This is not really known today since this breed is primarily used as beef cattle, not draft cattle. However, they are pretty strong, and can probably pull over half a ton of weight if they were trained to pull carts and wagons.
However, if by "strength" you are referring to good things or advantages about this breed, such would be that it is an excellent range cow--a cow best suited for land with low-quality forage and which requires females to be excellent mothers and protective of their calves.
On farms and ranches that raise and breed Hereford cattle.
Hereford is a town in England. Hereford is also a beef breed of cattle that originated in England.
Hereford cattle.
In 1817.
Oliver Siralvo Willham has written: 'A genetic history of the Hereford breed of cattle in the United States' -- subject(s): Cattle, Heredity, Hereford cattle
James MacDonald has written: 'History of polled Aberdeen or Angus cattle' -- subject(s): Beef cattle, Cattle breeds, Aberdeen-Angus cattle, Races, Bovins de boucherie, Aberdeen-Angus, Bovins 'History of Hereford cattle' -- subject(s): Beef cattle, Hereford cattle, Cattle breeds, Races, Bovins de boucherie, Bovins, Hereford (Race de bovins)
Primarily for beef production.
Jerseys and Herefords are breeds of cattle.
They're about the same.
By ship, when Henry Clay of Ashland, Kentucky imported two females and one bull from England, as were other subsequent importations of other Hereford cattle.
Earle W. Klosterman has written: 'A comparison of the Hereford and Charolais breeds and their crosses under two systems of management' -- subject(s): Hereford cattle, Breeding, Charolais cattle, Cattle
Angus, Hereford, and Shorthorns.