Respuesta :
Before the Civil War, the Shawnee Trail led Texas cattlemen to markets in Kansas City and St. Louis. Following the war, increased settlement closed that route, and in 1866 Charles Goodnight and Oliver Loving blazed a trail west (called the Goodnight-Loving Trail) to the New Mexico and Colorado markets. Soon, however, railheads in Kansas led cowboys up the Chisholm Trail to Abilene, and up the Western Trail to Dodge City and points north.
In 1874 John T. Lytle, who were transporting 3,500 longhorn cattle by the grazing ranges of theTexas for Fort Robinson, or Nebraska, or blazed the trail. The road began in the hill country by Kerrville, Texas, or ran west of or roughly parallel in the Chisholm Trail to the Kansas.
What is the history of the cattle trails?
Trace was the history of the development to the cattle trails. Before the Civil War, or the Shawnee Trail led Texas cattlemen for markets to the Kansas City or St. Louis.
How did cattle get to the railroads?
Crossing the northern range soon after the Civil War, the iron trails brought the market to the cattle country. Inevitably the men of the lower range would seek by reach the railroads with they had to sell their greatest natural product, to cattle to the hoof.
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