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Goodnight, Loving!
On this day in 1867, legendary cattleman Oliver Loving died of gangrene
at Fort Sumner, New Mexico. Loving was born in Kentucky in 1812 and came
to Texas in 1843. By 1855 he had moved to the future Palo Pinto County,
where he ran a country store and ranched. In 1866, having heard about
the probable need for cattle at Fort Sumner, New Mexico, where some
8,000 Indians had been settled on a reservation, Loving gathered a herd,
combined it with that of Charles Goodnight, and began a long drive to
the fort. Their route later became known as the Goodnight-Loving Trail,
although it had been used by other cattlemen. In the spring of 1867 the
partners began a new drive, on which Loving received his fatal wound in
an Indian attack. Before Loving died Goodnight assured him that his wish
to be buried in Texas would be carried out. After a temporary burial at
Fort Sumner, while Goodnight drove the herd on to Colorado, Goodnight
had Loving's body exhumed and carried home. Stories differ as to who
accompanied the body back to Weatherford, but he was reburied there in
Greenwood Cemetery on March 4, 1868.
- Links to Related Handbook of Texas Online Articles
- LOVING, OLIVER
- GOODNIGHT, CHARLES
- GOODNIGHT-LOVING TRAIL
- CATTLE TRAILING
- Other Texas Day by Day Articles for This Date
- Radio broadcasting comes to South Texas (1922)
- West Texas's first professional woman artist dies (1874)
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