Utah's
livestock industry developed along lines recognizably
different from those of many western states, but it
still has acquired characteristics that clearly make
it part of the western livestock tradition. Factors
that influenced this development at the outset included
natural conditions and the timing and nature of settlement.
Isolated by the great canyons of the Colorado River
to the south, Utah was not heavily influenced by Hispanic
and Texas ranching customs or livestock until after
1880. By way of contrast, however, Utah lay in the main
road of the central overland migration. The earliest
Mormons brought with them Midwestern husbandry practices
as well as animals. Thus, Midwestern stock bloodlines
and culture dominated Utah's earliest livestock industry.
Nevertheless, distinctive Utah livestock practices evolved
quickly. Fencing was lacking and community herds and
grounds became common. At first, rangeland was abundant
and little effort was made to lay formal claim to it.
Later, the territorial legislature granted vast tracts
to prominent Mormon leaders. Only a few of these were
translated into actual titles, but they did provide
the basis for the first range practices.
Mormon herds multiplied quickly and animals continued
to be imported from other states, and by 1860 Utah was
a livestock region of some importance. A few individuals,
including Salt Lake City's William Jennings, parlayed
commerce, freighting, and slaughter of animals for local
markets into sizable fortunes. Others like Alexander
Topance and Ben Heywood traded for large herds, which
they then drove to both Midwest and California markets.
However, Utah was in no sense a ranch country in the
pre-railroad era. Its livestock industry had been shaped
by the Mormon penchant for cooperation and group life.
People lived in towns, farmed small farms, and ran a
few cows and sheep. These animals were fed on the farm
or grazed on town lands or were part of co-op herds.
The nearest thing to ranches were the herd houses which
dotted outlying parts of the central valleys. The difference
between farm stock and range stock was blurred. Mountain
ranges for grazing were used first by town sheep pools
and summer dairies staffed by women and children. Although
cooperation was common in the cattle industry throughout
the West, Mormon pools differed in the great number
of farm-based owners and the small number of animals
owned by each operator.
By the late 1870s a distinctive village livestock industry
was firmly established in Utah's central mountain valleys.
At this point the long-horned cattle and Hispanic traditions
of the "Texas Invasion" finally began to penetrate
into Utah, superimposing ranching patterns upon the
well-established customs of the village-based livestock
industry.
To some degree, this change was reflected in growing
livestock numbers. The upswing began first in cattle,
which in 1885 numbered about 200,000. This number increased
to 356,600 in 1895. Thereafter, pressured by sheep and
by adverse weather and markets, cattle numbers barely
held their own until 1905. Encouraged by Forest Service
policy, they then increased to about 412,000 in 1910
and to 505,000 by the end of World War I.
After slow beginnings, sheep numbers also increased
rapidly. By 1885 the territory supported one million
head, and by 1890 about 1,500,000. By the turn of the
century the tally skyrocketed to 3,818,000. In the decade
that followed, with drought, slow markets, and Forest
Service policy prompting the trend, the number declined
to 2,740,000. Thereafter, sheep numbers held at about
2,500,000 for more than fifteen years.
During this period the livestock industry prospered.
Prominent ranching families emerged throughout the state,
towns grew, and the country filled up. Strategically
placed towns like Nephi and Spanish Fork took on regional
importance, and livestock were trailed out of the Great
Basin portion of Utah onto the Colorado Plateau part
of the state as well as into Arizona and other neighboring
states. Particularly in the far corners of the territory,
the expanding Utah livestock culture confronted the
more general ranching frontier, as stockmen from surrounding
areas extended their herds onto what were literally
the last ranges available. In the northwest area of
the state, Charles Crocker, Jr., son of the California
railroad magnate, moved in tens of thousands of California-bred
stock. Across the territory, friction between large
and small ranchers in Wyoming extended into Brown's
Hole and the Uinta Basin, contributing to that area's
reputation as an outlaw haven. Also, the Arizona Strip
was penetrated by far-ranging stockmen like B.F. Saunders.
