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In the hills of eastern Tennessee, the Hayes family had one treasure worth more than their land, their cabin, or anything they owned: Solomon. A prize bull that had won every county fair in three states. A breeding animal so valuable that farmers drove from Kentucky and Virginia just to pay stud fees. Solomon wasn't just livestock — he was the Hayes family legacy on four legs. So when deputies came through Hayes Hollow chasing a bootlegger, and one of them shot Solomon dead because the bull was "blocking the road" — they didn't just kill an animal. They created the Tennessee Reapers. Four Hayes brothers stood in that road and watched their prize bull bleed out while deputies laughed about "dumb hillbilly cattle." Solomon died in front of the family who had raised him from a calf, who had polished his horns for every fair, who had built their future around his bloodline. That night, four brothers made an oath. Over the next six years, all 20 deputies present that day would die — each one found with the Hayes cattle brand burned into their flesh. In this documentary you'll discover: ► The Hayes family: four brothers, one legacy ► Solomon: the prize bull worth a fortune ► $8,000 in prize winnings across three states ► Why a breeding bull meant everything to mountain farmers ► The chase through Hayes Hollow that morning ► The deputy who shot Solomon for blocking the road ► The laughter while the brothers watched him die ► Four brothers making a blood oath that night ► The transformation: farmers to reapers ► Deputy #1: found two months later ► The cattle brand signature burned into every body ► Deputies 2-10: six years of patient hunting ► How four brothers moved as one killing unit ► The investigation that found only shadows ► Deputies 11-19: some offered to pay for a new bull — too late ► Deputy #20: the one who pulled the trigger ► Mountain people who protected the Reapers ► The Hayes brothers: never arrested, never charged ► Solomon's horns mounted in their cabin until death ► The graves where four brothers rest together They saw a bull in the road. The Hayes brothers saw three generations of breeding. They saw an obstacle. The family saw their children's inheritance. They saw five minutes of target practice. Solomon's owners saw their entire future bleeding out in the dirt. In Appalachia, a prize bull wasn't just livestock. It was a bank account. A retirement plan. A legacy you could pass to your sons. Kill a man's prize bull and you might as well burn down his farm and scatter his family to the wind. The Tennessee Reapers earned their name in those hills. Four brothers who hunted as a pack, who branded their kills like cattle, who spent six years delivering mountain justice to men who thought an animal's life was worthless. 20 deputies learned different. Each one died wearing the Hayes brand — the same mark that had made Solomon famous at every fair in Tennessee. ⚠️ SUBSCRIBE and hit 🔔 for more untold stories of Appalachian vengeance and mountain justice. #HayesFamily #TennesseeReaper #Appalachia #PrizeBull #20Deputies #MountainJustice #TrueStory #AppalachianHistory #Documentary #ForgottenHistory #TrueCrime #Solomon #BloodOath #FarmersRevenge