1953 Cochise County ranch brands published by the Livestock Sanitary Board: 76-G H-N O-Z
Since 1895, ranch owners have been required to register their ranch brands with first the territory, and later with the state. The main purpose of the brand was to show proof of ownership at a time where cattle were free range grazing throughout the territory. In 1908 there were 11,566 brands registered in Arizona, and by 2016 that number dropped to 9, 883.
Today, a brand must be renewed every five years, and it is required to be unique; it is not allowed to be adopted or re-recorded. It was common for cattle rustlers to use a “running iron” to change the appearance of a cattle brand, and while most brand violations are misdemeanors, the intentional changing, altering or disfiguring a brand is a class 4 felony in Arizona.
Brands are created by using a mix of capital letters either singly or joined in combination, numerals, pictures, and characters. They are a unique language, and like any language, there are rules on how to read them, or in rancher’s terms, “callin’ the brand.”
Letters:
Can be upright, or “lazy” – laying down.
Can be connected or combined.
Can be reversed. Can be hanging.
Picture brands are usually used alone. There are three accepted rules for reading brands. Read from the left to the right Read from the top to the bottom. When a brand is enclosed, it is read from the outside to the inside.
References: AZ Department of Agriculture, "History of Livestock Brands" and Cowboy Showcase Brands
If you have questions, contributions, or problems with this site, email: Jean Walker
Coordinator - Jean Walker
State Coordinator: Colleen Pustola
Asst. State Coordinators: Shannon Lanning and MD Monk
If you have questions or problems with this site, email the County Coordinator.