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Everyone loves a cowboy - the dashing hero of the West who rides the
range, ropes wild steers, sleeps under the stars, and sports
high-topped boots and a ten-gallon hat. But the world seems to view him
from one of two angles. Either he vanished with the last trail drive,
or he is alive, young and virile, riding broncs and flashing silver
spurs. Between these two extremes lie the real cowboy an the intense,
formative years of change that transformed the Texas cattle industry
from trail driving into modern ranching.
Barney Nelson traces this transition period through the story of Ted
Gray, a successful cattleman who began his career during the Great
Depression as a thirty-dollar-a-month cowboy in West Texas. Gray
gradually acquired his own land and cattle, in part during a
twenty-three-year stint on the Kokernot 06 Ranch. Along the way, as he
broke broncs, fought screwworms, and weathered droughts, Gray developed
certain convictions to be passed on to future cowboys: most
importantly, that it is still possible to own some cows. Gray wants
today's cowboys to eat their beans, patch their britches, stay in the
country, and learn the cattle business.
Nelson, by allowing Ted Gray to tell his own story, has painted a
vivid picture of life on the range with insights peculiar to those who
have lived and loved cattle ranching. Her book will fascinate
ranchers, businessmen, cowboy and western buffs, and historians of
Texas, the Southwest, and the cattle industry.
Reviews ...
"Growing up around Jacksboro, Texas, on
the eve of the Great Depression, Ted Gray admired the look and manner
of the few old cowpunchers and ranchers who still inhabited the region.
Not anxious to follow the plow as did his father, Gray struck out on
his own at the age of fifteen to "make a hand" among the
cowboys of the West. Gray slowly climbed the ladder of responsibility
from cowhand to wagon boss to ranch manager and finally to ownership
of his own land and livestock. This fascinating account of his
education in the saddle smells of burned hide and choking dust and
creaks authentically like saddle leather and bowed legs. But The Last
Campfire is much more than a collection of twice-told tales from
another stove-up cowboy. Ted Gray has something more to say to us. His
life and philosophy inspire and captivate. Seldom has the oral
tradition been better utilized in a published work."
–
B. Byron Price, Executive Director, Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody,
Wyoming
About the Author...
Barney Nelson is a free-lance
writer and photographer who has contributed numerous articles to such
magazines as Western Horseman, Persimmon
Hill, and The Cattleman. Her
photographs have appeared on several magazine covers, in major
advertising campaigns, and in museum exhibits. When The Last Campfire was written, Nelson and
family lived on the Willow Springs Camp of the Kokernot 06 Ranch.
Today she is a college professor at Sul Ross State University in
Alpine, Texas, teaching writing and literature.
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