Difference between revisions of "Stinnett, Beaumont 1956-11-21"

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Right here will be a general overview of the oral history interview. It will be roughly 3-5 sentences for new interviews, shorter for older interviews.  
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Beaumont Stinnett, a son-in-law of pioneer rancher R. B. (Ben) Masterson, discusses the Masterson family, the JY brand and his own ranching endeavors.  
  
 
==General Interview Information==
 
==General Interview Information==
  
'''Interviewee Name:'''
+
'''Interviewee Name:''' Beaumont Stinnett
  
'''Additional Parties Recorded:'''
+
'''Additional Parties Recorded:''' None
  
'''Date:'''  
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'''Date:''' November 21, 1956
  
'''Location:'''
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'''Location:''' Amarillo, Texas
  
'''Interviewer:'''
+
'''Interviewer:''' None Given
  
'''Length:'''
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'''Length:''' 1 hour 35 minutes
  
  
 
==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
'''Tape 1, Side 1:'''
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'''Tape 1, Side 1:''' Use of the JY brand by the Mastersons,
 +
Robert Benjamin Masterson, Sr.,
 +
Personality,
 +
Characteristics,
 +
Minerals on the JY Ranch properties,
 +
R. B. (Ben) Masterson, Sr. (again),
 +
Wives,
 +
Ranching operations,
 +
Anecdote,
 +
Selling out after World War I,
 +
Children,
 +
Sally Lee (Mrs. Scott),
 +
Anna Bell (Mrs. D. S. Kritser),
 +
Fanny Fern (Mrs. Chansler E. Weymouth),
 +
Mary (Mrs. Mary Fain),
 +
Anecdote about gas wells (1916),
 +
Charles N. Gould,
 +
Two structures,
 +
Property in King and Knox counties,
 +
80,000 acres,
 +
Robert B. Masterson, Jr.,
 +
Thomas B. "Teb" Masterson,
 +
Masterson family,
 +
Maintains most of the mineral rights,
 +
The Lowrances own some of the rights,
 +
Discussion about the retirement of the JY brand to Texas Tech University by Floyce Masterson,
 +
Land division between Bob and Tom Masterson,
 +
Bateman mineral interest.
 +
<br>
  
 +
'''Tape 1, Side 2:''' JY brand (again),
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Original holder of the brand,
 +
R. B. (Ben) Masterson, Sr.,
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Born: December 12, 1853,
 +
To Texas (1854),
 +
Ranching activities after 1930s,
 +
Thomas B. "Teb" Masterson, Sr.,
 +
King and Knox counties,
 +
R. B. (Ben) Masterson, Jr.,
 +
Children,
 +
Peggy Masterson Stinnett,
 +
Bennett Masterson,
 +
Thomas B. "Teb" Masterson, Sr. (again),
 +
Children,
 +
T. B. (Tom) Masterson, Jr.,
 +
R. B. (Bob) Masterson III,
 +
JY brand origins,
 +
Anecdote about "Yes, Jenny",
 +
T. B. Masterson, Sr. (again),
 +
Death (1945),
 +
Sons continued use of the JY brand,
 +
Land leasing arrangements,
 +
Land interest divisions,
 +
T. B. (Tom) Masterson, Jr. and R. B. Masterson III,
 +
Partnership dissolvement,
 +
T. B. (Tom) Masterson, Jr. (again),
 +
Floyce Masterson, widow,
 +
R. B. Masterson, Jr. (again),
 +
Selling the King-Knox Ranch (1955),
 +
G. A. and Ed Lowrance (1956),
 +
Floyce Masterson (again),
 +
Leasing her ranch to the Lowrances,
 +
Peggy Masterson Stinnett and Beaumont Stinnett,
 +
Use of the JY brand (1942),
 +
Potter, Randall and Carson counties,
 +
Uses of the JY brand,
 +
Long S brand used by C. E. Weymouth,
 +
Stock farming in Carson County,
 +
Brand registration,
 +
Brand significance,
 +
Less significant today (1956),
 +
Heritage,
 +
Branding will continue,
 +
Types of cattle feed used.
 
<br>
 
<br>
  
'''Tape 1, Side 2:'''
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'''Tape 2, Side 1:''' Cattle feed (continued),
 +
Creek fed vs. non-creek fed,
 +
Range grasses used,
 +
Ben Masterson,
 +
Advantages and disadvantages of multiple ranch sites,
 +
King-Knox operation,
 +
New strategies,
 +
Farming and ranching combined,
 +
Land ownership,
 +
R. B. (Ben) Masterson Sr.’s children,
 +
Horse usage on ranches,
 +
Ten horses per ranch,
 +
Ranch hands prefer pickup trucks,
 +
Potter County ranch and Carson County farm,
 +
Stinnett (again),
 +
Randall County ranch,
 +
Education,
 +
Gas business,
 +
Children,
 +
Weather,
 +
Effects on ranching,
 +
Future of ranching,
 +
Current economics of buying a new ranch,
 +
High land cost,
 +
Ranching incidents,
 +
Rustling,
 +
Coyotes,
 +
Winters,
 +
Rainfall,
 +
Water,
 +
Windmills to pump subsurface water,
 +
Grasshoppers.
 +
<br>
  
 +
'''Tape 2, Side 2:''' Grasshoppers (continued),
 +
Pictures of the Mastersons.
 
