Cattle on the beach: Apalachicola, Florida
Image Number: N047144
Old Spanish cattle brands
Image Number: RC05555
Steamship at wharf: Punta Rassa, Florida (189-)
Image Number: RC19392
Wharf where cattle were hurriedly pushed along chutes and crowded into every available spot on board schooners that plowed the waters between Punta Rassa, Tampa, St. Andrews Bay, Charlotte Harbor, and Cuba. Many ships carried 200 head or more per trip.
Cattle drive at Bartow (189-)
Image Number: RC02673
At the far left is Crayton Parker, in the middle is Tom Smith on a horse named Boomerang, and at the right is Aunt Jeanie feeding hay to a cow.
Cowboy at an open range roundup near Fort McCoy: Florida (c. 1910)
Image Number: N045020
Fighting over a stolen herd (1895)
Image Number: RC02054
Included in an article titled "Cracker Cowboys of Florida" published in Harper's New Monthly magazine v.91, issue 543, August 1895.
A bit of cow country (1895)
Image Number: RC02057
Included in an article titled "Cracker Cowboys of Florida" published in Harper's New Monthly magazine v.91, issue 543, August 1895.
Jacob Summerlin: Bartow, Florida
Image Number: RC02467
He amassed a fortune in the cattle business and endowed the Summerlin Institute.
Jacob Summerlin (1820-1893). Reputedly the first child born in the Florida Territory, Jake Summerlin was said to have started working cattle and cracking whips by seven years of age. At 16, he travelled south to central Florida, where he earned his fortune raising cattle in the Kissimmee and Peace River areas. Summerlin became one of the state's wealthiest men before he reached 40. He and his partners sold cattle to Cuba and the U.S. Naval Base in Key West. He purchased large land parcels in southwest Florida, including a wharf at Punta Rassa. During the Civil War, Summerlin smuggled beef to the Confederates by shipping it out of present day Charlotte Harbor, then later sold cattle to Union soldiers at Ft. Myers. After the war he donated land to establish a school in Bartow. In Orlando, he opened the Summerlin Hotel, donated the land for Lake Eola Park, and became the City Council's first president.
Jacob Summerlin: Bartow, Florida
Image Number: RC12095
He amassed a fortune in the cattle business and endowed the Summerlin Institute.
Seminole Indian cowboy Charley Micco and grandson Fred Smith on horseback in a cattle ranch: Brighton Reservation, Florida. (1950)
Image Number: C013676
Emperor: registered Guzerat Brahman bull bred and raised on the ranch of Henry O. Partin and sons, Kissimmee, Florida
Image Number: PC4977
Brahman bull: Bradenton, Florida
Image Number: PC5941
Accompanying note: "Emperor Jr. 10th owned by T.P. Chaires Jr. of Bradenton, Florida. One of the outstanding Brahman Bulls in Florida. This is the second generation of Florida bred cattle imported from India. Florida rates second in the U.S. in pure bred Brahman cattle."
Two cowboys wearing handguns: Gainesville, Florida (189-)
Image Number: RC05578
Rough and Ready, two cowboys wearing handguns and boots, are two Gainesville residents. Archie L. Jackson, left, was the son of a Confederate veteran and grandfather of an Alachua County rancher. Thomas McDonald, right, had a son, Harrison H. McDonald, who was a county judge for many years. This photo was taken in the 1890s, after the two men had driven a herd of cattle from Old Town, forded the Suwannee River, and brought the herd close to Gainesville for grazing. This shot was taken about one block west of the courthouse, behind Steenberg's Hardware Store, later Thomas Hardware.
Group of Florida cattle barons: De Soto County, Florida
Image Number: PR02647
L-R: Ed Wells, C. C. Carlton, W. N. "Pole" Duncan, Hooker Parker, unknown.







