Cattle Barons vs. Small Ranchers and Farmers. Johnson County Wyoming, 1892. Cattle barons were outraged when juries failed to convict cattle rustlers and took the law into their own hands. They hired Texan gunmen to help kill suspected cattle thieves.
On the cattle baron's side were members of the Cheyenne Club, dominated by the Wyoming Stock Growers' Association. US Senator's Francis Warren and Joseph Carey, along with Governor Amos Barker made sure the state militia did not interfere. The chief organizers were Major Frank Wolcott and W.C. Irvine. On the other side were the small ranchers and farmers who were mislabeled the "kings of the cattle thieves". Nick Ray and Nate Champion were the organizers.
On April 10, 1892, in the seat of Johnson County Buffalo, residents were warned that the area was full of armed cattle baron men. The invaders fell back to the TA Ranch, 14 miles away from Buffalo where they besieged some 300 small ranchers, and townsmen recruited by the sheriff, Red Angus.
Within 36 hours after the invaders killed two rustlers (Nick Ray and Nate Champion) on Powder River, several hundred cowboys, small ranchers and farmers were up in arms. They were convinced the cattle barons were out to eliminate the small man and seize all their lands under the guise of punishing the lawless. The memory of "Cattle Kate" Watson who was lynched in 1889 for entertaining cowboys and accepting stolen cattle as payment, was still fresh in their minds.
When Governor Barber called for help from Senators Warren and Carey, they persuaded President Benjamin Harrison to call in federal troops. The cavalry came, rescued the situation and locked up the men in Fort Russell, Wyoming. The cattle barons were never tried for murder but public opinion tried and convicted them in the public press and in a book published in 1894 called The Bandits of the Plains, the Cattlemen's Invasion of Wyoming. Long after the publication, the memory of the Johnson County War was kept alive.
Next time...Land of Violence
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Today in Pioneer History: "On August 13, 1878, Kate Bionda, a restaurant owner, dies of yellow fever in Memphis, Tennessee, after a man who had escaped a quarantined steamboat visited her restaurant. The disease spread rapidly and the resulting epidemic emptied the city.
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