North Dakota
How did Texas longhorn cattle end up in Theodore Roosevelt National Park?
WATFORD CITY, N.D. — A dozen longhorn steers might be seen grazing leisurely of their favourite pasture on a sagebrush flat seen from the scenic drive within the north unit of Theodore Roosevelt Nationwide Park.
The park retains the longhorn cattle as a vestige of the hundreds of longhorns that have been pushed from Texas to the open vary in western Dakota Territory within the 1870s and Eighteen Eighties after the once-enormous buffalo herds had been hunted to the brink of extinction.
Their presence — now in query in gentle of the park’s introduced desire for eradicating all cattle and horses — is owed to a mixture of historical past and politics.
The longhorns have grazed the north unit since 1967 to depict the “historic scene” of the open-range ranching period through the time Theodore Roosevelt ranched and hunted within the Little Missouri Badlands within the Eighteen Eighties.
Roosevelt himself most well-liked shorthorn cattle, which he purchased in Minnesota, however the longhorns, with their signature set of horns spanning as much as seven toes broad, bony frames and spindly legs, have been the world’s dominant cattle breed on the time.
The park’s north unit, in truth, as soon as was the positioning of the immense Lengthy X Ranch, stocked with hundreds of longhorns that have been pushed up from Texas alongside the Lengthy X Path, which ran by means of the north unit.
The longhorns have been saved, together with the wild horses that roam the park’s south unit, as “demonstration herds” to depict the “historic scene” from Roosevelt’s time.
At its peak, the Lengthy X Ranch had 11,000 longhorns, a colourful herd of cattle with assorted pink, black and mottled coats and their flamboyant horns.
“Think about 11,000 of these longhorns on the market,” mentioned Mike Kopp, a photographer and blogger from Wilton who has explored the historical past of longhorns and the park herd. “It might have been fairly a present of shade.”
Texas cowboys who got here north searching for recent pastures favored the longhorns as a result of they have been plentiful — and free for the taking up the Texas vary, remnants of herds launched by the Spanish within the 1600s.
“They have been available as a result of they ran wild in western Texas” and developed hardiness throughout two centuries of roaming, Kopp mentioned.
However, he added, “They weren’t favored by butchers.” The longhorns’ gaunt, bony builds impressed the saying that they supplied “5 kilos of hamburger and 5 hundred kilos of bone and horn.”
In the course of the Eighteen Eighties, nevertheless, longhorns dominated the pastures surrounding badlands ranching cities, together with Medora and Watford Metropolis.
The Reynolds brothers of Texas, who based the Lengthy X Ranch, have been the primary to drive cattle as much as grazing lands within the Watford Metropolis space, transferring a “monster herd” from the Rio Grande to the Little Missouri, guided by compass as they made their means in a trek that began in early spring and concluded in September 1884.
The brothers purchased a former sheep ranch whose homeowners misplaced their herd after vigilantes in pursuit of horse thieves burned their pasture, and the sheep perished the next winter, forcing them to promote.
The primary Texas longhorns reached northern Dakota Territory in 1876, when a herd of two,500 was pushed north.
A lot of the Texas cattle have been 2-year-old steers and have been referred to as “trailers” due to their tendency to wander backwards and forwards as they crossed the prairies.
“After touring all the way in which from Texas to North Dakota they appeared to develop a nervous behavior of aimless roaming, which was not excelled even by the wolves,” wrote George Shafer, an early McKenzie County rancher. “Notably have been they inclined to comply with buffalo trails, for in the event that they as soon as struck a path throughout the prairie, there was no relaxation, day or night time, till they discovered its vacation spot.”
After making the lengthy journey from Texas, the longhorns have been skinny and scrawny after they arrived on the northern Dakota vary. After two years of grazing, they developed into “wonderful, massive animals that all the time introduced firstclass costs on the Chicago markets,” Shafer wrote.
The lengthy cattle drives pioneered by the Reynolds brothers and a “daring band of Texas cowboys” continued yearly till 1897, permitting ranches within the space to restock yearly.
