A Brief History Of “Cowtown” (2024)

Conference & Stage Expo

Elizabeth Shurr and Jack P. Hagler, ASTC

The saloon doors open and a dusty cowboy sidles up to the bar asking for a well-deserved drink. The barkeep obliges the cowboy’s demand by handing him a drink and asks the spur wearing man his whereabouts. The man replies with his adventures on his cattle drive from South Texas to the nearby stockyard. This kind of image usually comes into people’s minds when thinking of Fort Worth, Texas. Some of the city's colorful past will be incorporated into the 2014 USITT Annual Conference & Stage Expo next March.

Established in 1849 and named to honor General William Jenkins Worth, Camp Worth began as an Army outpost on the north-facing bluff overlooking the Clear Fork of the Trinity River. It was one of eight forts built and assigned to protect Texas settlers from Native American attacks along Texas’s western frontier.

From the 1860’s into the late 1870’s, Fort Worth was the king of the cattle industry and earned its nickname -- Cowtown. Hell’s Half Acre, located where downtown Fort Worth is today, became the place to be for cowboys looking for entertainment. A cowboy could hang his hat, take off his boots, and settle in for a night of gambling, partying, and trouble in civilization’s last stop on the Chisholm Trail before the long cattle drive north to Kansas City. Now it is the scene of vibrant restaurants, live music, and less bawdy entertainments.

The Texas and Pacific Railway arrived in Fort Worth in 1876 and several other railroad companies arrived soon after. Railroads were the catalyst for further cattle industry growth and the building of stockyards. From Fort Worth, cattle could be shipped to market by rail, virtually ending the cattle drives northward to Kansas City. People arrived in droves via the transportation of the times – by horse or by rail. By 1878, Fort Worth had its first grain elevator. Flour mills followed and Fort Worth also became known as a grain center. The small town of Fort Worth quickly grew from about 300 people to over 3,000 residents.

While dancehall shows were operating in Hell’s Half Acre, (which had actually grown to about two acres in size) the longest running “show” in Fort Worth found its beginning as the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show. The event began as a livestock show in 1896 in a field along Marine Creek. It was moved indoors in 1908 to the newly built Northside Coliseum. The arena, now called Cowtown Coliseum, is still operating in the Stockyards area. A competition of cowboy and cowgirl events was added to the exposition in 1918 and marketed using the Spanish word “rodeo.” The show, the world’s first indoor rodeo, served as a model to other rodeos and still does today. In 1944, the rodeo and stock show moved to Will Rogers Memorial Center. Gene Autry performed at the rodeo that year, becoming the first popular entertainer to appear at a rodeo event, and setting a new trend in Western entertainment.

With industries of cattle and grain booming, banks, restaurants, more entertainment, and modern progress followed. By the end of the 19th Century, Fort Worth was a well-oiled working machine. Population was on the rise and Fort Worth grew yet another industry: meat packing. Fort Worth became home to one of largest meat packing operations in the West, processing everything from hogs to cattle. More stockyards were built and more supporting business came with them. At the same time came what people outside of Texas know Fort Worth for: OIL! Streets changed from dust trails to beautiful concrete paths to make way for the booming city. In 1920, Fort Worth had eight operating refineries with four more being built for the nearby East Texas oil boom.

While business grew, so did architecture and culture. Dallas had been chosen as the official site for the 1936 Texas Centennial Celebration. Not to be outdone, Fort Worth leaders began making plans for their own celebration to be held in a cow pasture west of downtown; and so was the birth of Will Rogers Memorial Center located in what is now Fort Worth’s beautiful Cultural District. Included as one of the new facilities for the celebration was a new amphitheater called Casa Mañana, meaning “House of Tomorrow.” The 4,000-seat outdoor venue included a restaurant and the world’s largest rotating stage. It was surrounded by a moat with projecting fountains circling the stage to create the stage curtain.

The theatre produced Broadway plays, western shows, and musicals until budgets were cut and the building was later dismantled. In 1958, Casa Mañana was rebuilt; this time as an indoor, air conditioned theatre-in-the-round. The interior was renovated to a proscenium stage configuration in 2003. Today, the theatre continues to produce everything from Broadway shows to children’s theatre and even the occasional Western show, just as it did when it first opened.

Currently, Fort Worth Texas, is the 16th most populous city in the United States and the fifth largest city in Texas. Take a walk down one of "Cowtown’s" streets; you might be taken back in time and hear the swinging of saloon doors. Just like the first cowboys coming to town, don’t forget to buy your new hat and boots in Fort Worth so you will be set for your trail ride home.

