<p><SPAN name="i_ix_4" id="i_ix_4"></SPAN><i>The bison as a beast of burden.</i>—On account of the abundance of horses
for all purposes throughout the entire country, oxen are so seldom used
they almost constitute a curiosity. There never has existed a necessity
to break buffaloes to the yoke and work them like domestic oxen, and so
few experiments have been made in this direction that reliable data on
this subject is almost wholly wanting. While at Miles City, Mont., I
heard of a German “granger” who worked a small farm in the Tongue River
Valley, and who once had a pair of cow buffaloes trained <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_458"></SPAN></span>to the yoke.
It was said that they were strong, rapid walkers, and capable of
performing as much work as the best domestic oxen, but they were at
times so uncontrollably headstrong and obstinate as to greatly detract
from their usefulness. The particular event of their career on which
their historian dwelt with special interest occurred when their owner
was hauling a load of potatoes to town with them. In the course of the
long drive the buffaloes grew very thirsty, and upon coming within sight
of the water in the river they started for it in a straight course. The
shouts and blows of the driver only served to hasten their speed, and
presently, when they reached the edge of the high bank, they plunged
down it without the slightest hesitation, wagon, potatoes, and all, to
the loss of everything except themselves and the drink they went after!</p>
<p>Mr. Robert Wickliffe states that trained buffaloes make satisfactory
oxen. “I have broken them to the yoke, and found them capable of making
excellent oxen; and for drawing wagons, carts, or other heavily laden
vehicles on long journeys they would, I think, be greatly preferable to
the common ox.”</p>
<p>It seems probable that, in the absence of horses, the buffalo would make
a much more speedy and enduring draught animal than the domestic ox,
although it is to be doubted whether he would be as strong. His weaker
pelvis and hind quarters would surely count against him under certain
circumstances, but for some purposes his superior speed and endurance
would more than counterbalance that defect.</p>
<p><SPAN name="i_ix_5" id="i_ix_5"></SPAN>BISON HERDS AND INDIVIDUALS IN CAPTIVITY AND DOMESTICATION, JANUARY 1,
1889.</p>
<p><i>Herd of Mr. S. L. Bedson, Stony Mountain, Manitoba.</i>—In 1877 Mr.
Bedson purchased 5 buffalo calves, 1 bull, and 4 heifers, for which he
paid $1,000. In 1888 his herd consisted of 23 full-blood bulls, 35 cows,
3 half-breed cows, 5 half-breed bulls, and 17 calves, mixed and
pure;<SPAN name="fnanchor_51_51" id="fnanchor_51_51"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</SPAN> making a total of 83 head. These were all produced from the
original 5, no purchases having been made, nor any additions made in any
other way. Besides the 83 head constituting the herd when it was sold, 5
were killed and 9 given away, which would otherwise make a total of 97
head produced since 1877. In November, 1888, this entire herd was
purchased, for $50,000, by Mr. C. J. Jones, and added to the already
large herd owned by that gentleman in Kansas.</p>
<p><SPAN name="young" id="young"></SPAN></p>
<div class="center">
<ANTIMG src="images/016.jpg" alt="YOUNG HALF-BREED (BUFFALO-DOMESTIC) BULL." title="YOUNG HALF-BREED (BUFFALO-DOMESTIC) BULL." /></div>
<h4><span class="sc">Young Half-breed (Buffalo-Domestic) Bull.—Herd of C. J.
