required 6,000 miles of barbed<br />

wire fence. With this new innovation in ranching came another<br />

new job title—fence hand. This class of unsung men contained<br />

those who fenced and secured our ranches and some of their<br />

early work can still be found today in isolated areas.<br />

The First and Second World Wars changed the lives of many<br />

of these ranch laborers, but at the same time, taught them new<br />

skills, the most important of which was welding.<br />

By the early 1950s, ranchers were replacing weaker, wooden<br />

implements with stronger, longer-lasting metal implements built<br />

by the skilled war-welding cowboys. Soon gates were fashioned<br />

of metal rod and pipe. Even metal war-surplus landing mats,<br />

which had been used in the islands as makeshift runways for<br />

war planes, became ranch gates and working-pen fences.<br />

RANCHERS WERE REPLACING<br />

WEAKER, WOODEN IMPLEMENTS WITH<br />

STRONGER, LONGER-LASTING METAL<br />

IMPLEMENTS BUILT BY THE SKILLED<br />

WAR-WELDING COWBOYS<br />

Soon, metal cattle guards, metal cattle chutes, head gates,<br />

even metal cattle pens were built and installed.<br />

Then came the iconic metal cattle trailer, with more changes on<br />

the way. One day the neighbor had a fancy, new, decorative gate<br />

installed on the county road with the addition of a brand logo<br />

to the gate. Soon, names were written in metal script explaining<br />

who the ranch belonged to, the type of cattle raised therein, and<br />

on, and on.<br />

Today, the sky’s the limit! Life-like figures have been added<br />

to gated ranch entrances in recent years, depicting cowboys<br />

roping, horses bucking, cattle drives, silhouettes of big deer—<br />

you name it, you got it. They just keep on ‘a-comin’. As Butch<br />

Cassidy said, “Who are those guys?”<br />

A ranch owner must have good ranch hands. They are the men<br />

who make the ranch go ‘round. Ranch owners can’t operate with<br />

a transient workforce. Good, strong, stable family men, who love<br />

their work more than their pay, are those men who build and<br />

decorate our ranches.<br />

The Browns of Bee<br />

County in South Texas<br />

are most fortunate to<br />

employ one such man.<br />

Pablo Garcia, our ranch<br />

welder and mechanic, is<br />

the best in the business.<br />

He builds our “stuff.” He<br />

builds anything we ask<br />

him to build and when<br />

done, it is perfect for the<br />

use and nice to look at<br />

as a bonus.<br />

Garcia was raised in our<br />

area and was trained as<br />

a mechanic and welder by<br />

his father. He is a pipeline class welder. He can do it all. He<br />

has built all of our feedlot cattle handling facilities and pens<br />

over the 20 years he has worked for us.<br />

Thanks to him, instead of having to stop and open gates,<br />

we sail quickly over numerous pipe cattle guards built and<br />

installed by him.<br />

The ranch welding shop is his domain and where many of<br />

our tools and implements are constructed as well as repaired.<br />

We also take in outside welding from other ranchers as<br />

time permits. Many of these jobs involve decorative ranch<br />

entrances.<br />

It is an honest statement that we would not be able to ranch<br />

as effectively in this fast-paced society we live in without<br />

Pablo Garcia’s faithful work ethic and the necessities and<br />

conveniences he provides for us through his welding skills.<br />

112

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