A Brief History Of “Cowtown” (2024)

FAQs

What is the history of the Cowtowns? ›

Cattle towns were found at the junctions of railroads and livestock trails. These towns were the destination of the cattle drives, the place where the cattle would be bought and shipped off to urban meatpackers, midwestern cattle feeders, or to ranchers on the central or northern plains.

How did Fort Worth get the nickname Cowtown? ›

Between 1866 and 1890, drovers trailed more than four million head of cattle through Fort Worth. The city soon became known as “Cowtown.”

What is the history of the Cowtown Rodeo? ›

Cowtown Rodeo was started in 1929 by Howard Harris Sr. and his son, Howard “Stoney” Harris Jr. Stoney held the first rodeo in Woodstown NJ, in conjunction with the Salem County Fair, at the original auction grounds on North Main Street.

Was Wichita a cow town? ›

Experience Wichita like it's 1865. Old Cowtown is a living history museum that lets you immerse yourself in the sights, sounds and activities common to a Midwestern cattle town. Hear the ring of the blacksmith anvil, sip an ice-cold sarsaparilla in the saloon and be transported back to the prairie lifestyle.

What is the purpose of Cowtown? ›

Often referred to (less respectfully) as "cow towns," cattle towns were small frontier settlements whose entrepreneurial existence depended heavily on the trade in free-range cattle. A typical cattle town lay at the junction of railroad and livestock trail.

What happened in cow towns? ›

Cow Towns - Abilene

Initially, the new towns that were created along the railroad were lawless. The cow towns were particularly troublesome. In Abilene, a cow town in Kansas, there were gunfights, murders, gambling, and prostitution. In 1870, Thomas Smith became town marshal and issued a strict ban on carrying guns.

What is a brief history of the rodeo? ›

Rodeo stresses its western folk hero image and its being a genuinely American creation. But in fact it grew out of the practices of Spanish ranchers and their Mexican ranch hands (vaqueros), a mixture of cattle wrangling and bullfighting that dates back to the sixteenth-century conquistadors.

What is Cowtown nickname? ›

From the 1860's into the late 1870's, Fort Worth was the king of the cattle industry and earned its nickname -- Cowtown. Hell's Half Acre, located where downtown Fort Worth is today, became the place to be for cowboys looking for entertainment.

What is the oldest rodeo in America? ›

“The World's Oldest Rodeo®” July 4, 1888, became the birthday of professional rodeo when a group of Prescott, Arizona, merchants and professional businessmen organized the first formalized “cowboy tournament” and offered cash prizes.

What is Wichita, KS famous for? ›

Wichita has long been known as a center of entrepreneurship. In addition to aircraft pioneers, Fred Koch founded Koch Industries in Wichita, and Dan and Frank Carney founded Pizza Hut. Coleman, Freddy's Frozen Custard, and many other successful companies began in Wichita.

How old is Cowtown? ›

Originally started in 1929 by the Harris family, Cowtown Rodeo in rural Salem County was suspended during World War II and resumed operations in 1955. Today, there's rodeo action every Saturday night May through September, making it the longest-running regular Saturday night rodeo in the United States.

What is Cowtown also known as? ›

Once known as Cowtown, because of both the annual shindig known worldwide as the Calgary Stampede and its place in Canada's wild western culture. Calgary has become a truly cosmopolitan city.

What is the history of cow tales? ›

Original Caramel Cow Tales® were introduced by Goetze's Candy Company in 1984. They are made from the same secret family recipe used to make Goetze's Caramel Creams® (a.k.a. "Bulls-Eyes®").

What is the origin of the wild cow? ›

The earliest known wild cattle originated from Asia south of the Himalayas during the Late Miocene. This is not only supported by the fossil record but also the fact that South Asia has the highest diversity of wild cattle on planet, as well as the fact the southeast Asian saola is the basal most of the living species.

What is the history of the Cow Parade? ›

History. The concept of "cow parade" has its origins in Zürich, Switzerland, in 1998 by artistic director Walter Knapp, it is based on an idea which was realised in the same city for the first time in 1986: lions as the symbol of Zurich were painted and then on display throughout the city.

What is the history of the cow hitch? ›

History. A simple and useful knotted structure, the cow hitch has been known since at least the first century when described by Greek physician Heraklas in a monograph on surgical knots and slings. Known under a variety of names, this knot has been used both on land and at sea.

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