Jones, Garden City, Kansas.</span><br/>Drawn by Ernest E. Thompson.</h4>
<p><i>Herd of Mr. C. J. Jones, Garden City, Kans.</i>—Mr. Jones’s original herd
of 57 buffaloes constitute a living testimonial to his individual
enterprise, and to his courage, endurance, and skill in the chase. The
majority of the individuals composing the herd he himself ran down, <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_459"></SPAN></span>
lassoed, and tied with his own hands. For the last five years Mr. Jones
has made an annual trip, in June, to the uninhabited “panhandle” of
Texas, to capture calves out of the small herd of from one hundred to
two hundred head which represented the last remnant of the great
southern herd. Each of these expeditious involved a very considerable
outlay in money, an elaborate “outfit” of men, horses, vehicles, camp
equipage, and lastly, but most important of all, a herd of a dozen fresh
milch cows to nourish the captured calves and keep them from dying of
starvation and thirst. The region visited was fearfully barren, almost
without water, and to penetrate it was always attended by great
hardship. The buffaloes were difficult to find, but the ground was good
for running, being chiefly level plains, and the superior speed of the
running horses always enabled the hunters to overtake a herd whenever
one was sighted, and to “cut out” and lasso two, three, or four of its
calves. The degree of skill and daring displayed in these several
expeditions are worthy of the highest admiration, and completely surpass
anything I have ever seen or read of being accomplished in connection
with hunting, or the capture of live game. The latest feat of Mr. Jones
and his party comes the nearest to being incredible. During the month of
May, 1888, they not only captured seven calves, but also <i>eleven adult
cows</i>, of which some were lassoed in full career on the prairie, thrown,
tied, and hobbled! The majority, however, were actually “rounded up,”
herded, and held in control until a bunch of tame buffaloes was driven
down to meet them, so that it would thus be possible to drive all
together to a ranch. This brilliant feat can only be appreciated as it
deserves by those who have lately hunted buffalo, and learned by dear
experience the extent of their wariness, and the difficulties, to say
nothing of the dangers, inseparably connected with their pursuit.</p>
<p>The result of each of Mr. Jones’s five expeditions is as follows: In
1884 no calves found; 1885, 11 calves captured, 5 died, 6 survived;
1886, 14 calves captured, 7 died, 7 survived; 1887, 36 calves captured,
6 died, 30 survived; 1888, 7 calves captured, all survived; 1888, 11 old
cows captured, all survived. Total, 79 captures, 18 losses, 57
survivors.</p>
<p>The census of the herd is exactly as follows: Adult cows, 11; three-year
olds, 7, of which 2 are males and 5 females; two-year olds, 4, of which
all are males; yearling, 28, of which 15 are males and 13 females;
calves, 7, of which 3 are males and 4 females. Total herd, 57; 24 males
and 33 females. To this, Mr. Jones’s original herd, must now be added
the entire herd formerly owned by Mr. Bedson.</p>
<p>Respecting his breeding operations Mr. Jones writes: “My oldest [bull]
buffaloes are now three years old, and I am breeding one hundred
domestic cows to them this year. Am breeding the Galloway cows quite
extensively; also some Shorthorns, Herefords, and Texas cows. I expect
best results from the Galloways. If I can get the black luster of the <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_460"></SPAN></span>
latter and the fur of a buffalo, I will have a robe that will bring more
money than we get for the average range steer.”</p>
<p>In November, 1888, Mr. Jones purchased Mr. Bedson’s entire herd, and in
the following mouth proceeded to ship a portion of it to Kansas City.
Thirty-three head were separated from the remainder of the herd on the
prairie near Stony Mountain, 12 miles from Winnipeg, and driven to the
railroad. Several old bulls broke away en route and ran back to the
herd, and when the remainder were finally corraled in the pens at the
stock-yards “they began to fight among themselves, and some fierce
encounters were waged between the old bulls. The younger cattle were
raised on the horns of their seniors, thrown in the air, and otherwise
gored.” While on the way to St. Paul three of the half-breed buffaloes
were killed by their companions. On reaching Kansas City and unloading
the two cars, 13 head broke away from the large force of men that
attempted to manage them, stampeded through the city, and finally took
refuge in the low-lands along the river. In due time, however, all were
recaptured.</p>
<p>Since the acquisition of this northern herd and the subsequent press
comment that it has evoked, Mr. Jones has been almost overwhelmed with
letters of inquiry in regard to the whole subject of buffalo breeding,
and has found it necessary to print and distribute a circular giving
answers to the many inquiries that have been made.</p>
<p><i>Herd of Mr. Charles Allard, Flathead Indian Reservation,
Montana.</i>—This herd was visited in the autumn of 1888 by Mr. G. O.
