Rocking P Ranch and the Second Cattle Frontier in Western Canada

By Clay Chattaway
With Warren Elofson
Series: ISSN
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Paperback : 9781773850108, 320 pages, January 2019

Table of contents

Preface
Introduction: The Macleay Family and the Rocking P Gazette

I. The Second Cattle Frontier in Western Canada
1. Go West Young Men
2. The Extended Family Period: Riddle and Macleay Brothers
3. Nature?s Fury and The Tattered Dream
4. The Rocking P Ranch (and Farm)
5. Enlisting the nuclear Family, 1909-1925
6. Finance Matters

II. The Rocking P Gazette
7. Introducing the Rocking P Gazette
8. The Rural West
9. Country Entertainment
10. Principles of Need
11. From Religion to Race
12. Reinforcing Family Values

Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Description

The Rocking P Ranch was one of the most ambitious family ranches in Southern Alberta. Founded in 1900 by Roderick Riddle Macleary, the Rocking P flourished during the Second Cattle Frontier as open-range the Texas System ranches failed.

Beginning in 1923, Maxine and Dorothy Macleay edited, reported, and published The Rocking P Gazette, a monthly newspaper grounded in the daily life of the Rocking P. Ranch. With an audience of their parents and relatives, cowpunchers, teachers, and cooks, the 12- and 14-year-old sisters set out to create a family newspaper that reflected as closely as possible the commercial publications of the time. With sections for local news, advertisements, riddles, poetry, and contributions from Macleay ranch hands, The Rocking P Gazette brings the family ranch to life.

Clay Chattaway and Warren Elofson draw upon this remarkable resource to explore the Second Cattle Frontier and to tell the story of the Rocking P Ranch. Through the lens of The Rocking P Gazette, Chattaway and Elofson detail not only a system of agricultural production, but a way of life that continues to this day.

Reviews

A great collaboration that brings family ranch history to life!

Richard W. Slatta, professor of History, North Carolina State University

A lively read and a captivating account of the Rocking P. Ranch.

—Brooke Campbell, Canada's History Magazine

This fascinating account, enriched by the artwork of Dorothy and Maxine Macleay, serves as a reminder that young people are often astute observers and commentators.

Bill Waiser, distinguished professor emeritus, University of Saskatchewan

A lively account of the Rocking P. Ranch and southern Alberta ranching life in the first half of the twentieth century.

Donald Smith, professor emeritus, University of Calgary