Goodnight, Charles, 1836-1929
Name Entries
person
Goodnight, Charles, 1836-1929
Name Components
Name :
Goodnight, Charles, 1836-1929
Goodnight, Charles
Name Components
Name :
Goodnight, Charles
Genders
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Charles Goodnight is best known as a cattleman and co-founder of the Goodnight-Loving Trail to bring cattle from Texas to market in New Mexico. However, Charles Goodnight and his wife, Mary Ann, played a pivotal role in saving the Great Southern Bison Herd from extinction. Separated from the Northern Herd by busy wagon trails and the railroad and slaughtered by hundreds of eager "buffalo hunters," by 1895 the Great Southern Herd, once numbering in the millions, was almost gone. Charles and Mary Ann gathered numerous orphaned calves and brought them to their Panhandle ranch where they were protected and nurtured. Today the Southern Bison Herd, one of only three distinct sub-species worldwide, is cared for by the State of Texas in Caprock Canyons State Park not far from Palo Duro Canyon and the original Goodnight bison ranch. Charles Goodnight was born in 1836 on the family farm in Macoupin County, Illinois. His mother remarried after his father died and the new family moved to a farm in central Texas in 1845. In 1857 Goodnight joined the Texas Rangers and during the Civil War he was part of their Frontier Regiment. His experience fighting Comanche raiders and trailing fugitives gave him profound familiarity with the West Texas and Panhandle prairies. After the Civil War, many head of free-roaming cattle were rounded up in Texas but the good markets were farther west. In 1866 Goodnight teamed with cattleman Oliver Loving to forge a trail from Belknap, Texas, to Fort Sumner, New Mexico, thus initiating the famous Goodnight-Loving Trail. After Loving died in 1867, Goodnight continued the lucrative business, extending the cattle drives into the booming Colorado Territory on the Goodnight Trail. In 1870 he married Mary Ann "Molly" Dyer and they settled in his Rock Canyon Ranch on the Arkansas River five miles west of Pueblo, Colorado. In 1877 the Goodnights resettled on the JA Ranch, a large spread in Palo Duro Canyon and the first cattle ranch in the Texas Panhandle. Goodnight was manager and one-third owner behind the principle, John G. Adair of Denver. In 1878 Goodnight established a trail north from the ranch to the closest railhead in Dodge City, Kansas, the Palo Duro-Dodge City Trail subsequently used by many Panhandle and West Texas ranchers. By the time of Adair's death in 1885, the JA Ranch had over 100,000 head of hearty longhorn cattle grazing on 1,325,000 acres. Goodnight sold his interest in the JA Ranch in 1887, purchased property in nearby Armstrong County and moved to the town that now bears his name. There Charles and Molly were civic leaders, founders of Goodnight College, and in later years they concentrated on developing their small herd of bison and promoting awareness and conservation of the "buffalo." After Molly died in 1926, Charles moved to Clarendon, Texas but spent winters in Phoenix, Arizona for his health. He remarried in 1927 and in 1929 died at age 93. Goodnight had no children.
Breeder of cattle in Goodnight, Texas.
Charles Goodnight was a pioneering Texas rancher, often credited with the invention of the chuckwagon.
Charles Goodnight, trail driver, rancher, and wildlife breeder, was born 5 March 1836, in Macoupin County, Illinois. He moved with his family to near Nashville-on-the-Brazos, Milam County, Texas, in 1845. In the spring of 1866, Goodnight and Oliver Loving organized a cattle drive from Fort Belknap, Texas to the Pecos River, and up to Fort Sumner, New Mexico. This route became known as the "Goodnight-Loving Trail." As an early believer in improvement through breeding, Goodnight developed one of the nation's finest herds through the introduction of Hereford bulls. With his wife's encouragement, he also started a domestic buffalo herd, sired by a bull he named "Old Sikes," from which he developed the "cattalo" by crossing bison with Angus cattle. He continued his experiments with buffalo for the rest of his life, and also kept elk, antelope, and various other animals. Goodnight's wildlife preservation efforts gained the attention of such naturalists as Edmund Seymour, and American Bison Society member Martin S. Garretson. Goodnight died on 12 December 1929, in Phoenix, Arizona.
