CHAPTER VI 

 ANIMAL TYPE AND ITS IMPORTANCE 



Farm animals in early days in America were usually very 

 inferior. The settlers of New England and the older states 

 did not give much attention to live stock. Until we had 

 large cities we had no important live-stock markets. The 

 farmers produced but little more than was needed for the 

 local home sales. In. 1830 the first railway was built in 

 America. Before that, people drove live stock long distances 

 to market. As early as 1804, cattle were driven overland 

 from Ohio to Baltimore to find buyers. West of the Miss- 

 issippi, large herds of cattle and sheep developed with the 

 settlement of the country. There were great drives of 

 cattle and sheep overland to Kansas City, St. Louis, and 

 other places. It was not till 1865 that the Union Stock 

 Yards of Chicago opened for business. Now it is much the 

 largest live-stock market in the world. 



The study of animal form in a large way really began 

 with the selling of stock in the market. At first people 

 were not very particular. An increase in population, how- 

 ever, increased the demand for meat. Then men began to 

 buy from the farmer and to sell animals in the markets. 

 These sellers naturally saw certain differences in their stock. 

 They saw that some beasts served a given purpose better 

 than others, and that some were really worth more than 

 others for the same purpose. So the men who sold in the 

 markets began to use special words to indicate the kind of 

 stock they were talking about. 



