Arthur Johnson Memorial Library

Kelton, Elmer

Day the cowboys quit The day the cowboys quit Elmer Kelton - 1st Forge ed. - New York Forge, 1999. - 281 p. 18 cm.

"A Tom Doherty Associates book." Originally published: Garden City, N.Y. : Doubleday, 1971.


"The Day the Cowboys Quit was inspired by an historic event, a strike against large ranches on the Texas high plains, when the encroachment of an Eastern corporate mentality drove freedom-loving cowboys to drastic measures―no matter the cost." --Elmer Kelton

In later years people often asked Hugh Hitchcock about the Canadian River cowboy strike of 1883.

Wagon boss Hugh Hitchcock knows the cowboy life better than most: In 1883 if you're a cowboy, you can't own a cow and you are stigmatized as a drunk. Worse, you are exploited by the wealthy cattle owners who fence the range, replace traditions and trust with written rules of employment, refuse to pay a livable wage, and change things "that ought to be left alone." The cowboys working in the Canadian River country of the Texas Panhandle decide to fight back, to do the unthinkable: go on strike.

In this celebrated novel, Elmer Kelton uses the true but little-known Canadian River incident to focus on the changes brought to ranching by big-money syndicates.


0812574508 (pbk.) 9780812574500 (pbk.)


Cowboys--Fiction.
Ranchers--Fiction.



Kel 32