Boyd Ranch House at the Trails and Rails Museum
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
The Boyd Ranch House was built by James Boyd in 1864 near the present-day town of Gibbon, Nebraska. Mr. Boyd started a freighting business with the purchase of 24 mule teams; one of their first hauls was the lumber to build the ranch house. Shortly after the house was completed, Boyd move to Omaha, Nebraska, where he later became mayor. When you visit the Boyd Ranch House, be sure to ask what happened to Mr. Boyd after he was mayor of Omaha! - Information provided by the Buffalo County Historical Society.
Images
The Boyd Ranch House today.
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
Ranches such as the Boyd Ranch covered a
large amount of land; it was not unusual for a ranch in Nebraska to cover many acres
of land. They would have several employees, usually men, that often lived on
the ranch as well, or somewhere nearby so it would be easy to go to and from
the ranch each day. Today, these employees are often called ranch hands, hands, or hired men, among
other less common names. The employees made sure the livestock was cared for on
a day-to-day basis and kept up with any maintenance that was required of
buildings and equipment.
James Boyd’s wife, Ann, was probably in charge of the care of the home like most women on the frontier, and United States in general, at the time. The women of large ranches such as the Boyd Ranch may have been tasked with providing meals for all the men each evening, as well as providing a place for them to relax after a long day of working outside in the harsh and sometimes unpredictable Nebraska weather. They may have been in charge of keeping up with laundry and keeping the house tidy, as well as buying the goods needed for the home from the nearest dry-goods store. Women of the frontier were often in control of the home and making sure it ran smoothly as their husband was often away from the home during the day.
James Boyd’s wife, Ann, was probably in charge of the care of the home like most women on the frontier, and United States in general, at the time. The women of large ranches such as the Boyd Ranch may have been tasked with providing meals for all the men each evening, as well as providing a place for them to relax after a long day of working outside in the harsh and sometimes unpredictable Nebraska weather. They may have been in charge of keeping up with laundry and keeping the house tidy, as well as buying the goods needed for the home from the nearest dry-goods store. Women of the frontier were often in control of the home and making sure it ran smoothly as their husband was often away from the home during the day.
Sources
Halverson, Cathryn. Playing House in the American West: Western
Women’s Life Narratives, 1839-1987. Tuscaloosa:
University Alabama Press. 2013
Howell, Alice, “Nebraska Centre and the Boyd Ranch House,” Buffalo Tales, Vol 3, No. 8. Kearney: Buffalo County Historical Society, September 1980.
Howell, Alice, “Nebraska Centre and the Boyd Ranch House,” Buffalo Tales, Vol 3, No. 8. Kearney: Buffalo County Historical Society, September 1980.