Trail driver,
pioneer cattleman, and partner in the JA Ranch in Palo Duro Canyon.
Charles Goodnight is best known as a cattleman and co-founder of the Goodnight-Loving Trail to bring cattle from Texas to market in New Mexico. However, Goodnight and his wife, Mary Ann, also played a pivotal role in saving the Great Southern Bison Herd from extinction. Separated from the Northern Herd by busy wagon trails and the railroad and slaughtered by hundreds of eager "buffalo hunters," by 1895 the Great Southern Herd, once numbering in the millions, was almost gone. Charles and Mary Ann gathered numerous orphaned calves and brought them to their Panhandle ranch where they were protected and nurtured. Today the Southern Bison Herd, one of only three distinct sub-species worldwide, is cared for by the State of Texas in Caprock Canyons State Park not far from Palo Duro Canyon and the original Goodnight bison ranch.
Charles Goodnight was born in 1836 on the family farm in Macoupin County, Illinois. His mother remarried after his father died and the new family moved to a farm in central Texas in 1845. In 1857 Goodnight joined the Texas Rangers and during the Civil War he was part of their Frontier Regiment. His experience fighting Comanche raiders and trailing fugitives gave him profound familiarity with the West Texas and Panhandle prairies. After the Civil War, many head of free-roaming cattle were rounded up in Texas but the good markets were farther west. In 1866 Goodnight teamed with cattleman Oliver Loving to forge a trail from Belknap, Texas, to Fort Sumner, New Mexico, thus initiating the famous Goodnight-Loving Trail. After Loving died in 1867, Goodnight continued the lucrative business, extending the cattle drives into the booming Colorado Territory on the Goodnight Trail. In 1870 he married Mary Ann "Molly" Dyer and they settled in his Rock Canyon Ranch on the Arkansas River five miles west of Pueblo, Colorado.
In 1877 the Goodnights resettled on the JA Ranch, a large spread in Palo Duro Canyon and the first cattle ranch in the Texas Panhandle. Goodnight was manager and one-third owner behind the principal, John G. Adair of Denver. In 1878 Goodnight established a trail north from the ranch to the closest railhead in Dodge City, Kansas, the Palo Duro-Dodge City Trail subsequently used by many Panhandle and West Texas ranchers. By the time of Adair's death in 1885, the JA Ranch had over 100,000 head of hearty longhorn cattle grazing on 1,325,000 acres. Goodnight sold his interest in the JA Ranch in 1887, purchased property in nearby Armstrong County and moved to the town that now bears his name. There Charles and Molly were civic leaders, founders of Goodnight College, and in later years they concentrated on developing their small herd of bison and promoting awareness and conservation of the "buffalo." After Molly died in 1926, Charles moved to Clarendon, Texas but spent winters in Phoenix, Arizona for his health. He remarried in 1927 and in 1929 died at age 93. Goodnight had no children.
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/13511858
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-nr88012627
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/nr88012627
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q1064563
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/L61G-K7J
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
Subjects
American bison
American bison
Animal breeding
Animal mutation breeding
Babesiosis in cattle
Cattalo
Cattle
Cattle
Cattle breeders
Cattle drives
Cattle herding
Cattle trade
Cattle trails
Comanche Indians
Indians of North America
Land grants
Land settlement
Ranches
Ranching
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Goodnight (Tex.)
AssociatedPlace
Texas
AssociatedPlace
Texas Panhandle (Tex.)
AssociatedPlace
Goodnight (Tex.)
AssociatedPlace
J.A. Ranch (Tex.)
AssociatedPlace
Goodnight (Tex.)
AssociatedPlace
Palo Duro Canyon (Tex.)
AssociatedPlace
Texas
AssociatedPlace
Texas
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>