By the late Eighteen Eighties, tens of millions of cattle from Texas and different areas — lots of them longhorns — have been being fattened on western Dakota grasslands. However by the late Eighteen Eighties, circumstances on the overstocked vary have been deteriorating, setting the stage for a catastrophe that will strike a extreme blow to the booming cattle trade, inflicting Roosevelt and plenty of different ranchers to desert inventory elevating.
* * *
The concept to have longhorns grazing in Theodore Roosevelt Nationwide Park to commemorate the open vary ranching period originated within the early Nineteen Sixties.
The Nationwide Park Service thought of a proposal to ascertain what can be referred to as Longhorn Ranch on the website of the previous Peaceable Valley Ranch within the south unit, as soon as a working ranch and the unique park headquarters.
A plan drafted in 1961 touted the Longhorn Ranch as a option to fill a “long-felt have to interpret the story of the open vary cattle trade on the Northern Plains.” The plan famous that the Elkhorn Ranch website, a small unit of the park that when served as the middle of Roosevelt’s ranching operations, was distant and accessible on unimproved, gravel roads.
The Longhorn Ranch imaginative and prescient was to create a “typical ranch” that may very well be operated by a rancher underneath a concession allow and stocked with 10 or 12 longhorns that will graze inside a 300-acre, fenced pasture.
As planning advanced, the proposed ranch website shifted to the 218-acre Elkhorn Ranch website, 30 miles north of Medora, the place a “full-blown dwelling historical past website” was envisioned in a 1963 grasp plan.
The brand new plan referred to as for a working herd of longhorn cattle, blacksmith demonstrations, motel, service station, eating places, horse livery and 200-site campground. However that bold plan was streamlined by the Nineteen Seventies, with virtually no improvement of the Elkhorn website, with the doable exception of reconstruction of Roosevelt’s ranch home.
Curiosity in having longhorns within the park continued, nevertheless. One proponent was Hal Davies, the editor of the Minot Each day Information, in response to a 1986 historical past of the park, “On the Open Margin” by David Harmon.
One other influential champion of maintaining longhorns within the park was Sen. Milton Younger, R-N.D. Based on minutes of a 1966 park workers assembly, somebody advised the north unit may accommodate the cattle.
“If we don’t settle for the longhorn cattle, appropriates is likely to be reduce,” somebody mentioned on the assembly, in response to Harmon. Six months later, in 1967, the park introduced in half a dozen longhorns from the Fort Niobrara Nationwide Wildlife Refuge in Nebraska — the nucleus of the herd that is still right this moment.
“Whereas it can’t be mentioned that the affect of Davies and Younger brought on the introduction of longhorns to Theodore Roosevelt (Nationwide Park), definitely political concerns performed a component within the determination,” Harmon wrote.
The longhorns have the run of the north unit, however they largely graze on a 750-acre sagebrush flat on the Little Missouri River close to the buffalo corral.
The longhorns coexist peacefully with the bison that roam the north unit, mentioned Kopp, who has written concerning the longhorns on the
Lovely Badlands weblog
. In 2017, whereas recording a video of the longhorns grazing, the cattle have been joined by a band of buffalo that wandered by means of the pasture to drink from the river.
“Usually, they don’t mingle like that,” Kopp mentioned, including that the longhorns graze the taller grass and keep away from hilly terrain.
The longhorns are “readily seen from the scenic drive and have turn out to be a favourite of tourists, offering among the environment of the open vary,” Harmon wrote.
Because the park’s designation shifted from a memorial park to a nationwide park in 1978, the emphasis has switched from historic preservation to conservation.
Because of this, Harmon wrote, it was questioned whether or not the cattle and horses, which have been “unique to the Badlands,” battle with Nationwide Park Service insurance policies on ecosystem administration in pure areas.
For many years, the park tolerated the longhorns and horses due to their historic significance.
