Everything about Charles Goodnight totally explained
Charles Goodnight (
March 5,
1836 –
December 12,
1929) was a
cattle rancher in the
American West, perhaps the best known rancher in
Texas. He is sometimes known as the "father of the
Texas Panhandle."
Essayist and
historian J. Frank Dobie said that Goodnight "approached greatness more nearly than any other cowman of history."
Goodnight was born in
Macoupin County,
Illinois, east of
St. Louis, Missouri, the fourth child of Charles Goodnight and the former Charlotte Collier. Goodnight is particularly known in
Canyon and
Amarillo. The former community of Goodnight, now a
ghost town in
Armstrong County, bears his name.
Goodnight moved to Texas in
1846 with his mother and
stepfather, Hiram Daugherty. In
1856, he became a
cowboy and served with the local
militia, fighting against
Comanche raiders. A year later, in
1857, Goodnight joined the
Texas Rangers. Goodnight is also known for guiding
Texas Rangers to the
Indian camp where
Cynthia Ann Parker was recaptured, and for later making a treaty with her son,
Quanah Parker.
At the outbreak of the
Civil War, he joined the
Confederate States of America. Most of his time was spent as part of a frontier regiment guarding against raids by Indians. At the war's end, Goodnight returned to Texas and joined in "making the gather" -- a near state-wide round-up of cattle that had roamed free during the four long years of war.
Following the war, he became involved in the herding of feral
Texas Longhorn cattle northward from
West Texas to railroads. In
1866, he and
Oliver Loving drove their first herd of cattle northward along what would become known as the
Goodnight-Loving Trail. Goodnight invented the
chuckwagon, which was first used on the initial cattle drive. Upon arriving in
New Mexico, they formed a partnership with New Mexico cattleman
John Chisum for future contracts to supply the
United States Army with cattle. After Loving's death, Goodnight and Chisum extended the trail from New Mexico to
Colorado, and eventually to
Wyoming. Goodnight is reported to have kept a photograph of
Oliver Loving in his pocket for a long time after his death. As requested by the dying Loving, Goodnight carried the body from New Mexico to
Weatherford, the seat of
Parker County, for burial.
On
July 26,
1870, Goodnight married Mary Ann "Molly" Dyer, a
teacher from Weatherford, located west of
Fort Worth. Goodnight developed a practical
sidesaddle for Molly. Though he wasn't of his wife's denomination, Goodnight donated money to build a
Methodist Church in Goodnight. He and Molly also established the Goodnight Academy to offer post-
elementary education to hundreds of children of ranchers.
In order to take advantage of available grass, timber, water, and game, founded in
1876 what was to become the
JA Ranch in the
Palo Duro Canyon of the south Texas Panhandle. He partnered with the
Irish businessman
John George Adair to create the JA, which stands for "John Adair". In
1880, Goodnight was a founder of the Panhandle Stockman's Asssociation. The organization sought to improve cattle-breeding methods and to reduce the threat of
rustlers and
outlaws. After Adair's death in 1885, Goodnight worked in partnership for a time with Adair's widow,
Cornelia Wadsworth Ritchie Adair.
In addition to raising cattle, Goodnight preserved a herd of native
American Bison, which survives to this day. He also crossbred buffalo with domestic cattle, which he called
cattalo. After Goodnight had already left the JA,
Tom Blasingame came to the ranch in
1918. Blasingame worked there most of the next seventy-three years, having, at the time of his death in
1989, become the oldest cowboy in the
history of the
American West.
After Molly died in
April 1926, Goodnight became ill himself. He was nourished back to health by a 26-year-old
nurse and
telegraph operator from
Butte, Montana, named Corinne Goodnight, with whom Charles had been corresponding because of their shared surname.
On
March 5,
1927, Goodnight turned ninety-one and married the younger Corinne Goodnight, who was hence Corinne Goodnight Goodnight. He joined her
Apostolic Church, akin to
Pentecostal, and was
baptized a few months before his death in Goodnight, Texas. Evetts Haley had described Goodnight as "deeply religious and reverential by nature."
In his younger years, Goodnight smoked some fifty
cigars per day but switched to a pipe in his mature years. He never learned to read or write but had his wives write letters for him to various individuals, including Quanah Parker. During his last illness, he gave his gold Hampton pocket watch to his
pastor, Ralph Blackburn.
The following are named after Goodnight:
(1)
Charles Goodnight Memorial Trail
(2) Former town of Goodnight, site of the former Goodnight Baptist College and birthplace in
1920 of the
scientist Cullen M. Crain)
(3) Several streets in the Texas Panhandle
(4) The highway to
Palo Duro Canyon State Park.
(5) The annual Goodnight Award recognizes an individual or business for sharing Goodnight's love of the land and for protecting the Western heritage of Texas.
(6) The annual Charles Goodnight Chuckwagon Cookoff held in
September in Clarendon is the principal fundraiser for the
Saints' Roost Museum, which includes a Goodnight exhibit.
In literature
Laura Vernon Hamner, who knew Charles and Molly Goodnight, from her time in Claude, Texas, published a
novelized biography of the cattleman,
The No-Gun Man of Texas in 1935, six years after his death.
In his
Pulitzer Prize-winning
novel Lonesome Dove and its
sequels,
Larry McMurtry based the relationship between Gus McCrae and Woodrow Call on the relationship between Goodnight and Loving. The grave marker Call carves for one of the characters late in the novel is based on an actual gravestone Charlie Goodnight had created, and the trek back to Texas at the end of the novel is based on Goodnight's return of Loving's body to Texas.
There are other notable influences from Goodnight's life in the novel as well. All four novels include brief appearances by Goodnight as a character, and he plays his largest role in the final (chronological) volume of the series,
Streets of Laredo. Goodnight also appears briefly in the
prequel Dead Man's Walk and in a more prominent role in the sequel
Streets of Laredo, where he and Call have become good friends. However, Goodnight's appearance as a character in
Dead Man's Walk is historically inaccurate. The action of the novel is set during the Santa Fe Expedition of
1841. Goodnight appears as a young man in the novel, but would have been only five years old at the time. Goodnight is played in
Dead Man's Walk by
Chris Penn, in
Comanche Moon by
Jeremy Ratchford and in
Streets of Laredo by
James Gammon.
The Western novelist
Matt Braun's novel
Texas Empire is based on the life of Goodnight and fictionalizes the founding of the JA Ranch.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Charles Goodnight'.
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