Sentences with phrase «texas by cattle»

Not exact matches

A 1999 study led by James Derr of Texas A&M University showed that six of the 15 North American bison populations contain cattle genes (Animal Conservation, DOI: 10.1017 / S1367943099000359).
John joins his brother Dan (James Badge Dale) and the rest of the Texas Rangers to track him down, only to be ambushed by Cavendish in the desert and slaughtered like cattle.
The ranch was founded in 1853 by steamboat captain Richard King and continues to produce cattle and crops in Texas and on property the company owns in Florida.
One of its claims to fame is the Chisholm Trail Outdoor Museum, which traces part of the trail taken by cattle herders from Texas to Kansas.
The Texas Heeler is a hybrid dog that is bred by crossing a Blue Heeler (a.k.a. Australian Cattle Dog or ACD) with an Australian Shepherd (or Aussie).
Built in 1886 by Cattle Baron Colonel Jesse Driskill as a showcase of legendary Texas hospitality, The Driskill has since stood as an important social hub and iconic piece of Texas history.
Not just by the wine, but also the fact that they have real Texas Longhorn cattle on the property.
- Family Life on the Frontier (prior to 1845, Anschutz Collection, Denver)- Fur Traders Descending the Missouri (1845, Metropolitan Museum of Art)- The Concealed Enemy (1845, Stark Museum of Art, Orange, Texas)- The Jolly Flatboatmen (1846, Manoogian Collection, Taylor, Michigan)- Boatmen on the Missouri (1846, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco)- Landscape with Cattle (1846, St. Louis Art Museum)- Lighter Relieving a Steamboat Aground (1846 - 47, The White House)- Raftsmen Playing Cards (1847, St. Louis Art Museum)- Captured by Indians (1848, St. Louis Art Museum)- Country Politician (1849, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco)- Shooting for the Beef (1850, Brooklyn Museum, New York)- Mississippi Boatman (1850, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC)- The Squatters (1850, Museum of Fine Arts Boston)- The Emigration of Daniel Boone (1851, Washington University, St. Louis)- Trapper's Return (1851, Detroit Institute of Arts)- Canvassing for a Vote (1851 - 52, Nelson - Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City)- Fishing on the Mississippi (1851 - 52, Nelson - Atkins Museum, Kansas City)- The Storm (1852 - 53, Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford)- Deer in Stormy Landscape (1852 - 53, Anschutz Collection, Denver)- Western Boatmen Ashore by Night (1854, Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth)- Stump Speaking (1853 - 54, St. Louis Art Museum)- View of a Lake in the Mountains (1855, Los Angeles County Museum of Art)- Washington Crossing the Delaware (1856, Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, Virginia)- Martial Law or Order No. 11 (1870, State Historical Society of Missouri)- View of Pikes Peak (1872, Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Texas)
Programming at Project Row Houses is generously supported by Mark Bradford; The Brown Foundation; Bruner Foundation Inc.; Chevron; The Nathan Cummings Foundation; William Stamps Farish Fund; Agnes Gund; William J. Hill Land & Cattle Co.; Houston Endowment Inc.; Joan Hohlt & Roger Wich Foundation; Kensinger Donnelly; Jeanne and Michael Klein; The Kresge Foundation; The Lewis Family Foundation; Marc Melcher; John P. McGovern Foundation; National Endowment for the Arts; National Performance Network's Visual Artists Network; Nightingale Code Foundation; Betty Pecore and Howard Hilliard; Picnic; Robert Rauschenberg Foundation; South Texas Charitable Foundation; Texas Capital Bank; Texas Commission on the Arts; Susan Vaughan Foundation; and a grant from the City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance for the generous support of their programs.
East Texas sheriffs are spearheading efforts to get hay to cattle farmers flooded out by Hurricane Harvey.
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