Edgar Beecher Bronson

Edgar Beecher Bronson (1856–1917) was a Nebraska rancher, a West Texas cattleman, an African big-game hunter, a serious photographer and starting late in life, an author of fiction and personal memoirs. As he matured as a writer, his works showed a "marked advance...in characterization".[1]

Edgar Beecher Bronson, ca. 1917

Bronson was a nephew of famed abolitionist Henry Ward Beecher.[2] Formerly a reporter for the New York Tribune, Bronson headed west in 1877 to learn the cattle business under the directive of Clarence King — first director of the United States Geological Survey and owner of large mining and cattle operations in the American West. Bronson worked for one season in Wyoming before starting his own ranch with 716 cows with calves. Bronson chose Sioux County, Nebraska for the site of his first ranch.

Bibliography

  • Reminiscences of a Ranchman (1908)
  • The Red-Blooded Heroes of the Frontier (1910)
  • In Closed Territory (1910) - about Africa, with over 100 photos
  • The Vanguard (1914)
  • The Love of Loot and Women (1917) - published posthumously
gollark: There is a *lot* of potatOS. I even skipped some, but there's still a lot.
gollark: It might also be useful to look into moving some common stuff like fetch, fread/fwrite and all that into a big library...
gollark: Oh, come to think of it, it would be cool if potatOS could do P2P update if there's no internet connection somehow. Which is probably one of the things git is designed for. Hmmm.
gollark: I have backups of various older versions of it, too.
gollark: No, there are just a lot of files on pastebin and it's hard to track down all the places potatOS randomly downloads things.

References

  1. "From Bret Harte's Country". The Independent. Jul 13, 1914. Retrieved August 21, 2012.
  2. Nebraska Historic Buildings Survey Sioux County.
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