3 of 3 available systemwide,
with no current holds.
Location and Availability
|
Burton Barr Central Library
— 2 of 2 available
|
| |
Call Number |
Status |
| |
REF 979.02 T497h AZ Room
  - Floor 2
|
In Library Use Only
|
| |
979.02 T497h
|
On Shelf
- (Checked in: Aug 3 2012 )
|
|
Desert Broom Library
— 1 of 1 available
|
| |
Call Number |
Status |
| |
979.02 T497h
|
On Shelf
- (Checked in: Nov 16 2012 )
|
Summary:
"Old-time western action and adventure punctuate this history of cowboy life and commerce, the story of a large-scale cattle-ranching business when ranges were still unfenced and cattle drives raised dust from Texas to Montana. Jim Bob Tinsley traces the development of the Hash Knife outfit - its brand, its owners, and its hell-for-leather cowboys - through three Texas ranches (one with its own Boot Hill and a foreman who wore chaps with cartridge loops that dangled to his knees), a vast Montana range, and a two-million-acre spread in northern Arizona." "On one level the book is a business history based on exhaustive research in archival sources. The Hash Knife's fortunes wax and wane through complex financial deals, droughts, and hard Montana winters as the investment focus shifts from Texas to New York to Arizona." "On the ranges themselves, however, and on the trails and in the cowtowns and saloons, the Hash Knife cowboys were writing their own kind of history - of brand changing and Indian skirmishes, train robberies and gunfights. A few Hash Knife cowboys were inadvertently part of the Pleasant Valley war between Arizona cattlemen and sheepmen. In Montana, the great tribal warrior Young-Man-Afraid-of-His-Horses appealed to the U.S. government to rid the Sioux of the Hash Knife cowboy who was stealing their horses." "The book includes over a hundred rare drawings, newspaper ads, brand registrations, and photographs of sheriffs, cowboys, range work, and roundups, among them a sequence of Hash Knife cowboys exhuming a gunshot comrade from his grave to give him one final shot of whiskey."--BOOK JACKET.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (p. [167]-183) and index.
Contents:
- 1. Cattlemen-Bankers with a Vision
- 2. Choosing a Brand and Beginning a Cattle Empire
- 3. The Trans-Pecos Range
- 4. Between the Forks of the Brazos
- 5. A New Range 1,200 Miles North
- 6. The Hash Knife Outfit in the Arizona Territory
|
- 7. Rhyming Robber of the Hash Knife
- 8. Songs on the Hash Knife Range
- 9. Trouble between Cowboys and Navajos
- 10. Sheriff Frank Wattron's International Furor
- 11. The Babbitt Era of the Hash Knife in Arizona
- 12. The Hash Knife Today.
|
What is the Rotten Tomatoes Tomatometer?
The Tomatometer measures the percentage of Approved Tomatometer Critics who recommend a certain movie --
or the number of good reviews divided by the total number of reviews.
A good review is denoted by a
FRESH tomato.
A bad review is denoted by a ROTTEN tomato. 
In order for a movie to receive an overall rating of FRESH on Rotten Tomatoes, the reading on the Tomatometer for that movie must be at
least 60%. Otherwise, it is ROTTEN. The ratings and reviews are licensed by the Phoenix Public Library from Rotten Tomatoes. For more information,
please visit the Rotten Tomatoes website at www.rottentomatoes.com