[Cowhands and Cattle in Matador]

Photograph of two cow hands on horseback in front of a herd of cattle with more cattle and hills in the background.
Date: 1900
Creator: unknown
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Farmhouse and Pond]

Photograph of a farmhouse at Matador Ranch from across a pond with trees reflected in the water in the foreground and some trees in the background.
Date: 1927
Creator: unknown
System: The Portal to Texas History

Headquarters, Matador Division, Matador, Texas

Photograph of the Headquarters of the Matador Division in Matador, Texas. The house is stone and surrounded by newly planted trees. On the left side of the frame is a water tower. In front of the house is a barbed-wire fence and a metal gate. In the foreground is a grassy field and a section of picket fencing.
Date: unknown
Creator: unknown
System: The Portal to Texas History

Matador Headquarters from the South

Photograph of the Matador Headquarters from the south. The house is stone with two porches and a stoop. There is a dirt road leading to the house. Standing on the road is a man and a child in hats.
Date: unknown
Creator: unknown
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Ranch Work Collage]

Series of four trimmed photographs mounted on a board, with white paint outlines and decorations around the photos. At the top, there is a rectangular photo of five mounted cowhands herding a loose group of cattle on an open plain; in the center are two oval-shaped photos including a makeshift corral of horses with several men standing or mounted outside the pen (left) and a pitched tent with a man seated in the shade next to it (right); at the bottom is another rectangular photo of cowhands, both mounted and not, who appear to be holding down calves in a corral, in front of a much larger pen full of cattle.
Date: 1926
Creator: unknown
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Red Bird at Matador Ranch]

Photograph of an unidentified cowhand on 'Red Bird,' a champion cutting horse of Matador Ranch.
Date: 1900~/1930~
Creator: unknown
System: The Portal to Texas History