Shields, of Chicago, who reports that it consists of thirty-five head of
pure-blood buffaloes, of which seven are calves of 1888, six are
yearlings, and six are two-year olds. Of the adult animals, four cows
and two bulls are each fourteen years old, “and the beards of the bulls
almost sweep the ground as they walk.”</p>
<p><i>Herd of Hon. W. F. Cody (“Buffalo Bill”).</i>—The celebrated “Wild West
Show” has, ever since its organization, numbered amongst its leading
attractions a herd of live buffaloes of all ages. At present this herd
contains eighteen head, of which fourteen were originally purchased of
Mr. H. T. Groome, of Wichita, Kansas, and have made a journey to London
and back. As a proof of the indomitable persistence of the bison in
breeding under most unfavorable circumstances, the fact that four of the
members of this herd are calves which were born in 1888 in London, at
the American Exposition, is of considerable interest.</p>
<p>This herd is now (December, 1888) being wintered on General Beale’s
farm, near the city of Washington. In 1886-’87, while the Wild West Show
was at Madison Square Garden, New York City, its entire herd of twenty
buffaloes was carried off by pleuro-pneumonia. It is to be greatly
feared that sooner or later in the course of its travels the present
herd will also disappear, either through disease or accident.</p>
<p><i>Herd of Mr. Charles Goodnight, Clarendon, Texas.</i>—Mr. Goodnight writes
that he has “been breeding buffaloes in a small way for the past <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_461"></SPAN></span>ten
years,” but without giving any particular attention to it. At present
his herd consists of thirteen head, of which two are three-year old
bulls and four are calves. There are seven cows of all ages, one of
which is a half-breed.</p>
<p><i>Herd at the Zoological Society’s Gardens, Philadelphia, Arthur E.
Brown, superintendent.</i>—This institution is the fortunate possessor of
a small herd of ten buffaloes, of which four are males and six females.
Two are calves of 1877. In 1886 the Gardens sold an adult bull and cow
to Hon. W. F. Cody for $300.</p>
<p><i>Herd at Bismarck Grove, Kansas, owned by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa
Fé Railroad Company.</i>—A small herd of buffaloes has for several years
past been kept at Bismarck Grove as an attraction to visitors. At
present it contains ten head, one of which is a very large bull, another
in a four-year-old bull, six are cows of various ages, and two are
two-year olds. In 1885 a large bull belonging to this herd grew so
vicious and dangerous that it was necessary to kill him.</p>
<p>The following interesting account of this herd was published in the
Kansas City Times of December 8, 1888:</p>
<p>“Thirteen years ago Colonel Stanton purchased a buffalo bull calf for $8
and two heifers for $25. The descendants of these three buffaloes now
found at Bismarck Grove, where all were born, number in all ten. There
were seventeen, but the rest have died, with the exception of one, which
was given away. They are kept in an inclosure containing about 30 acres
immediately adjoining the park, and there may be seen at any time. The
sight is one well worth a trip and the slight expense that may attach to
it, especially to one who has never seen the American bison in his
native state.</p>
<p>“The present herd includes two fine bull calves dropped last spring, two
heifers, five cows, and a bull six years old and as handsome as a
picture. The latter has been named Cleveland, after the colonel’s
favorite Presidential candidate. The entire herd is in as fine condition
as any beef cattle, though they were never fed anything but hay and are
never given any shelter. In fact they don’t take kindly to shelter, and
whether a blizzard is blowing, with the mercury 20 degrees below zero,
or the sun pouring down his scorching rays, with the thermometer 110
degrees above, they set their heads resolutely toward storm or sun and
take their medicine as if they liked it. Hon. W. F. Cody, “Buffalo
Bill,” tried to buy the whole herd two years ago to take to Europe with
