Ohio History Journal

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NOTES ON THE

ANTE-BELLUM CATTLE INDUSTRY FROM

THE McNEILL FAMILY PAPERS

 

 

by JOHN EDMUND STEALEY III

 

 

 

The long-ignored story of the pre-Civil War cattle industry in Ohio has been

the subject in recent years of several scholarly studies which have enhanced

the meager bibliography of American agricultural history. Previously only

a few major works dealt with the beef trade on a general, national basis. The

most notable of these are James Westfall Thompson's History of Livestock

Raising in the United States, 1607-1860 and Charles Townsend Leavitt's

original research in his 1931 University of Chicago dissertation "The Meat

and Dairy Livestock Industry, 1819-1860."1 Ohio's role in the production

and marketing of meat animals, however, won deserved recognition in Paul

C. Henlein's description of cattle driving from Ohio in a 1954 Agricultural

History publication as well as in his important monograph, Cattle Kingdom

in the Ohio Valley, 1783-1860,2 and in the specialized articles by Robert

Leslie Jones in the Ohio Historical Quarterly in 1955.3

The paucity of manuscript material, almost non-existent on many phases

of the ante-bellum industry in Ohio and in the nation, has hindered research

by agricultural historians. Henlein's use of previously unexamined manu-

 

 

NOTES ARE ON PAGES 70-72