The standing of the herds tipped decisively, nevertheless, when park officers lately introduced their desire can be to steadily take away the horses and cattle — proposed motion that provoked sturdy backlash from the general public and elected officers.
A decision urging the park to maintain the horses and longhorns is transferring by means of the North Dakota Legislature with broad help, and Gov. Doug Burgum has provided to supply state experience and sources to assist hold the herds within the park.
Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., who serves on the committee that oversees the parks, assembled a gathering of legislative leaders, Burgum and Lawyer Basic Drew Wrigley, who met with the pinnacle of the park service and park superintendent to press the case for maintaining the longhorns and horses, each well-liked attracts for the park.
Park officers are anticipated to launch their plan for the horses and cattle this spring, and a brand new spherical of public feedback will comply with.
* * *
The summer time of 1886 was dry in western Dakota Territory, exacerbating poor vary circumstances brought on by overgrazing as hundreds of cattle have been moved onto the northern vary.
Roosevelt acknowledged the indicators of impending catastrophe, writing within the fall of 1886 that “it’s merely a query of time as to when a winter will come that may understock the ranges by the abstract strategy of killing off about half of all of the cattle all through the North-west.”
Unfamiliar with the severity of Northern Plains winters, Texas ranchers confronting excessive drought drove nonetheless extra herds to the Dakota ranges.
The dry summer time, which weakened cattle, was adopted by a harsh winter, with subzero chilly and punishing blizzards. And simply as Roosevelt predicted, cattle died by the tens of hundreds — with ranchers struggling losses of as much as 90% of their herds.
After struggling massive losses that winter, the Lengthy X Ranch was offered to buyers from Boston, however poor administration sank the operation, Shafer wrote.
The recognition of longhorns, properly tailored to drought and circumstances in a a lot hotter local weather, seems to have pale in Dakota Territory following the killer winter of 1886-87, mentioned Doug Ellison, proprietor of Western Edge Books in Medora and a historian of the area.
Giant-scale cattle ranching through the open vary period supplied the muse of the world’s financial system, and longhorns have been “positively an necessary a part of our vary historical past, practically as necessary because the horses,” he mentioned. “I believe they have been sort of the vanguard of the trade right here. Finally, they have been changed by among the extra hardy inventory.”
North Dakota
New state plan targets falling reading scores in North Dakota
FARGO — Reading test scores are declining across the U.S., but North Dakota is working to reverse that trend.
The National Assessment of Educational Progress, also known as “The Nation’s Report Card,” reported a significant decline in U.S. reading scores between 2019 and 2022.
A statewide plan in North Dakota is focusing on key areas of development: Phonics, vocabulary, comprehension and oral reading fluency, or reading aloud.
It’s called “The Science of Reading in North Dakota.”
“COVID played a big role in this. We certainly went backwards after COVID, and that’s unfortunate, but I think we’re taking the correct steps to move forward now,” Nick Archuleta, president of North Dakota United, said. North Dakota United is the union of the North Dakota Education Association and the North Dakota Public Employees Association.
A recent survey by the National Literacy institute shows 21% of adults in the U.S are illiterate and 54% have a literacy rate below a sixth-grade level.
North Dakota
Jamestown, state officials tour businesses that received automation grants
JAMESTOWN — State and local officials went on a tour of three businesses in Jamestown on Friday, Dec. 13, that highlighted recipients of the Automate ND Grant Program.
The tour included stops at Champ Industries USA Inc., Agri-Cover Inc. and Midmach.
Champ Industries received a $240,500 grant for an automated tool-loading brake press.
“This program helped a lot,” said Kyle Johnson, plant manager at Champ Industries. “Automation is definitely something that we were going towards, and this allowed us to take the first step much sooner than we anticipated.”
Agri-Cover received a nearly $283,000 grant for robot arms and autonomous carts. Midmach received $500,000 for three robotic welding cells.
The North Dakota Development Fund received $5 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act funding for a grant program during the 2023 legislative session. The program was developed in response to the workforce shortage in North Dakota, according to the North Dakota Department of Commerce’s website.
