CROSBY, TEXAS - Overlooking the White River is a strip of hilltop that hosts
scrub trees, and long grass. Peaceful and idyllic it’s hard to reconcile it
to the name it holds: Stampede Mesa. The hilltops violent name comes from a
more lawless time.
Stampede
In the fall of 1889 the area was a frequent stop for men on the trail. A
trail boss could order his men to see that the cows they were driving were
watered and then bedded down on the Mesa for the night. The area was good for
the tall grass, the water and a high place to spot trouble for some distance
away. For one trail boss trouble came in an unexpected fashion. The men
had accidentally driven their herd through the property of a farmer and had
driven his cows up the Mesa with their own. The Farmer arrived on a scrawny
white mare and demanded his cows back.
There
was no argument with that, they had no use for his cows, which were just
as skinny and malcontent as both the farmer and his horse, but they did
have a problem when he also cut out some of their cattle and began to
drive them away. An argument ensued that the trail men were too tired
and hungry to endure. The old farmer was instructed to come back at
daybreak when the sun was up and he had a “better chance of seeing
things” the cowboy’s way. Cursing bitterly the farmer, embarrassed not
only by being caught stealing but also in having to leave his own stock,
rode his old scrawny horse back down the Mesa.
The men
gratefully ate and prepared to sleep. Their rest was to be short lived
for in the night the cattle stampeded. Incredibly, since they seem to be
driven away from the North and heading south, they headed straight for
the steepest part of the canyon. Every man knew his job and did his best
but when the sun came up that morning two men and hundreds of steers lay
dead at the bottom of the canyon. Men who had witness the beginning of
the stampede claimed to have seen the old Farmer and his white mare
driving the cattle recklessly toward the cliffs edge.
There
was no justice to appeal to, only the law of the Trail Boss and he decided to
let the punishment fit the crime. He had the Farmer dragged up the hill, his
hands tied, his eyes blindfolded and then ordered he be tied to his likewise
blindfold horse and driven off the edge of the Mesa.
Of
course this is not the end of the story. The Farmer still blindfolded and tied
to his horse was seen countless times. And word began to spread from cowboy to
trail driver not to camp on Stampede Mesa lest your herd, or your men
share his fate as he would try to drive men, horse, and steer over the cliff
where his body had been left to rot.
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Would love to use the image as part of a powerpoint for background when we perform Ghost Riders in the Sky for our Greeley Chorale fundraiser this late net month. Is it copyrighted? Where would I get permissions?
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