Celebrations Today – October 7
Holidays and observances
- Christian feast day:
- International Trigeminal Neuralgia Awareness Day
- Italian Evacuation Day (Libya)
- Teachers’ Day (Laos)
- The first day of Nagasaki Kunchi, celebrated until October 9 (Nagasaki)
Celebrations Today – USA: October 7
National LED Light Day *
National Frappe Day
National Bathtub Day
National You Matter to Me Day
Today in US History: October 7
Fall Roundup Time
October 7, 1979, was the final day of the fall roundup and trail drive for the Ninety-Six Ranch. The ranch lies along Martin Creek, a tributary of the Little Humboldt River in the upper section of Paradise Valley, Humboldt County, Nevada.
The cattle ranch’s annual cycle began in spring with the birth of the calves. The calves were branded and turned out with the rest of the herd to summer on grazing range about fifteen miles due north of the ranch in the Santa Rosa Mountains. Each fall, some 2,000 cattle were gathered from the range and driven home.
One week before the fall roundup, the buckaroos, as cowboys are known in this region, packed their gear and traveled from the Ninety-Six Ranch in the valley to a line camp in the mountains. The (line) camps along the trail were located near a spring or stream, and consisted of a permanent cabin with a wood-burning cookstove and bunks, a fenced area to hold the cavvy (a string of horses), a place to store hay, and a corral where the day’s mounts were caught and saddled.
A buckaroo’s day started early during roundup time. At 5:30 in the morning, the buckaroos ate breakfast, put away bedrolls, and began to gather the cattle that they found throughout the range. It took three days to round up the cattle and three more days for the trail drive back to the ranch.
During part of the year, the herds grazed on public land managed either by the Bureau of Land Management, part of the Department of the Interior, or on lands overseen by the U.S. Forest Service, part of the Department of Agriculture. The federal land managers followed detailed regulations governing the date upon which a herd could come onto the land, the date for the roundup, and the permitted herd size, expressed in “Animal Unit Months” (AUMs).
Buckaroos used a variety of techniques to move the animals. To drive cattle from a thicket, they made noisy cattle calls—perhaps by banging on a tin can or by shaking a can full of stones. They were always careful not to cause a stampede. Cowboys often rode to a site above the cattle and positioned themselves out of sight, then rode down the hill so that the cattle would move in the desired direction. Activities such as card playing, conversation, good food, and, even frisbee, provided recreation along the trail.
At the end of the roundup, any calves born during the summer or overlooked in the spring were branded, and the marketable cattle sold. During the winter, the remaining herd, mostly cows, was fed hay and kept in nearby pastures. In the spring, with the birth of new calves and a turnout to the grazing range, the cycle began again.
- The collection Buckaroos in Paradise: Ranching Culture in Northern Nevada, 1945-1982 provides a look at U.S. cattle ranching and its traditions through an in-depth examination of life on the Ninety-Six and neighboring ranches.
- See the special presentation “Buckaroo: Views of a Western Way of Life”, an essay by Howard W. Marshall.
- Watch and listen as Les Stewart, owner of the Ninety-Six Ranch, shows how the ranch used to stack hay with a large wooden derrick, explains his strategy for branding, and introduces the group of buckaroos who rousted the 1979 roundup.
- Search on Native American or Paiute to find out more about the Northern Paiute from the Fort McDermitt Indian Reservation who have worked on the Ninety-Six Ranch from its earliest days.
- Learn more about the Paiute people in general by searching on the terms Paiute or Pahute or Piute in the
- Search on the term cowboy in History of the American West, 1860-1920: Photographs from the Collection of the Denver Public Library to see images such as Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show cowboys, Sioux Indians in camp entertained by a cowboy, and the famous motion picture cowboy, Tom Mix.
Cornell University
Cornell University welcomed its first 412 students to the rural campus overlooking Lake Cayuga in Ithaca, New York, on October 7, 1868. Cornell is one of the original institutions funded as a result of landmark federal legislation, the Morrill Act of 1862. Named for Vermont Congressman Justin Morrill, this legislation offered states grants in the form of federal lands proportional to their population to establish public institutions (colleges) in agriculture, mechanic arts (engineering), military science, and classical studies. Proceeds from the sale of these federal lands were meant to build and operate the new colleges.
The land-grant colleges also provided greater access to college for women. Women were formally admitted to Cornell in the spring of 1872.
Cornell is proud of many firsts. These include the nation’s first university degree in veterinary medicine and the first doctorates in electrical engineering and industrial engineering. Cornell established the first four-year schools of hotel administration and industrial and labor relations. The Cornell University Press was the first university publishing enterprise in the U.S. and is one of the country’s largest university presses. Cornell was the first among all U.S. colleges and universities to allow undergraduates to borrow books from its libraries.
Cornell University was one of the first colleges to field a football team. “Big Red,” the nickname for all Cornell’s varsity teams, was first “Big Red Bear,” when in 1916, the varsity football team collected $25 to purchase a black bear cub they nicknamed Touchdown. A student wearing a costume was substituted for the live bear not long afterward.
A second Morrill Act, passed in 1890, sought to extend access to higher education through additional endowments for all land-grant institutions as established in the 1862 act. This legislation withheld funds from states that failed to provide, at minimum, separate but equal educational facilities for African Americans, and led to the founding of many historically black colleges and universities.
Native Americans also benefited from land-grant legislation. Thirty-three Native American tribal colleges became land grant institutions in 1994.
Some of the most well-known land-grant institutions are Purdue University in Indiana, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston, Tuskegee University in Alabama, Pennsylvania State University, Ohio State University, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Today, Cornell is the only land-grant institution of New York State and equally a privately endowed university, the only land-grant member of the Ivy League/Ancient Eight, and a partner of the State University of New York.
Visit American Memory to find more on Cornell University and other higher educational institutions:
- Search across the American Memory pictorial collections on Cornell or Ithaca to see more photographs of Cornell University, as well as the scenic Ithaca Falls and Cascadilla Gorge.
- Search on Cornell University in Music for the Nation: American Sheet Music, 1870-1885 to find the “Cornell University Polka” and the “Cornell University Defilé March.”
- Explore the wide range of materials available on other institutions of higher learning. Search across all the American Memory collections on college, or university, or on the names of individual institutions.
- Read the Morrill Act in Primary Documents in American History for more information on this groundbreaking statute.
Today in History – October 7-External Links
Today’s Weather in History
Today in Earthquake History
This Day in Naval History
Today’s Document from the National Archives
Today’s Events, Births & Deaths –Wikipedia
Today in History by AP
On this Day -1950 to 2005 – Today’s Story–BBC
On This Day: The New York Times
This Day in History –History.com
Today in Canadian History – Canada Channel
History of Britain that took place On This Day
Russia in History –Russiapedia