<br>
 
<br>
  
'''Range Dates:'''
+
'''Range Dates:''' 1853-1956
  
'''Bulk Dates:'''
+
'''Bulk Dates:''' 1940s-1956
  
  

Revision as of 16:48, 8 September 2015

Beaumont Stinnett, a son-in-law of pioneer rancher R. B. (Ben) Masterson, discusses the Masterson family, the JY brand and his own ranching endeavors.

General Interview Information

Interviewee Name: Beaumont Stinnett

Additional Parties Recorded: None

Date: November 21, 1956

Location: Amarillo, Texas

Interviewer: None Given

Length: 1 hour 35 minutes


Abstract

Tape 1, Side 1: Use of the JY brand by the Mastersons, Robert Benjamin Masterson, Sr., Personality, Characteristics, Minerals on the JY Ranch properties, R. B. (Ben) Masterson, Sr. (again), Wives, Ranching operations, Anecdote, Selling out after World War I, Children, Sally Lee (Mrs. Scott), Anna Bell (Mrs. D. S. Kritser), Fanny Fern (Mrs. Chansler E. Weymouth), Mary (Mrs. Mary Fain), Anecdote about gas wells (1916), Charles N. Gould, Two structures, Property in King and Knox counties, 80,000 acres, Robert B. Masterson, Jr., Thomas B. "Teb" Masterson, Masterson family, Maintains most of the mineral rights, The Lowrances own some of the rights, Discussion about the retirement of the JY brand to Texas Tech University by Floyce Masterson, Land division between Bob and Tom Masterson, Bateman mineral interest.

Tape 1, Side 2: JY brand (again), Original holder of the brand, R. B. (Ben) Masterson, Sr., Born: December 12, 1853, To Texas (1854), Ranching activities after 1930s, Thomas B. "Teb" Masterson, Sr., King and Knox counties, R. B. (Ben) Masterson, Jr., Children, Peggy Masterson Stinnett, Bennett Masterson, Thomas B. "Teb" Masterson, Sr. (again), Children, T. B. (Tom) Masterson, Jr., R. B. (Bob) Masterson III, JY brand origins, Anecdote about "Yes, Jenny", T. B. Masterson, Sr. (again), Death (1945), Sons continued use of the JY brand, Land leasing arrangements, Land interest divisions, T. B. (Tom) Masterson, Jr. and R. B. Masterson III, Partnership dissolvement, T. B. (Tom) Masterson, Jr. (again), Floyce Masterson, widow, R. B. Masterson, Jr. (again), Selling the King-Knox Ranch (1955), G. A. and Ed Lowrance (1956), Floyce Masterson (again), Leasing her ranch to the Lowrances, Peggy Masterson Stinnett and Beaumont Stinnett, Use of the JY brand (1942), Potter, Randall and Carson counties, Uses of the JY brand, Long S brand used by C. E. Weymouth, Stock farming in Carson County, Brand registration, Brand significance, Less significant today (1956), Heritage, Branding will continue, Types of cattle feed used.

Tape 2, Side 1: Cattle feed (continued), Creek fed vs. non-creek fed, Range grasses used, Ben Masterson, Advantages and disadvantages of multiple ranch sites, King-Knox operation, New strategies, Farming and ranching combined, Land ownership, R. B. (Ben) Masterson Sr.’s children, Horse usage on ranches, Ten horses per ranch, Ranch hands prefer pickup trucks, Potter County ranch and Carson County farm, Stinnett (again), Randall County ranch, Education, Gas business, Children, Weather, Effects on ranching, Future of ranching, Current economics of buying a new ranch, High land cost, Ranching incidents, Rustling, Coyotes, Winters, Rainfall, Water, Windmills to pump subsurface water, Grasshoppers.

Tape 2, Side 2: Grasshoppers (continued), Pictures of the Mastersons.

Range Dates: 1853-1956

Bulk Dates: 1940s-1956


Access Information

Original Recording Format:

Recording Format Notes:

Transcript:



Thank you for your interest in this oral history interview. Our oral history collection is available to patrons in the Southwest Collection's Reading Room, located on the campus of Texas Tech University. For reading room hours, visit our website. Please contact Reference Staff at least one week prior to your visit to ensure the oral history you are interested in will be available. Due to copyright issues, duplications of our oral histories can only be made for family members. If an oral history transcript has been made available online, the link will be provided on this page. More information on accessing our oral histories is located here. Preferred citation style can be found here.