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  1. 29 de feb. de 2012 · John Ware. John Ware looms large in the small field of Black history in Alberta. He was a big man, a cowboy who played an important role in the early days of the ranching industry. Born into ...

  2. 24 de mar. de 2023 · John Ware Cabin, located in Dinosaur Provincial Park, is connected to just the last five years of this remarkable man's life. A true pioneer, John Ware established his reputation in frontier society with deeds rather than words. His skills in the saddle and straightforward honesty earned him the respect of fellow cattlemen and entrepreneurs.

  3. WARE, JOHN, cowboy and rancher; b. 14 May 1850, probably in northern Texas, second youngest of 11 children; m. 2 March 1892 Mildred Lewis in Calgary, and they had two daughters and four sons; d. 11 Sept. 1905 near Brooks, Alta. John Ware’s life in Canada spans the golden years of the ranching frontier, the period of the great cattle companies [see Matthew Henry Cochrane].

  4. 20 de abr. de 2017 · Ware opens the Four-Nines, his own ranch. By 1890, Ware has amassed enough cattle that he's able to open his own ranch, called the Four-Nines. In 1892, he marries Toronto-born Mildred Lewis. In ...

  5. We are looking for community partners to support our ambitious ten-year plan of normalizing Black directors in Canada. Our plan will actively recruit, train, mentor, and place 750 Black Board Directors by 2030. The John Ware Institute, inspired by the legendary story of John Ware, aims to highlight modern-day black pioneers and leaders in Canada.

  6. John Ware was hired to do exactly that: to move 3,000 head of cattle to Sir Hugh Allan’s North-West Cattle Co, located in the foothills southwest of Calgary. CF: It was the first really large cattle drive, and it was the beginning of the establishment of Alberta as an agricultural economy and driver.

  7. The John Ware Institute aspires to play an integral role in illuminating the profiles of the many modern day John Wares, so they get noticed. Furthermore, the Institute also plans on fostering the development of Canada’s next crop of Black board directors and business leaders. Lofty and aspirational goals – but a walk in the park compared ...