Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

TexasTowelie

(112,167 posts)
Thu Jan 13, 2022, 04:05 AM Jan 2022

Atrocious but efficient: How ranchers used barbed wire to make phone calls

Historian J. Evetts Haley wrote that, in its time, the old XIT Ranch up in the Texas Panhandle was “probably the largest fenced range in the world.” He recalled that its barbed wire enclosed over 3 million acres of land. At the north end alone, the fence ran for 162 miles. The unique enclosure helped keep in enormous cattle herds, keep out rustlers, and also gave rise to the creative use of a new technology: the telephone.

I’ll come back to the XIT in a moment, but first, consider these smattering of reports from that era. In 1897, The Electrical Review, reported that “on a ranch in California, telephone communication had been established between the various camps . . . by means of barbed wire fences.” The article says the novel use of the phone was a great success and was being used in Texas as well. That same year, the New England Journal of Agriculture was impressed that two Kansas farmers, living a mile apart, had attached fine telephone instruments to the barbed wire fence that connects their places and established easy communication. From the Butte Intermountain in 1902 we see this notice: “Fort Benton’s latest development is a barbed wire telephone communication.” The article points out that people of the range were not all that happy with barbed wire, which they thought was an “evil” that had arrived with the railroad, but they had decided to look at the practical side of its existence and use it to create a telephone exchange that would connect all the ranches to Fort Benton.

On the XIT, given that the ranch covered over 4,500 square miles, there was interest in creating a communication system that would be more efficient than sending out fast riders to distant camps. “In the early 1900’s,” Haley reported, “a great many telephones were placed upon the ranch. Where possible, the top line of the fences was used as a telephone line, though the ‘service’ was atrocious.” It did allow for quick communication concerning emergencies such as a grass fire that required all cowboys immediately. There was even talk among technology geeks of the era that cowboys could carry phones wherever they went and clip on to the fence to report problems they encountered. Haley said that the old cowboys no doubt scoffed at the notion of carrying phones in their saddlebags to squawk about every escaped bull or rattlesnake bite they came across.

The cowboys, always ingenious when it came to invention, perfected the barbed wire phone systems by adding insulators. They’d use old broken whiskey bottles and soda pop bottles – particularly the necks of them — to put under the wire to lift it off the fence and improve conductivity. This made the signal go further and clarified the voices they carried.

Read more: https://www.texasstandard.org/stories/atrocious-but-efficient-how-ranchers-used-barbed-wire-to-make-phone-calls/

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Atrocious but efficient: How ranchers used barbed wire to make phone calls (Original Post) TexasTowelie Jan 2022 OP
K & R A fascinating bit of history! Budi Jan 2022 #1
If my 7th grade Texas history class had been so interesting TexasTowelie Jan 2022 #2
Too bad that it is illegal to teach CRT in Texas... Sancho Jan 2022 #3
They are still using smoke signals in parts of the state. nt TexasTowelie Jan 2022 #4
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Jan 2022 #5
1st word I came to was fascinating. Then saw it had already been used. 7wo7rees Jan 2022 #6
I heard about this years ago from an old rancher... Javaman Jan 2022 #7
The comedy Green Acres with Eddie Albert and Eva Gabor HubertHeaver Jan 2022 #8
 

Budi

(15,325 posts)
1. K & R A fascinating bit of history!
Thu Jan 13, 2022, 04:23 AM
Jan 2022

And how bout this!!

"Dr. Anderson told me it’s quite fascinating to consider that what started as a fence system on the XIT evolved really into what is the XIT Communications which serves that region today. XIT Communications provides phone service and high speed internet to rural communities in the footprint of the original ranch – and more."

TexasTowelie

(112,167 posts)
2. If my 7th grade Texas history class had been so interesting
Thu Jan 13, 2022, 04:47 AM
Jan 2022

I may have learned a few things. Instead I had the baseball coach who was gone to games most of the spring.

Response to TexasTowelie (Reply #4)

7wo7rees

(5,128 posts)
6. 1st word I came to was fascinating. Then saw it had already been used.
Thu Jan 13, 2022, 10:32 AM
Jan 2022

I don't have anything else. But thank you for sharing!!
My grandfather grew up on the plains of Texas.

Javaman

(62,530 posts)
7. I heard about this years ago from an old rancher...
Thu Jan 13, 2022, 02:06 PM
Jan 2022

he also told me that back then the ranchers that had served in the military use to tap out morse code on the barb wire as well.

HubertHeaver

(2,522 posts)
8. The comedy Green Acres with Eddie Albert and Eva Gabor
Fri Jan 14, 2022, 12:54 AM
Jan 2022

Had an episode that alluded to using the barbed-wire fence in this manner. After a while the farmers refused to cooperate so the experiment failed.

Latest Discussions»Region Forums»Texas»Atrocious but efficient: ...