his Wild West Show, but they were not for sale at his own figures, and,
indeed, there is no anxiety to dispose of them at any figures. The
railroad company has been glad to furnish them pasturage for the sake of
adding to the attractions of the park, in which there are also
forty-three head of deer, including two as fine bucks as ever trotted
over the national deer trail toward the salt-licks in northern Utah.</p>
<p>“While the bison at Bismark Grove are splendid specimens of their class,
“Cleveland” is decidedly the pride of the herd, and as grand a <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_462"></SPAN></span>creature
as ever trod the soil of Kansas on four legs. He is just six years old
and is a perfect specimen of the kings of the plains. There is royal
blood in his veins, and his coat is finer than the imperial purple. It
is not possible to get at him to measure his stature and weight. He must
weigh fully 3,000 pounds, and it is doubtful if there is to-day living
on the face of the earth a handsomer buffalo bull than he. “Cleveland’s”
disposition is not so ugly as old Barney’s was, but at certain seasons
he is very wild, and there is no one venturesome enough to go into the
inclosure. It is then not altogether safe to even look over the high and
heavy board fence at him, for he is likely to make a run for the
visitor, as the numerous holes in the fence where he has knocked off the
boards will testify.”</p>
<p><i>Herd of Mr. Frederick Dupree, Cheyenne Indian Agency, near Fort
Bennett, Dakota.</i>—This herd contains at present nine pure-blood
buffaloes, five of which are cows and seven mixed bloods. Of the former,
there are two adult bulls and four adult cows. Of the mixed blood
animals, six are half-breeds and one a quarter-breed buffalo.</p>
<p>Mr. Dupree obtained the nucleus of his herd in 1882, at which time he
captured five wild calves about 100 miles west of Fort Bennett. Of
these, two died after two months of captivity and a third was killed by
an Indian in 1885.</p>
<p>Mr. D. F. Carlin, of the Indian service, at Fort Bennett, has kindly
furnished me the following information respecting this herd, under date
of November 1, 1888:</p>
<p>“The animals composing this herd are all in fine condition and are quite
tame. They keep by themselves most of the time, except the oldest bull
(six years old), who seems to appreciate the company of domestic cattle
more than that of his own family. Mr. Dupree has kept one half-breed
bull as an experiment; he thinks it will produce a hardy class of
cattle. His half-breeds are all black, with one exception, and that is a
roan; but they are all built like the buffalo, and when young they grunt
more like a hog than like a calf, the same as a full-blood buffalo.</p>
<p>“Mr. Dupree has never lost a [domestic] cow in giving birth to a
half-breed calf, as was supposed by many people would be the case. There
have been no sales from this herd, although the owner has a standing
offer of $650 for a cow and bull. The cows are not for sale at any
price.”</p>
<p><i>Herd at Lincoln Park, Chicago, Mr. W. P. Walker, superintendent.</i>—This
very interesting and handsomely-kept herd is composed of seven
individuals of the following character: One bull eight years old, one
bull four years old, two cows eight years old, two cows two years old in
the spring of 1888, and one female calf born in the spring of 1888.</p>
<p><i>Zoological Gardens, Cincinnati, Ohio.</i>—This collection contains four
bison, an adult bull and cow, and one immature specimen.</p>
<p><i>Dr. V. T. McGillicuddy, Rapid City, Dakota</i>, has a herd of four pure
buffaloes and one half-breed. Of the former, the two adults, a bull and <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_463"></SPAN></span>
cow seven years old, were caught by Sioux Indians near the Black Hills
for the owner in the spring of 1882. The Indians drove two milch cows to
the range to nourish the calves when caught. These have produced two
calves, one of which, a bull, is now three years old, and the other is a
yearling heifer.</p>
<p><i>Central Park Menagerie, New York, Dr. W. A. Conklin, director.</i>—This
