Book Description
Frontier Cattle Ranching in the Land and Times of Charlie Russell is an engaging, sprightly comparison of ranching experiences in Montana and Alberta/Assiniboia from 1880 to 1920. Elofson argues that these two frontiers had much in common. Montana is revealed to have a more sedate, and less wild, cultural tradition than is remembered. Alberta/Assiniboia is shown to have a rowdier, more "western" ranching culture than is typically acknowledged. The regional stereotypesof American individualism, lawlessness, and self-reliance, and of Canadian law and orderare exaggerated. Elofson examines the lives of cowboys and ranch owners during the short-lived free-range era with its oversized spreads. He looks at the prevalence of drunkenness, prostitution, gunplay, and rustling in both localities and contact with the supposed civilities of tennis courts, grand pianos, ostentatious dinners, and fancy balls in both regions. Elofson drawns upon the artwork, short stories, and legend of Charlie Russell, a cowboy and rancher who moved between the regions, to illustrate his point.
About the Author
Warren M. Elofson is professor of history at the University of Calgary and the author of Cowboys, Gentlemen and Cattle Thieves. He has farmed and ranched in Alberta all his life.
Frontier Cattle Ranching in the Land and Times of Charlie Russell FROM THE PUBLISHER
Frontier Cattle Ranching in the Land and Times of Charlie Russell is an engaging, sprightly comparison of ranching experiences in Montana and Alberta/Assiniboia from 1880 to 1920. Elofson argues that these two frontiers had much in common. Montana is revealed to have a more sedate, and less wild, cultural tradition than is remembered.
Alberta/Assiniboia is shown to have a rowdier, more "western" ranching
culture than is typically acknowledged. The regional stereotypes of
American individualism, lawlessness, and self-reliance, and of Canadian
law and order are exaggerated.
Elofson examines the lives of cowboys and ranch owners during the
short-lived free-range era with its oversized spreads. He looks at the
prevalence of drunkenness, prostitution, gunplay, and rustling in both
localities and contact with the supposed civilities of tennis courts,
grand pianos, ostentatious dinners, and fancy balls in both regions.
Elofson drawns upon the artwork, short stories, and legend of Charlie
Russell, a cowboy and rancher who moved between the regions, to illustrate
his point.
Warren M. Elofson is professor of history at the University of Calgary and
the author of Cowboys, Gentlemen and Cattle Thieves. He has farmed
and ranched in Alberta all his life.