The one-time program made grants of up to $500,000 available to primary-sector certified businesses in North Dakota. The grants could not be more than 50% of the machinery, equipment or software being purchased.
“We’ve had legislators reach out to us with interest in advancing and sponsoring a bill to run it into the future and create something or at least do another one-time funding,” said David Lehman, advanced manufacturing business development manager for the state Commerce Department.
The Automate ND Grant Program had 42 applicants with $13 million in requests in a three-month application window from 21 communities, said Shayden Akason, deputy director of economic development and finance with the state Commerce Department. He said 18 applicants were funded from 13 communities.
“It just showed the type of demand and interest that companies have in automation to help their workforce challenges,” he said. “ … The quality of those applications, we probably would have funded another dozen of them. That’s how good they were and that’s how competitive the process was.”
The state needs about 30,000 to 40,000 people to fill its workforce gap, Lehman said. He said the manufacturing sector has around 26,000 to 29,000 employees in the state.
“If you took every graduating high school student and every graduating college student, we still wouldn’t fill our workforce gap in North Dakota,” he said.
Lehman said there are three ways for the state to dig itself out of the workforce issue — improving processes, focusing on Visa workers and legal immigration to increase workforce and automation.
“If you can’t, if you can’t improve your processes, you can’t get enough people, then you have to automate it,” he said.
Lehman said automation can be difficult in the short term because the state doesn’t have a strong infrastructure for it and the upfront costs are more expensive.
“But in the long term, so North Dakota, who has consistently been in the top three lowest unemployment states since the Bakken hit, has the opportunity,” he said. “So it’s painful now, but as we automate, it should make us more productive and better.”
Akason said workforce is the No. 1 challenge to expansion and economic development in North Dakota. He said the one-time Automate ND Grant Program was created to help alleviate the workforce shortage and keep manufacturers competitive so they can maintain or expand their market share.
Masaki Ova joined The Jamestown Sun in August 2021 as a reporter. He grew up on a farm near Pingree, N.D. He majored in communications at the University of Jamestown, N.D.
North Dakota
Fire damages historic Hankinson church
HANKINSON, N.D. — Investigators are working to determine the cause of a fire at St. Philip’s Catholic Church in Hankinson, which broke out late Wednesday afternoon, Dec .16.
Fire crews from multiple agencies responded to the 114-year-old church at about 4:30 p.m. Smoke could be seen billowing from the bell tower as firefighters worked for over two and a half hours to contain the fire.
Hankinson Fire Chief Josh Lenzen said the call came in after someone noticed smoke coming from the building.
“I believe it was reported as someone driving by, seeing smoke coming from the vents in the attic area,” Lenzen said.
The church, which is undergoing a $2 million renovation, suffered smoke and structural damage. The fire appeared to originate in the attic near a stained-glass window, according to Lenzen. Crews used a ladder truck from the Wahpeton Fire Department to access the church’s roof.
“The attic area had vents that were not close-able, and some of the access areas to the top of the attic area, it’s a very steep roof, high roof, and only one access point to get into it,” Lenzen said.
Firefighters faced windy conditions, but Lenzen said wind did not play a significant role in battling the blaze.
The fire comes as the church community prepares for Christmas services. Lenzen noted that while plans are still uncertain, the congregation will have options for worship.
Crews from Hankinson, Lidgerwood, Fairmount, and Wahpeton assisted in extinguishing the fire. The North Dakota Fire Marshal’s Office is leading the investigation. More details are expected to be released Thursday, Dec. 17.
No injuries were reported.
The church was originally built in 1908, with construction finished in 1910.
Hankinson is about 64 miles south of Fargo.
Isak Dinesen joined WDAY-TV as a reporter in September 2024. He previously worked as a multimedia journalist at WAOW-TV in Wausau, Wisconsin for three years. He graduated from NDSU in 2020, majoring in Journalism and minoring in Sports Communication at MSUM.
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