much-visited collection contains four bison, an adult bull and cow, a
two-year-old calf, and a yearling.</p>
<p><i>Mr. John H. Starin, Glen Inland, near New York City.</i>—There are four
buffaloes at this summer resort.</p>
<p><i>The U. S. National Museum, Washington, District of Columbia.</i>—The
collection of the department of living animals at this institution
contains two fine young buffaloes; a bull four years old in July, 1888,
and a cow three years old in May of the same year. These animals were
captured in western Nebraska, when they were calves, by H. R. Jackett,
of Ogalalla, and kept by him on his ranch until 1885. In April, 1888,
Hon. Eugene G. Blackford, of New York, purchased them of Mr. Frederick
D. Nowell, of North Platte, Nebraska, for $100 for the pair, and
presented them to the National Museum, in the hope that they might form
the nucleus of a herd to be owned and exhibited by the United States
Government in or near the city of Washington. The two animals were
received in Ogalalla by Mr. Joseph Palmer, of the National Museum, and
by him they were brought on to Washington in May, in fine condition.
Since their arrival they have been exhibited to the public in a
temporary inclosure on the Smithsonian Grounds, and have attracted much
attention.</p>
<p><i>Mr. B. C. Winston, of Hamline, Minnesota</i>, owns a pair of buffaloes,
one of which, a young bull, was caught by him in western Dakota in the
spring of 1886, soon after its birth. The cow was purchased at Rosseau,
Dakota Territory, a year later, for $225.</p>
<p><i>Mr. I. P. Butler, of Colorado, Texas</i>, is the owner of a young bull
buffalo and a half-breed calf.</p>
<p><i>Mr. Jesse Huston, of Miles City, Montana</i>, owns a fine five-year-old
bull buffalo.</p>
<p><i>Mr. L. F. Gardner, of Bellwood, Oregon</i>, is the owner of a large adult
bull.</p>
<p><i>The Riverside Ranch Company, south of Mandan, Dakota</i>, owns a pair of
full-blood buffaloes.</p>
<p><i>In Dakota</i>, in the hands of parties unknown, there are four full-blood
buffaloes.</p>
<p><i>Mr. James R. Hitch, of Optima, Indian Territory</i>, has a pair of young
buffaloes, which he has offered for sale for $750.</p>
<p><i>Mr. Joseph A. Hudson, of Estell, Nebraska</i>, owns a three-year-old bull
buffalo, which is for sale.</p>
<p>In other countries there are live specimens of <i>Bison americanus</i>
reported as follows: two at Belleview Gardens, Manchester, England; <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_464"></SPAN></span>one
at the Zoological Gardens, London; one at Liverpool, England (purchased
of Hon. W. F. Cody in 1888); two at the Zoological Gardens, Dresden; one
at the Zoological Gardens, Calcutta.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<h4><i>Statistics of full-blood buffaloes in captivity January 1, 1889.</i></h4>
<div class="center">
<table border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="in captivity">
<tr><td align="left">Number kept for breeding purposes</td><td align="right"><tt>216</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Number kept for exhibition</td><td align="right"><tt> 40</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td> </td><td align="right"><tt>---</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Total pure-blood buffaloes in captivity</td><td align="right"><tt>256</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td> </td><td align="right"><tt>===</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Wild buffaloes under Government protection in the Yellowstone Park </td><td align="right"><tt>200</tt></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Number of mixed-breed buffalo-domestics</td><td align="right"><tt> 40</tt></td></tr>
</table></div>
<p><br/></p>
<p>There are, without doubt, a few half-breeds in Manitoba of which I have
no account. It is probable there are also a very few more captive
buffaloes scattered singly here and there which will be heard of later,
but the total will be a very small number, I am sure.</p>
<hr class="wide" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />