Life on a Cattle Ranch in the 1940s America: The Cowboy | Documentary | 1943
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- Опубліковано 13 чер 2024
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This classic film - originally titled as 'The Cowboy' - is a documentary produced by the U.S. Office of War Information. It was produced as part of the Projections of America series in 1943 and was rereleased as part two of The American Scene series in 1952.
Plot:
A young English boy travels to the American West during World War 2. His ideas about cowboys have been shaped by books and movies about the Old West, but he learns that contemporary cowboys live a much different life. The film includes many scenes of work on a cattle ranch and shows how the West provides many of the products that benefit Allied troops in Europe.
The scenes were filmed in remote parts of Wyoming.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND / CONTEXT
A ranch is an area of land, including various structures, given primarily to the practice of ranching, the practice of raising grazing livestock such as cattle or sheep for meat or wool. The word most often applies to livestock-raising operations in Mexico, the Western United States and Canada, though there are ranches in other areas.
People who own or operate a ranch are called ranchers, cattlemen, or stockgrowers. The people who are employees of the rancher and involved in handling livestock are called a number of terms, including cowhand, ranch hand, and cowboy. People exclusively involved with handling horses are sometimes called wranglers.
Ranches generally consist of large areas, but may be of nearly any size. In the western United States, many ranches are a combination of privately owned land supplemented by grazing leases on land under the control of the federal Bureau of Land Management. If the ranch includes arable or irrigated land, the ranch may also engage in a limited amount of farming, raising crops for feeding the animals, such as hay and feed grains.
Ranches that cater exclusively to tourists are called guest ranches or, colloquially, "dude ranches." Most working ranches do not cater to guests, though they may allow private hunters or outfitters onto their property to hunt native wildlife. Ranching is part of the iconography of the "Wild West" as seen in Western movies and rodeos.
Origins of ranching:
Ranching and the cowboy tradition originated in Spain, out of the necessity to handle large herds of grazing animals on dry land from horseback. When the Conquistadors came to the Americas in the 16th century, followed by settlers, they brought their cattle and cattle-raising techniques with them. Huge land grants by the Spanish (and later Mexican) government, part of the hacienda system, allowed large numbers of animals to roam freely over vast areas. A number of different traditions developed, often related to the original location in Spain from which a settlement originated. As settlers from the United States moved west, they brought cattle breeds developed on the east coast and in Europe along with them, and adapted their management to the drier lands of the west by borrowing key elements of the Spanish vaquero culture of Northern Mexico.
The Open Range:
The prairie and desert lands of what today is Mexico and the western United States were well-suited to "open range" grazing. For example, American bison had been a mainstay of the diet for the Native Americans in the Great Plains for centuries. Likewise, cattle and other livestock were simply turned loose in the spring after their young were born and allowed to roam with little supervision and no fences, then rounded up in the fall, with the mature animals driven to market and the breeding stock brought close to the ranch headquarters for greater protection in the winter. The use of livestock branding allowed the cattle owned by different ranchers to be identified and sorted. Beginning with the settlement of Texas in the 1840s, and expansion both north and west from that time, into the 1880s, ranching dominated western economic activity.
For more information about ranching, see:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranch
Life on a Cattle Ranch in the 1940s America: The Cowboy | Documentary | 1943
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NOTE: THE VIDEO REPRESENTS HISTORY. SINCE IT WAS PRODUCED DECADES AGO, IT HAS HISTORICAL VALUES AND CAN BE CONSIDERED AS A VALUABLE HISTORICAL DOCUMENT. THE VIDEO HAS BEEN UPLOADED WITH EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES. ITS TOPIC IS REPRESENTED WITHIN HISTORICAL CONTEXT.
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Great video! Actually quite great!
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Just imagine all those cows would be dead by now.
Sreacks
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Very interesting. Thank You 😊
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that was amazing
This intro is hilarious
Amazing
Cowboy hats were too big or too small back then - today's cowboy hats began to take shape in the late 1960s
The niwits believe cow's farts are destroying the world Lol
Pitiful video! Actually, quite pitiful!