JOSEPH JOHN BANKOFIER 1880-1949
Joseph John Bankofier, affectionately known as “Joe boy” by his
many friends was born to John and Emma Bankofier on May 20, 1880, Nevada City,
California. After the death of his
father and remarriage of his mother to John McNulty, he moved with his
stepfather and family to Burns, Oregon at the age of thirteen. There they engaged in the cattle business
near Burns and Crane. At the age of
eighteen he accepted employment with Miller and Lux as Cow-Boss of their White
Horse division.
During the Klondike gold rush, two gentlemen, Jack Dalton and
Bill Hanley of Burns, Oregon hired Joe Boy to ship 150 head of cattle to Alaska
to supply the gold camps with meat.
The following is an article that appeared in the Frontier Times
in 1959 summer edition, written by J.J. Ballard as told to him by Joe Boy,
which stands out as unique and one of the strangest trail drives ever
experienced.
“When the Klondike gold rush was going full blast, supplies -
especially meat - were scarce and high-priced in Nome and the gold camps
generally. Accordingly, two
enterprising gents named Jack Dalton and Bill Hanley of Burns, Oregon, decided
to supply the hungry miners with beef on the hoof. They bought 150 fat three-year old steers out of feed lots in
Western Montana and shipped them to Seattle, Washington. From there, with the cowhands necessary to
handle them, the cattle were shipped by boat to Skagway, Alaska. Corrals had been prepared on shore to
receive them. Joe Boy was placed in
charge.
At this point they ran into difficulty. The tugboat fee for towing the ship to its
proper mooring was exorbitantly high and the boys just flat refused to pay
it. Instead they jumped the cattle
overboard and swam them ashore. Once on
shore, their refusal in paying high towing charge didn’t seem so smart after
all. They were in a kind of hole facing
a high bluff that came down to the water on either side. “A hell of a looking place,”, Joe Boy told
me years later. “The steers damn sure
couldn’t climb the bluff and they couldn’t swim around it. It seemed that they were finished right
there”. The next morning the problem as
solved, the tide was out and they simply drove the cattle around the point of
rocks to higher ground. Now they
discovered their troubles had barely begun.
Leaving the cattle for a time, it is necessary to go back a year
to set the background for his incredible drive. These same owners has shipped in horses to be used as pack
animals to transport the supplies of the Chechako’s - tenderfeet- as far as
Chilkoot Pass. Summer ended, the horses
had been turned loose on bare hills covered with bunch grass. Most of them had wintered even in that north
latitude and severe cold. It was these
rugged animals that were used on this drive.
Joe Boy himself takes up the story now:
Leaving Skagway, we headed for the high country and then to the
Yukon 500 miles away. Grass was no
problem; it was up to our stirrups everywhere.
Mud was also everywhere, except in some of the worst places where the
trail had corduroy cross. (This is done
by cutting small trees and laying them cross-wise in the mud, one against the
other). When a steer got off the trail,
as on often did, he would sink to his body in mud. We could not ride around him to turn him back lest a horse became
hopelessly bogged in the mud. There was
no help for it; you simply had to dismount and go around him on foot. This had to be done with great care lest you
yourself became bogged in the treacherous muskeg. By dent of perseverance, long, slow, hard work and plenty of
cussing we finally reached the Yukon or was it the Klondike that empties into
the Yukon? Anyhow we eventually arrived
at the landing for steamboats that plied the river of Nome.
We loaded them (steers) on the boat and figured our troubles
were over. We figured wrong! On the way
down river the boat wrecked and sank.
Some of the steers escaped the wreck and swam ashore and were scattered
and lost. Some were butchered and the
meat processed for sale in Nome.
Joe Boy afterward heard of four of these fine steers in the interior,
where they, of course, finally became prey of the wolves.
The owners sued the boat company for the value of the lost
cattle, but that outfit was broke by then and the owners got little or nothing
for the cattle and a summer of hard work and heavy expenses. A daring undertaking that failed but might
have succeeded with a better break in the luck.
Joe boy himself stayed two years in Alaska, but took no part in
the mad scramble of the prospectors for gold.
There was nothing but disillusion and shattered hope in store for most
gold seekers. All the gold accumulated
in Alaska he carried in a Bull Durham tobacco sack aboard the boat that brought
him home. Once aboard he changed
clothes and threw his overalls overboard.
You guessed, the gold went with the overalls.
Joe Boy returned to Oregon and resumed his job working for the
P.L.S Company at the White Horse Ranch.
There he met his future bride, Alice Wilkinson. Joe Boy and Alice were married June 27, 1904
at the home of J.D. Vargas in Winnemucca, Nevada. They had four sons, Bob, Roy, Dave and Earl.
They made their home at the Disaster Peak Ranch near McDermitt,
Nevada, which they leased and operated for nine years, after they leased the
Vance Ranch for several years. In March
1921, they purchased the Ten-Mile Ranch located six miles north of McDermitt,
just over the Nevada Oregon border, from Alice’s father, Alfred Wilkinson,
where the family established their permanent home.
Joe Boy was associated with the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association
and was active in its interests through the county, state and union. As a member of the board of Directors of the
United States Grazing Service of Malheur County. He lent his valuable knowledge
of the cattle business for many years.
He also served as deputy sheriff of Southeastern Malheur County. He spent much time in Humboldt County and
was a member of the Winnemucca Lodge No. 19 F. & A.M.
Death came suddenly to Joe Boy while at the Minor Ranch, Near
McDermitt, Nevada the home of his son, Dave and Josephine Bankofier on December
24, 1949, while celebrating Christmas Eve.
Joseph John “Joe boy” Bankofier was inducted into the Buckaroo Hall of Fame in September 1998.