But the confrontation between the pioneer Utah livestock
culture and the broader frontier ways was perhaps most
apparent in southeastern Utah's San Juan County where
the Mormons worked their stock in village pools and
hung on while big outfits like the Carlisles, the Pittsburg
Company, the L.C. Company, and the Elk outfit from Texas
first took advantage of virgin ranges and then lost
interest as the country was overgrazed. During this
period, Utah cattlemen adapted husbandry practices developed
in Mormon villages to ranching ways that originated
in Texas and Mexico. The result was ranging practices
unique in many ways to Utah but still a part of the
broader ranching tradition.
The development of Utah's grazing industry is also reflected
in the growth of the sheep industry after 1890. Utah
sheep management practices were, like those with cattle,
in many respects a village development. It is significant
point that by the year 1900 sheep were crowding cattle
from many Utah ranges. The state's "crossroads
of the West" location had something to do with
this, as hundreds of thousands of sheep trailed to and
from neighboring states. Even more important was the
fact that desert ranges for winter grazing were more
abundant in Utah than were mountain pastures. In an
era when range rights on the public domain were held
only by customary use, this led to maximum stocking
of desert winter ranges and heavy overstocking of summer
ranges. Under these conditions of declining resources,
sheep competed somewhat more efficiently than cattle.
The sheep industry became important throughout the state
and the Wool Grower's Association became a potent economic
and political power.
Farming towns along the Wasatch Front and Wasatch Plateau
played an important role in this process. With more
young people than the arable land and water would accommodate
in farming and lacking other opportunities, they became
sheep towns, serving as the hinges upon which grazing's
seasonal rhythms turned as sheep trailed from desert
to mountain and back. In time, sheepmen like Mt. Pleasant's
John H. Seely became widely known, developing fine purebred
lines as well as grazing practices that attracted wide
attention. Gifford Pinchot employed W.C. Clos, Seely's
range manager, in developing Forest Service grazing
policy. Sheepmen were also ably represented politically
by powerful senators George Sutherland and Reed Smoot.
Utah's livestock industry also contributed to range
overgrazing and erosion problems that worsened until
at least the end of World War II. This dilemma was first
hinted at in the 1860s when Mormon Apostle Orson Hyde
reported that Sanpete County ranges were already "destitute
of grass," which was either eaten or tramped out,
and was often replaced by "desert weed." By
the time the transcontinental railroad arrived, observers
blamed sheep for the short grass supplies near Ogden,
and by the mid-1880s Mountain Meadows was transformed
from a verdant grassland to a gully-cut sagebrush plateau.
By 1910 Sanpete Valley towns were suffering regular
floods from ranges stripped of ground cover, a problem
that had extended to the Wasatch Front by 1930. In few
parts of the West was erosion more severe. Through erosion
control projects and the increased control of the Forest
Service and Bureau of Land Management, this process
was reversed after 1950 as public lands clienteles broadened
from the grazing interests that dominated their use
earlier, and as the development of defense and service
industries in Utah resulted in a general loss of overall
importance for the grazing industry.
From the vantage point of 1990 it is obvious that a
livestock culture indigenous to the more verdant East
and Midwest was transplanted to one of the West's most
arid and fragile environments. It was modified in response
to these conditions and for a time worked well. Then,
with the advent of the Texas invasion after 1880, a
more general ranging system developed, resulting in
adaptations in ranching customs and in added pressure
being put on the natural resources. Utah's core villages
lent themselves to the seasonal rhythms of summer and
winter grazing, contributing to overuse of the public
domain. Finally, it took many years to bring a grazing
system based on village ownership into line with prudent
resource utilization; the result was that Utah suffered
heavy erosion problems in connection with its livestock
industry. The state's livestock industry has used its
resources heavily, and at times the result has been
costly. Although only a small number of people are now
involved in the livestock industry, the population at
large has a deep affinity for the heritage that livestock
enterprise bequeathed to the state.
Charles S. Peterson