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Ochiltree
County Ranches
Source: The Handbook of Texas Online
CONNELL AND
EUBANK RANCHES
CRESSWELL RANCH
CONNELL AND
EUBANK RANCHES
The first ranch in Ochiltree County was
established by Thomas Connell and J. D. (Dee)
Eubank, both of whom came from Burnet County. In
1876 Connell and Eubank drove cattle from Winters,
in Runnels County, to seek a suitable ranch site.
They initially attempted the valley of the
Purgatoire River in Colorado, but two successive
hard winters there decimated their herds. With
about thirty cattle left, the two young cowmen
headed south from Kansas. They camped at a small
playa near the site of present-day Perryton on
December 20, 1878.
They decided Wolf Creek was the most promising
location for their ranch, herded their longhorn
cattle into the creek draw, and occupied the
dugout recently vacated by their friends Alfred H.
and D. Wilborn Barton, who had moved into the
abandoned Jones and Plummer stockade farther
downstream. Another neighbor was Charles A.
Dietrich, who helped them round up wild mustangs
and often cooked for them.
Within two years Connell and Eubank had increased
their individual herds and established their own
ranches, Eubank in eastern Ochiltree County and
Connell two miles to the east in Lipscomb County.
Just before this separation, Dee's letters had
prompted his brother, Henry T. Eubank, to move his
family to Wolf Creek from McCulloch County, where
he had served as county sheriff. In 1887 Henry
Eubank registered a Triangle F brand.
Two years later, when Ochiltree County was
organized, he was elected a county commissioner.
From 1894 to 1900 he served as county judge. Dee
Eubank helped establish Ochiltree County's first
school, known locally as "Raw Hide College,"
across Wolf Creek from his homestead. In later
years the Eubank heirs leased the ranch property
and eventually sold it to Carl Freeman.
Tom Connell, who recorded a D brand in 1881, built
a comfortable ranchhouse with a stone fireplace on
Wolf Creek in western Lipscomb County. The county
line was his property's western boundary. In 1886
he erected a fence along a strip two miles wide
and eight miles long and connected it with the old
drift fence to the south. In 1885 Connell married
Jannie Watson at Mobeetie; they had two sons and
two daughters.
When Lipscomb County was organized in 1887,
Connell was elected its first county judge. He
also established a mercantile and butcher shop in
Lipscomb. Business was conducted there in a way
most unusual, even for the frontier.
Connell would hang a fresh beef carcass in his
shop, place a pencil and tablet near the meat
block, go away, and leave the door unlocked. Each
customer would cut off the portion of meat he
wanted, weigh it on Connell's scales and write his
name and the amount of purchase on the pad. At his
convenience the customer looked up the judge and
paid him.
Connell ran this meat business successfully for
several years before selling it and moving in 1905
to Canadian, where he and his wife spent their
remaining years. The Eubank and Connell ranches
were never large like that of their neighbor,
Henry W. Cresswell. They have remained basically
intact, although under different brands and
owners. The site of Connell and Eubank's original
dugout on Wolf Creek is now on the Walter Daniel
ranch.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Millie Jones Porter, Memory Cups of Panhandle
Pioneers (Clarendon, Texas: Clarendon Press,
1945). Pauline D. and R. L. Robertson, Cowman's
Country: Fifty Frontier Ranches in the Texas
Panhandle, 1876-1887 (Amarillo: Paramount, 1981).
H. Allen Anderson
CRESSWELL
RANCH
The Cresswell (or Bar CC) Ranch was established in
1877 by the Cresswell Land and Cattle Company of
Colorado. This syndicate was formed when O. H. P.
Baxter and the brothers J. A. and M. D. Thatcher,
owners of bank stocks, mines, and farms, decided
to back Henry W. Cresswell, who was enthusiastic
about building up a ranch in the Panhandle.
Accordingly, Cresswell drove a herd southward and
selected as headquarters a site in Ochiltree
County on a small tributary of the Canadian known
as Home Ranch Creek. He marked his cattle with the
Bar CC brand he had first registered in Colorado
and cropped their left ears. Another Colorado herd
trailed to the area in 1878 increased the Bar CC
cattle to 27,000 head.
