Montana Rancher Ellen Cotton
#16rp - She remarried becoming Ellen Cotton. They accumulated land and cattle. That marriage also failed, but she still stayed.
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Montana Rancher Ellen Cotton
We were on a van trip from Cape Cod to California via Yellowstone, back the southern route to Louisiana, and north through the Appalachians returning to the Cape.
Along the way, we met Montana rancher Ellen Cotton.
West of Chicago, we picked up three hitchhikers going to St. Paul, Minnesota. One of them told us that if we were going through Sheridan, Wyoming, we should check out Ellen Cotton, who had a ranch and lived just across the Montana border. She would probably let us stay a night, maybe more. He gave us the directions to her place.
We decided to go see her.
Leaving Sheridan, we were soon in Montana, and after a few dozen dirt road miles, and crossroad signs pointing to this ranch, and to that ranch, we arrived at Ellen’s 4-Mile Ranch.
It was dark. Lights were on at the house, and smoke was coming out of the chimney.
The road down to the ranch house, about a quarter mile away, held slush snow (it was in May) and was just steep enough in spots, that I thought it better to stay up top.
We bedded down for the night and walked down in the morning.
Staying up top proved to be a good decision as the road was highly questionable, even for a four-wheel drive. If we made it down, we might have been there a while waiting for the road to dry up enough to drive out.
Nearing the house, a man was pulling hay bales off a flatbed pickup for cows in the pasture. We hailed him and he waved us in.
All bundled up in the morning cold and wearing a cowboy hat, working behind the hay truck set in low gear, was Ellen Cotton. I was surprised, he was a she. She was immediately likable.
After introductions, I stayed to help Ellen. Bette went into the house, meeting Laura, a student who was visiting a few days.
They started making breakfast. Eggs, biscuits and gravy, hashbrowns, toast and jam, thick slices of bacon from “Petunia,” a pet pig that had until recently lived at the ranch, and coffee. I can still taste it.
The cows were in the calving pasture. There were fifty-nine Moms-to-be. A few had already calved, with the rest of them due at any time. It may take few weeks.
The job now was to protect the new-born calves from coyotes and the cold if they were rejected by the mother. That would mean bottle feeding and providing warmth in the barn. And to provide help to the mother, if possible, if needed during birth.
It meant keeping watch. We checked up on them every three hours. A few cows and/or calves not making it was to be expected.
It was an important and trying time for ranchers.
Ellen was a character. I learned later that she was a great granddaughter of Ralph Waldo Emerson, and that the ranch house was built by Buffalo Bill Cody. She brought it from a nearby town and renovated it.
Born into the upper class in New England, she fell in love with ranching when on a trip out west as a child.
She married young and moved west despite family misgivings. They divorced, and she, with three small sons, stayed on. She wanted to be a rancher.
She remarried becoming Ellen Cotton. They accumulated land and cattle. That marriage also failed, but she still stayed.
RANCH LIFE
She took on ranch hands, and during school vacations, students would come in, camping out behind the house on a rise set up as a camp.
They would move the cattle to different pastures as the seasons passed and do what was needed on the ranch.
There was one large tepee still set up, standing in the snow drifts, banners blowing in the wind from the tepee top.
She talked about the community programs she was involved in. She had become an advocate for many of the rancher’s concerns. Their way of life, was threatened on many fronts. Civilization was closing in.
She had become an outspoken critic of the coal mining in the area. It was the strip mining that was the problem. Coal dust was affecting visibility; mountains in the distance could hardly be seen now.
Her main concern, though, was that strip mining cut into the aquifers, interfering with the underground water flow, threatening water supplies of ranchers and farmers throughout Montana, Wyoming, and the neighboring states.
She believed that digging tunnels to extract the coal would solve most problems. But that was expensive. It was a difficult problem for all concerned.
Things went smooth while we were there. No problems with the cattle.
Tired from checking on the herd throughout a cold night filled with a jillion stars and swirling snow squalls, we got up again to load the flatbed with hay for the morning feed.
Doing this routine day after day would take its toll. It was hard not to be impressed with those who choose this way of life.
With the sunrise my drowsiness departed.
It was time for us to go, but Ellen insisted we stay for breakfast.
We felt awkward having to leave but was assured that more help was on the way. She invited us back when we could spend more time.
Walking up the hill, I was certain we wouldn’t have made it up the road in the van. Snow, mud, and ice covered much of the roadway.
We were soon on our way to Yellowstone.
This short time on Ellen’s ranch, our arrival on the cliffs above the beach in northern California, and the tornado in West Virginia, were the highlights of this trip.
This story was first posted on Jan. 16, 2023.
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Great story, and wise move keeping the van up top, James. I once went down a snow covered back road in the Rockies and got stuck for a week. Ha. Should have asked you about it first...