Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches (PDF, MOBI, EPUB, FB2, TEXT)
als has been in existence since 1884.
The first great break followed the building of the Union Pacific
Railway. All the buffaloes of the middle region were then destroyed,
and the others were split into two vast sets of herds, the northern
and the southern. The latter were destroyed first, about 1878; the
former not until 1883. My own chief experience with buffaloes was
obtained in the latter year, among small bands and scattered
individuals, near my ranch on the Little Missouri; I have related it
elsewhere. But two of my kinsmen were more fortunate, and took part in
the chase of these lordly beasts when the herds still darkened the
prairie as far as the eye could see.
During the first two months of 1877, my brother Elliott, then a lad
not seventeen years old, made a buffalo-hunt toward the edge of the
Staked Plains in Northern Texas. He was thus in at the death of the
southern herds; for all, save a few scattering bands, were destroyed
within two years of this time. He was with my cousin, John Roosevel