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How did the development of barbed wire in the 1870s change the cattle ranching industry?

User Tddtrying
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Barbed wire was an invention that completely transformed the American West. Before the invention of barbed wire, cattle was generally allowed to roam freely, as settlements and farms were few and far in between. This free roaming was also convenient when the cattle needed to travel long distances to be sold in the East.

However, after the invention of barbed wire, the protection of range rights became easier to enforce. Large areas of land were enclosed much more easily. Moreover, livestock was a lot less likely to cross range boundaries.The invention was durable, cheap and effective, which made it very common in the West.

This reduced the availability of grazing land for cattle, with many dying when they could not find a way around the fences. Cattle was now contained to smaller parcels, which also meant that the cattle needed less supervision, reducing the need for cowboys, and leading to the decline of this tradition.

User Funky
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The development of barbed wire in the 1870s changed the cattle ranching industry by allowing the cattle ranching owners that have large ranches to enclose their own territory in which allowed them from eliminating the possible competition in regards of the resources. It is because the barbed wire in the 1870s serves as an important tool that ranchers could use as a way of protecting their animals in the barn from predators capable of killing their animals and from also preventing other people from trespassing without their permission.
User PabloG
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