Soon Cresswell expanded his range and became a
favorite personality among his neighbors,
including Robert Moody, Joseph Morgan, Dee Eubank,
Tom Connell , and the Cator brothers. When Morgan
died of smallpox in 1883, Cresswell aided the
family and bought the Morgan Triangle cattle from
the widow.
Eventually the Bar CC range covered 1,250,000
acres that extended from the Canadian north to the
state line. The great Panhandle drift fence was
erected across this range. In order to move his
headquarters to a more central location, Cresswell
bought from Alfred H. Barton the old picket
stockade and storehouse built by Charles Edward
Jones and Joseph H. Plummerq on Wolf Creek in
eastern Ochiltree County.
In 1882 the Prairie Cattle Company offered to buy
out Cresswell,whose herd by then was estimated to
be over 31,000 head. Although that deal fell
through, some of the Prairie stockholders
succeeded in joining the Bar CC operation in 1885.
A new syndicate, composed of these English
investors along with the old cattle company, was
formed and called the Cresswell Ranch and Cattle
Company. It bought the ranch for $1.5 million, and
Cresswell retained $20,000 interest. This transfer
took some time, and it proved a time of troubles.
The Cresswell Ranch was plagued in 1885-86 by a
slump in the market, the "Big Die-up" that winter,
a prairie fire, and wolves. Nevertheless,
Cresswell doggedly overcame his financial losses
by purchasing 11,000 cattle from Charles Goodnight
and fattening them in Indian Territory. The new
company retained Cresswell as head of the ranch,
and he remained with the Bar CC until 1889. James
McKenzie, a Scot from Kansas City, was named
general manager, and W. J. Todd, who had counted
cattle in the transfer, became superintendent.
Laura V. Todd recalled how she and her infant son
traveled by train to Dodge City from Trinidad, and
then for two days by horse-drawn buggy from Dodge
to the ranch headquarters, where she lived in a
tent until a new frame house was completed. Mrs.
Todd brought potted plants and had furniture
shipped in by mule freight. She tells of an
infestation of bedbugs and the death of her baby
in 1886.
By Christmas she had a second son, Jep, and joined
in efforts to give the cowboys a real celebration,
complete with a dance, wild turkeys for the feast,
and a multitiered cake decorated with store-bought
candles. Jack Meade, Dave Pope, Archie King, Dave
Lard, O. R. McMordie, and Edward H. Brainard, who
was later made range foreman, were among the Bar
CC cowhands who helped host that memorable
Christmas gathering.
In January 1894 the Barcee post office was
established at the ranch headquarters with Laura
Todd as postmistress. Until then mail had been
left there for distribution to area settlers. The
office lasted only until May 1895, when mail was
routed to Ochiltree. By then the Cresswell company
had more than 25,000 cattle, including purebred
shorthorn and Hereford bulls, and 300 saddle
horses.
However, fluctuating cattle prices and pressures
of settlers caused the company to decline. Around
1900 it closed its operations and divided the
ranch. Snyder and Sears of Kansas City bought the
last of the original Bar CC herd. The brand, made
with two irons, was used until 1937 by the ranch
of Mrs. John Jones and her son-in-law, F. C.
McMordie, located on Home Ranch Creek, the site of
Cresswell's first headquarters.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Laura V. Hamner, Short Grass and Longhorns
(Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1943).
Arthur Hecht, comp., Postal History in the Texas
Panhandle (Canyon, Texas: Panhandle-Plains
Historical Society, 1960). A History of Lipscomb
County, Texas, 1876-1976 (Lipscomb, Texas:
Lipscomb County Historical Survey Committee,
1976). Pauline D. and R. L. Robertson, Cowman's
Country: Fifty Frontier Ranches in the Texas
Panhandle, 1876-1887 (Amarillo: Paramount, 1981).
Wheatheart of the Plains: An Early History of
Ochiltree County (Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree
County Historical Survey Committee, 1969).
H. Allen
Anderson
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was last updated January 9, 2014.
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