Chuckwagon - Breckenridge, CO, USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Outspoken1
N 39° 28.826 W 106° 02.775
13S E 410018 N 4370615
Located adjacent to the Breckenridge Visitor Center, this old chuckwagon provides atmosphere for visitors. Interesting piece since Breckenridge was a mining town, not a cattle town.
Waymark Code: WM101F0
Location: Colorado, United States
Date Posted: 02/08/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member fi67
Views: 1

"While some form of mobile kitchens had existed for generations, the invention of the chuckwagon is attributed to Charles Goodnight, a Texas rancher, the "father of the Texas Panhandle," who introduced the concept in 1866. After the American Civil War, the beef market in Texas expanded. Some cattlemen herded cattle in parts of the country that did not have railroads which would mean they needed to be fed on the road for months at a time. Goodnight modified the Studebaker wagon, a durable army-surplus wagon, to suit the needs of cowboys driving cattle from Texas to sell in New Mexico. He added a "chuck box" to the back of the wagon with drawers and shelves for storage space and a hinged lid to provide a flat cooking surface. A water barrel was also attached to the wagon and canvas was hung underneath to carry firewood. A wagon box was used to store cooking supplies and cowboys' personal items.

Chuckwagon food typically included easy-to-preserve items like beans and salted meats, coffee, and sourdough biscuits. Food would also be gathered en route. There was no fresh fruit, vegetables, or eggs available and meat was not fresh unless an animal was injured during the run and therefore had to be killed. The meat they ate was greasy cloth-wrapped bacon, salt pork, and beef, usually dried, salted or smoked. The wagon was also stocked with a water barrel and a sling to kindle wood to heat and cook food. On cattle drives, it was common for the "cookie" who ran the wagon to be second in authority only to the "trailboss." The cookie would often act as cook, barber, dentist, and banker.

The term "chuck wagon" comes from "chuck", a slang term for food, and not from the nickname for "Charles"." (from (visit link) )
Type and Quantity:
One chuckwagon.


Opening Hours:
24/7


Admission Fee: 0

On-line Documentation: Not listed

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