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Named after a Mexican War general William Jenkins Worth, Fort Worth
began as a military post in 1849. More than a century and a half
later, the defense industry remains Fort Worth's major strength
with Lockheed Martin's F-35s and Bell Helicopter's Ospreys flying
the skies over the city. Popularly known as ""Cowtown"" for the
iconic cattle drives and stockyards that brought the city fame,
soldiers, pilots, and military installations have been just as
important-and more enduring-in Fort Worth's legacy. Arsenal of
Defense: Fort Worth's Military Legacy covers the entire military
history of Fort Worth from the 1840s with tiny Bird's Fort to the
tremendous impact of the two World Wars on the city and the massive
defense plants of the first decade of the twenty-first century.
In August of 1897, in the small village of Henna, Syria, eighteen
miles from Damascus, Mohammed (Ed) Aryain was born. As far back as
he could remember, Ed dreamed of moving to the United States. In
the early twentieth century Syria still suffered from high taxation
and control under the Ottoman Turks. Ed saw Syrians who had been to
America returning home with gold watches and money to purchase
land, and he vowed to do the same. Although his parents did not
want him to go, eventually they relented and watched
fifteen-year-old Ed begin a 120-mile walk to Beirut to board a
steamship. He tells of his emotional first view of the Statue of
the Liberty and of his traumatic passage through Ellis Island.
Joining the network of Syrians who supported themselves by peddling
dry goods, Ed traveled across the Great Plains. Later he rented
storefronts in wild oil-boom towns in Oklahoma and Texas. Finally
he married an American woman and settled in West Texas, living in
Littlefield, Sudan, Brownfield, and finally in Seminole, where he
operated his own store on the town square until 1952. But even
after decades in the United States, a man never forgets his
homeland, and after nearly fifty years in America Ed returned
briefly to Syria to visit those who remained of the family he had
left behind. Eddie and Jameil Aryain, Ed's two sons, have each
written an afterword, providing their perspectives on this unique
piece of Americana. " A] beautifully edited memoir . . . that] not
only puts faces on Syrian emigrants but humanizes them as well"
--Great Plains Quarterly J'Nell Pate is the author of six books,
including, most recently America's Historic Stockyards: Livestock
Hotels, and a weekly history column in her local newspaper. She
lives in Azle, Texas.
A hundred years ago a simple business arrangement changed the
course of Fort Worth's economy for years to come and its character
perhaps forever. On July 26, 1887, the Union Stock Yards Company
received a charter to do business in an area just north of town.
The legacy of that charter: Cowtown.
J'Nell L. Pate has spent ten years researching the Fort Worth
market, with full access to company records and local archives. The
result is a thorough, thoughtful, and colorful examination of the
industry and its effects on this city.
The early years of the stockyards were years of struggle for local
businessmen, but in 1902, national giants Swift and Armour assumed
a two-thirds interest in the operations, and from there the market
grew to be the largest in the Southwest---and one of the three or
four largest in the nation. Decentralization after World War II saw
local country auctions and later large feedlot operations set the
market on a decline. Pate describes typical days during various
periods of the market's existence; regales with anecdotes about
traders, packers, and shippers; examines the successes and failures
of the owners and managers; and impartially evaluates the policies
and practices of national moguls Armour and Swift. Her study
demonstrates the interrelatedness of the Fort Worth market and the
larger Texas agribusiness scene and gives many new insights into
the livestock industry generally.
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