Alex Swan and the Swan Companies

Biography & Memoir, Business, Nonfiction, History, Americas, United States, 19th Century
Cover of the book Alex Swan and the Swan Companies by Lawrence M. Woods, University of Oklahoma Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Lawrence M. Woods ISBN: 9780806155548
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press Publication: January 25, 2016
Imprint: University of Oklahoma Press Language: English
Author: Lawrence M. Woods
ISBN: 9780806155548
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Publication: January 25, 2016
Imprint: University of Oklahoma Press
Language: English

The Swan name is inseparable from the history of Wyoming and the West, and when Swan made his mark in Wyoming in the 1880s, ranching was king. The largest among Alex Swan’s many corporate creations, The Swan Land and Cattle Company, Ltd., was one of the larger livestock companies to operate in the American West, and it survived long after it founder’s financial debacle in the great winter of 1886-1887. At one time, the Swan was said to be the largest private landowner in Wyoming, and at its peak it was certainly one of the largest sheep companies in the country.

This new work for the first time relates the life of Alex Swan, and offers a complete history of the Swan companies. Lawrence M. Woods has combed the surviving corporate records and other documents held in the United States and abroad.

At the height of his financial life, Swan was said to be the richest man in Wyoming Territory, and his influence extended beyond business affairs to community service, both in Wyoming and in Iowa. Yet, after his dramatic financial collapse, there were many who ridiculed what he had done, and Swan’s silence has left those criticisms on the record, without rebuttal.

Swan, a leader in the Wyoming Stock Growers Association from its founding in 1873, served as its second president. Promoting the use of Hereford cattle on the high plains, he was a force in the Wyoming ranching world, especially after his move to Cheyenne in 1874. Woods details Swan’s life in the years after his separation from the Scottish-controlled Swan Land and Cattle Company, especially his activities in Ogden, Utah.

The Swan companies continued operation into the mid-twentieth century. John Clay played a major role in their operation, and he figures prominently in their story. Alex Swan and the Swan Companies is an important portrait of the inner workings of the western cattle industry and its leaders.

The book has a bibliography, index, and three appendices. It is bound in rich brown linen cloth and has a foil stamped spine and front cover. Western Lands and Waters Series, XXII

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The Swan name is inseparable from the history of Wyoming and the West, and when Swan made his mark in Wyoming in the 1880s, ranching was king. The largest among Alex Swan’s many corporate creations, The Swan Land and Cattle Company, Ltd., was one of the larger livestock companies to operate in the American West, and it survived long after it founder’s financial debacle in the great winter of 1886-1887. At one time, the Swan was said to be the largest private landowner in Wyoming, and at its peak it was certainly one of the largest sheep companies in the country.

This new work for the first time relates the life of Alex Swan, and offers a complete history of the Swan companies. Lawrence M. Woods has combed the surviving corporate records and other documents held in the United States and abroad.

At the height of his financial life, Swan was said to be the richest man in Wyoming Territory, and his influence extended beyond business affairs to community service, both in Wyoming and in Iowa. Yet, after his dramatic financial collapse, there were many who ridiculed what he had done, and Swan’s silence has left those criticisms on the record, without rebuttal.

Swan, a leader in the Wyoming Stock Growers Association from its founding in 1873, served as its second president. Promoting the use of Hereford cattle on the high plains, he was a force in the Wyoming ranching world, especially after his move to Cheyenne in 1874. Woods details Swan’s life in the years after his separation from the Scottish-controlled Swan Land and Cattle Company, especially his activities in Ogden, Utah.

The Swan companies continued operation into the mid-twentieth century. John Clay played a major role in their operation, and he figures prominently in their story. Alex Swan and the Swan Companies is an important portrait of the inner workings of the western cattle industry and its leaders.

The book has a bibliography, index, and three appendices. It is bound in rich brown linen cloth and has a foil stamped spine and front cover. Western Lands and Waters Series, XXII

More books from University of Oklahoma Press

Cover of the book Diminished Democracy by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Listening to Rosita by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Sickness, Suffering, and the Sword by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book A History of the Indians of the United States by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Valley of the Guns by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Pipestone: My Life in an Indian Boarding School by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book The Directory for Confessors, 1585 by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Archaeological Perspectives on the Battle of the Little Bighorn by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Father of Route 66 by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book The Ch'ol Maya of Chiapas by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Back to the Blanket by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Open Range by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Indians and Emigrants by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book From Boer War to World War by Lawrence M. Woods
Cover of the book Nine Days in May by Lawrence M. Woods
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy