Clarence, what makes the Chaffin's all the more interesting to me, is that they didn't build an empire. Not anything like it. They scratched out a hardscrabble existence in a hardscrabble country and raised a family and got along just fine for many years - by working their asses off. But it never got any easier, nor profitable.
A quote from Ned Chaffin from the second interview in the link above kind of says it all.
"In fact, we went over to Wayne County there in that Entrada or what the heck ever their name is outfit, they had a little powwow up at up at Barry Scholl’s place there in Torry and there was a bunch of naturalists and scientists and smart people and college people and everything, and Dick Negri put on this little slide show for ‘em about the country. And one of the ladies said, she says, “I’ve been down in that country,” and she says, “Why in the world did your parents ever go into that god-forsaken place?” And I jumped up real quick and I says, “Because it was the last place left.”
My interest in the area and it's people stems from my not so distant ancestors being among the first white settlers of Hanksville, in Wayne county. The area known better to the world as Butch Cassidy's "Robbers Roost". I know many of the stories of the early settlers and cattle outfits.
- DAA