Elmer’ Prize Brahman Bull “David” Proudly Bearing the “Lazy U” Brand of the Boyt Ranch
Painting by Ethyl White ~ 1944
“Grandpa always loved livestock,” said Lloyd. “He made 3 or 4 cattle drives; one of them was to Oklahoma or a little farther. That’s the way you made a living back then,” explained Lloyd, “you had to have cattle to have something to eat or to make trade. Grandpa sent a lot of his cattle by train to Fort Worth. I remember one time he said he had 3,000 head a cattle with a price set at $84 per head during the depression and when they got up there they sold for $30 a head so he lost a lot of money on that trade,” Lloyd said emphatically. Grandpa had a lot of land and a lot of room for cattle. Grandpa started the first crosses with the shorthorns, leading the way for others, but the main ones were the Brahman and the Hereford cross, the Brafords,” stated Lloyd. “That was the money-maker, and he had some beautiful Brahman herds too. Grandpa, along with the Hudgins family, had some of the first Brahmans in this area. Walter Hudgins and Grandpa were dear friends. Most of Grandpa’s Brahmans were of the Manso line. Uncle Pat, however, loved the Red Brahman with the long ears, that was the Zebu Brahmans. But Grandpa liked the stocky gray Brahman, and his first herd bull was “David”. David was just a pet,” smiled Lloyd. He also had some of the best bucking bulls, a lot of his bulls ended up going to Madison Square Garden in New York. Uncle Cecil Boyt and Buck Echols were Championship ropers and they made one or two trips to Madison Square Garden. That is why Grandpa built the TVE arena in Liberty in 1940, because Uncle Cecil was roping.
“Grandpa had his headquarters there at Cottonwood,” continued Lloyd, “he had his own generator and a little refrigeration unit so he could do his own butchering. He really had a great set-up, he was a way ahead of his time, that’s for sure. Some people use to call it the “King’s Ranch of Southeast Texas.” That big barn you see gong down 1410 before you get to the big curve, could hold 55,000 bales of hay. He would take a cattle truck of hay and haul it to the cattle at Bolivar in the wintertime. He was always thinking ahead…he was sharp…he had a lot of horse sense, I’m telling you and he could get people to work for him. They knew he knew what he wanted done and they would do it for him.” One of his old black hands told Sonja, “Mister Elmer use to work right beside us when he was young and still percolatin.” “I sure did love that old man,” said Lloyd. “Grandma was a Clubb, so she was related to all the Clubb’s, Wingate’s, and Kiker’s in the Fannett area, we’re related to all of them, no strangers in the bunch,” smiled Lloyd.