Historically, during a period on The Frontier in North America after the removal of the American Bison and the Native Americans and before the coming of the homesteaders, ranching dominated economic activity. The public lands on the Great Plains consisted of "open range," where anyone could turn cattle loose for grazing. Barbed wire, invented in 1869, gradually made inroads in fencing off privately-owned land, especially for homesteads. Ranching became limited to lands of little use for arable farming.
Ranching forms part of the Iconography of the Western in motion pictures.
CS Cattle Company - a large family owned ranch in Northern New Mexico
La Escalera Ranch - Ranked by Texas Monthly magazine as one of the largest ranches in Texas, estimated 300,000 acres located in Pecos County, Reeves County, Brewster and Baylor County; owned and operated by the Gerald Lyda family, headquartered in Fort Stockton, Texas. The Lyda family has been involved in other major ranching operations in Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico, including the sprawling Ladder Ranch in southeastern New Mexico, now owned by media mogul Ted Turner.
Further Reading
Breaking Clean, Judy Blunt, Knopf, 2002, hardcover, ISBN 0375401318
This Was Cattle Ranching: Yesterday and Today, Virginia Paul, Superior Publishing Company, Seattle, Washington, 1973
Heart-Diamond Kathy L. Greenwood, University of North Texas Press, 1989, hardback, ISBN 0-929398-08-4
Cattle Ranges of the Southwest, published 1898, hosted by the Portal to Texas History