Many people have been under the impression that the Capitol Syndicate was an English concern, but it was not. It was chartered in England, however, because the Farwelis of Chicago, who owned it, went to England and there obtained the loan which enabled them to finish the capitol building and to develop the vast territory which composed their holdings in the Panhandle.
The ranch, like hundreds of others, was commonly known by the name of the brand it used; it was said that the brand, XIT stood for Ten (Counties) in Texas. It is not strange that the brand became so well known, for cattle with XIT burned on them covered a ranch 575 miles around; a ranch which had as its northwest corner the northwest corner of the Stake, and extended south 185 miles to a point in Hockley County; the east line of the ranch was 175 miles long, and the north line 80 miles long.
In J. Evetts Haley's book 'The XIT Ranch of Texas' I don't specifically remember it mentioned that the brand meant 'Ten in Texas'. I do remember that the main reasons they came up with it was because a single straight iron could be used to form the brand and that they thought it would be difficult for cattle thieves to change the brand on stolen cattle. Although in one illustration they show how thieves had tried to change it. Some were pretty clever.
ReplyDeleteThis article is particularly good in dealing with the raw numbers regarding the size of the ranch and the men and materials it took to make it all work. Truly mind boggling.
I think the Ten in Texas was just because it covered 10 counties and was something of a brag on the place.
DeleteRead about this first when I was a kid. In a comic book.
The Good Old Days really were.