Drovers Magazine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Drovers, America's beef business source (popularly referred to as Drovers Magazine or Drovers) is a monthly magazine that claims to be the oldest livestock publication in the United States.[1]

Chicago Daily Drovers Journal ad 1905
It derives its name from Drovers which is a British term for livestock herding.

Harvey Goodall started the Chicago Daily Drovers Journal in 1873 to report on the Chicago Stockyards.

In 1917 Jay Holcomb Neff purchased the publication and merged it with the Kansas City Drovers Telegram, which covered the Kansas City Stockyards.[2]

In 1901 an editorial in the Kansas City Drovers Telegram entitled "Call It The American Royal" was end up causing the Kansas City Livestock Show to change its name to the American Royal.[3]

The magazine later became a monthly and is now published by Vance Publishing with offices in Kansas City suburb of Lenexa, Kansas.

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