Charles Goodnight

Charles Goodnight (March 5, 1836- December 12, 1929) was a cattle rancher in the American West. He was born in Macoupin County, Illinois, the fourth child of Charles and Charlotte (Collier) Goodnight. He moved to Texas in 1846 with his mother and stepfather (Hiram Daugherty). In 1856, he became a cowboy, and served with the local militia fighting against the Comanche raiders. A year later, in 1857, Goodnight joined the Texas Rangers. At the outbreak of the Civil War, he joined the Confederacy. Most of his time was spent as part of a frontier regiment guarding against raids by Indians. Following the war, he became involved in the herding of feral Texas longhorn cattle northward from West Texas to railroads. In 1866, he and Oliver Loving drove their first herd of cattle northward along what would become known as the Goodnight-Loving Trail. Goodnight invented the chuckwagon, which was first used on this cattle drive. On July 26, 1870, Goodnight married Mary Ann (Molly) Dyer, a schoolteacher from Weatherford, Texas. Goodnight developed a practical sidesaddle for his wife to use. In 1876, Goodnight founded what was to become the JA Ranch, in Palo Duro Canyon.
  addition to raising cattle, Goodnight preserved a herd of native American Bison, which survives to this day, and also experimented with crossbreeding buffalo with domestic cattle which he called cattalo. 
After his wife's death in April of 1926, Goodnight became sick, but was nursed back to health by Corinne Goodnight, a 26 year old nurse and telegraph operator from Butte, Montana, with whom Charles had been corresponding because of their shared surname. In his last years he mined in Mexico and tried to become a movie producer. On March 5, 1927, Charles turned 91 and married the very young Corinne Goodnight. Two years later, Goodnight died on December 12th in Phoenix, Arizona. Several streets in the Texas Panhandle are named after Goodnight. in addition to the Charles Goodnight Memorial Trail and the highway to Palo Duro Canyon State Scenic Park. Goodnight is also known for guiding Texas Rangers to the Indian camp where Cynthia Ann Parker was recaptured, and for later making a treaty with her son, Quanah Parker.

References

  • Charles Goodnight: Cowman and Plainsman, by J. Evetts Haley
  • Texas Ranchmen, by Dorothy Abbott McCoy
  • The New Handbook of Texas, Texas State Historical Association

External links

Goodnight, Charles Goodnight, Charles Goodnight, Charles

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
californian
descriptive set theory
ivar giaever
polish space
list of sexual slurs
brian david josephson
letter to the inhabitants of canada
mr. hooper
hans rudolf merz
invisible man
martin ryle
scarface charley
betuweroute
list of political parties in greenland
list of political parties in guatemala
list of political parties in hong kong
ben roy mottelson
mule mountains
james rainwater
laevorotation
modoc
sancho vii of navarre
birmingham canal navigations
burton richter
high altitude
hazel
charles wyndham, 2nd earl of egremont
aero spacelines, inc.
chemical mortar battalion
ardbraccan house
philip warren anderson
dj premier
nevill francis mott
rah 66 comanche
george montague dunk, 2nd earl of halifax
brewster, florida
john hasbrouck van vleck
holy land foundation for relief and development
tuczno
halton (borough)
henry seymour conway
sheldon lee glashow
halton, buckinghamshire
amyloid