Cattle drives represented a compromise between the desire to get cattle to market as quickly as possible and the need to maintain the animals at a marketable weight. While cattle could be driven as far as in a single day, they would lose so much weight that they would be hard to sell when they reached the end of the trail. Usually they were taken shorter distances each day, allowed periods to rest and graze both at midday and at night. On average, a herd could maintain a healthy weight moving about per day. Such a pace meant that it would take as long as two months to travel from a home ranch to a
railhead. The
Chisholm Trail, for example, was long. On average, a single herd of cattle on a long drive (for example, Texas to Kansas railheads) numbered about 3,000 head. To herd the cattle, a crew of at least 10 cowboys was needed, with three horses per cowboy. Cowboys worked in shifts to watch the cattle 24 hours a day, herding them in the proper direction in the daytime and watching them at night to prevent stampedes and deter theft. The crew also included a
cook, who drove a
chuck wagon, usually pulled by
oxen, and a horse
wrangler to take charge of the
remuda (spare horses). The wrangler on a cattle drive was often a very young cowboy or one of lower social status, but the cook was a particularly well-respected member of the crew, as not only was he in charge of the food, he also was in charge of medical supplies and had a working knowledge of practical
medicine. Long-distance cattle driving was traditional in Mexico, California, and Texas, and horse herds were sometimes similarly driven. The
Spaniards had established the ranching industry in the New World and had begun driving herds northward from
Mexico beginning in the 1540s. Small Spanish settlements in Texas derived much of their revenue from horses and cattle driven into Louisiana, though such trade was usually illegal. Most cattle driving routes in the United States were shorter. For example, early 19th-century Pennsylvania cattle drovers travelled to
Philadelphia on the
Conestoga Road and
Lancaster Pike, which ended near the present site of
30th Street Station. Relatively long-distance herding of hogs was also common. In 1815
Timothy Flint "encountered a drove of more than 1,000 cattle and swine" being driven from the interior of Ohio to Philadelphia. was originally driven overland to the railheads in Kansas; they were replaced with shorter-horned breeds after 1900. As early as 1836, The gold boom in California in the 1850s also created a demand for beef and provided people with the cash to pay for it. Thus, though most cattle were obtained from Mexico, very long drives were attempted. Even the Australians began cattle drives to ports for shipment of beef to San Francisco and, after
freezing methods were developed, all the way to Britain. In 1853 the Italian aristocrat undertook a drive from St. Louis to San Francisco along the
California Trail; he returned to Europe in 1855 with large profits. In 1853-1854, together with his business partner, Washington Malone,
Tom Candy Ponting drove the first herd of
Texas Longhorn cattle from
Texas to
New York City, the longest cattle drive in American history. In the early years of the
American Civil War, Texans drove cattle into the Confederate states for the use of the Confederate Army. In October, 1862 a Union naval patrol on the southern Mississippi River captured 1,500 head of Longhorns which had been destined for Confederate military posts in Louisiana. The permanent loss of the main cattle supply after the Union gained control of the
Mississippi River in 1863 was a serious blow to the Confederate Army. The war blocked access to eastern markets. During the Civil War, the Shawnee Trail was virtually unused. By 1866 an estimated 200,000 to 260,000 surplus cattle were available. ==Cattle drive era==