Tag Archives: Texas

Just Below the 49th Parallel: Juneteenth USA and Emancipation Day in a Former British Colony

I’m taking a couple minutes here in the Morton Mandan Public Library, June 19, 2026, 5:01PM (central), to memorialize in a blog post the Northern Plains Juneteenth events that just started to unfold outside at Dykshoorn Park, Mandan, Morton County, North Dakota. Or thoughts of this particular Juneteenth. Some weeks ago, while on a work assignment in Niagara Falls National Heritage Area, our working group site visited the Niagara Falls Underground Railroad Heritage Center in Niagara Falls, New York. During the visit, our gracious and knowledgeable interpretive guides noted that just across the river, in Canada, the Juneteenth equivalent would be Emancipation Day, on August 1st, to observe the day in 1834 which arrived through the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, making the practice of enslaving human beings illegal across the British Empire, including colonies such as Canada. Canada’s House of Commons voted unanimously on March 24, 2021, to designate August 1 as Emancipation Day. There’s a whole official Canadian government write up on it linked here.

Historians of the Great Plains have crafted rather sophisticated arguments and narratives about how culture unfolded in different ways on the Great Plains and in the North American West north and south of the 49th parallel. It kind of has me wondering how a narrative that straddles this imaginary geopolitical boundary might work and unfold: Juneteenth in America, which has its origins in Galveston, Texas, circa 1865. And Emancipation Day throughout the British Empire, which included Canada starting in 1834.

As of now, at 5:18PM, I don’t have much more to write about this. Other than the usual latest peer reviewed biographies and histories one reads on topics, this in particular leaning me towards that of Charles Sumner, Thaddeus Stevens, and President Grant’s struggle with reconstruction and beating back and down the racially charged terrorist insurgencies throughout the post-Civil War South. Of this latter topic, Lt. Col. George Custer proved effective as a federal enforcer, leading the Union’s 7th Cavalry into the South to put down and suppress the KKK. I better get back to the present and go find a bit of food at this lovely Juneteenth celebration on the Northern Plains.


Ernest Staples Osgood, “The Day of the Cattleman” (1929)

Central to Ernest Staples Osgood’s 1929 scholarship is how cattlemen in Wyoming and Montana ignored previous perceptions of the Great Plains as an uninhabitable desert, and instead recalibrated their perspective to make a life on the North American steppe. Once the cowboy got to the Great Plains, Osgood said,

The solitude of the desert passed, and men began to realize that this, our last frontier, was not a barrier between the river settlements and the mining communities in the mountains but an area valuable in itself, where men might live and prosper. (Osgood, 1929: 9)

The chapters that follow elaborate on how the nineteenth-century Euro-American pushed west of the Mississippi River to initially make their way across the Great Plains and into the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Coast. By the time enough overland wagon trains arrived to the mountain basin, though, frontier fur traders and trappers had come down out of the Rockies to form encampments, and these settlements became stopping points and places of trade. The fur trader and trapper sold supplies to the wagon trains, swapping out locally-grazed cattle with emaciated wagon train cattle, the latter worn out from walking the hundreds of miles west. Once traded, the emaciated livestock revived themselves on the lush grasslands of the Great Plains, and they would fatten themselves up to be traded, sold or slaughtered.

Osgood LivestockThe increased arrival of the railroad supplanted the need for overland wagon trains, but the railroad itself brought laborers hungry for beef and protein. By this time, rumors about frontiersmen J.R. (Jim Bridger), Captain Richard Grant, and the firm Russell, Majors and Wadell making $15,000-to-$75,000 as cattlemen had landed in the ears of investors back east. (Osgood, 1929: 12-16) The response was profound in the post-Civil War world of the Great Plains. Texas ranchers utilized the warmer climes of the southern Great Plains as a place to breed cattle. After growing the herd, they then drove the cattle north to the lush grasslands of Wyoming, Montana and the Dakotas. After fattening up the cattle, the cowboy would drive them to railroad loading points and ship the livestock to markets in Chicago and beyond. Osgood explains a local Wyoming example of this, as in 1873 approximately 286 railcars of cattle were shipped from Wyoming to eastern markets. By 1877, only four years later, the number of rail cars shipping cattle east had increased to 1,649. (Osgood, 1929: 51)

Between 1879 and 1885, the Federal government did not care to impose legislation to manage the chaos intrinsic to the ranching industry on the Great Plains. This gave rise to local cattle and stockmen associations that sought, at least in ideal, to preserve an individual’s ownership of the herd, protect the herd, and regulate public grazing to prevent overcrowding. (Osgood, 1929: 114-115) In this vein, Osgood’s scholarship sets a stage for later works that might consider what the industrialization of the Great Plains meant for a growing world population, and this also speaks to World and Public historians. Today, non-American restaurants can be seen advertising “American” beef, and ruins of yesterday’s mining towns — Bannack, Montana included — still dot the landscape.

The ruins of the mining town of Bannack, Montana. Photo by archaeological comrade Brian Herbel of Missoula, Montana.

The ruins of the mining town of Bannack, Montana. Photo by archaeological comrade Brian Herbel of Missoula, Montana.

The big idea in Osgood’s book is that the large-scale Euro-American perception of the Great Plains had altered, once thought of in the first decade of the nineteenth century as a desert and by mid-century as an oasis for cattle and cowboy. Published in 1929, this book also reflects the language of the times, as Chapter 4 is titled “The Indian Barrier.” Whether the Euro-American understood it or not, they appropriated the positive perception of the Great Plains that the Native American already had. This is something Osgood could have drawn out quite a bit more in his work, but 1929 is far enough removed from 2013 that it makes a bit more sense to understand this piece of scholarship as history as much as it is understood as central to Great Plains historiography.