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Famous African-American Cowboy: A few black cowboys gained some notoriety. Few people would have known about Bose Ikard, had it not been for the television mini-series, "Lonesome Dove." Ikard was born a slave in Mississippi in 1847. Five years later his master brought Ikard to Texas. As a youth, he the cowboy trade on a ranch near Weatherford. Freed by the Civil War, Ikard went to work for Charles Goodnight and Oliver Loving. In 1866 he helped them blaze the Goodnight-Loving Trail. Goodnight had many words of praise for his trusted hand. "He surpassed any man I had in endurance and stamina." Ikard and Goodnight both died in 1929.

The life of Isom Dart (born Ned Huddleston) took a very different direction from Ikard's. He was born a slave in Arkansas in 1849. After Emancipation, he went to west to Texas. Huddleston soon began stealing Mexican horses and swimming them across the Rio Grande for sale in Texas. He moved to northwest Colorado and became involved in gambling and fights. After brushes with the law, he took work as a bronco buster. Although a great horseman, Huddleston could not keep to the straight-and-narrow. He joined a gang of rustlers in 1875. A rancher and his cowboys ambushed and killed the entire gang, except for Huddleston.

At that point, he changed his name to Isom Dart and again tried to go straight. After additional brushes with the law, Dart turned to hunting and breaking wild horses. He then bought his own ranch. Tom Horn, the bounty hunter, did not accept Dart's turn to lawful life. Horn shot and killed Dart, who died at age fifty-one.

Last of the Seminole
Black Indian 1913-1913

A mass of myth and legend surrounds many westerners. The character of "Deadwood Dick" is yet another example of art influencing life. Edward L. Wheeler's first pulp novel starring "Deadwood Dick" appeared in 1877. He wrote more than thirty more until his death in 1885. Many men, including Nat Love, claimed to be the real Deadwood Dick. Love was born a slave in Tennessee in 1854 (Some sources give the birthplace as Ohio.)

In 1907 he published The Life and Adventures of Nat Love, Better Known in the Cattle Country as "Deadwood Dick". Love relates his supposed adventures are typical western tall-tale fashion. His life story reads much like a pulp novel, with brave, heroic deeds at every turn. He claimed to have acquired his nickname by winning a roping contest in 1876 in Deadwood, South Dakota. Exactly where fact left off and fancy took over will never be known. But Love certainly became one of the most successful cowboy self-promoters of his day.

We have somewhat sounder historical data on Willie M. "Bill Pickett," (circa 1870-1932) the Texas-born cowboy credited with the invention of bulldogging (steer wrestling). Pickett performed as "The Dusky Demon" with the Miller Brother's 101 Ranch Wild West Show and rodeos for several decades. One of thirteen children, he was born in Travis County, Texas, thirty miles northwest of Austin.

Pickett worked on central Texas ranches during the late 1880s and 1890s. He married Maggie Turner in 1890 and together they would raise nine children. In partnership with his brothers, he started the "Pickett Brothers Bronco Busters and Rough Riders Association" in Taylor, Texas. According to their ads: "We ride and break all wild horses with much care. Catching and taming wild cattle a specialty."

By the 1900s Pickett bulldogged steers with his teeth at county fairs and other gatherings throughout the West. In 1904 he performed at Cheyenne Frontier Days and won the admiration of a
Wyoming Tribune reporter. Pickett would "attack a fiery, wild-eyed and powerful steer, dash under the broad breast of the great brute, turn and sink his strong ivory teeth into the upper lip of the animal, and throwing his shoulder against the neck of the steer, strain and twist until the animal, with its head drawn one way under the controlling influence of those merciless teeth and its body forced another, until the brute, under the strain of slowly bending neck, quivered, trembled and then sank to the ground."
 
Indian Scout 1910

Strong, athletic, compact (5'7", 145 pounds), and mustachioed, he dressed like a Spanish bullfighter. In the 1920s Pickett retired from competitive bulldogging but continued to give exhibitions. He also starred in a few black western movies that showcased his rodeo feats. Pickett returned to work for Zack Miller and continued to break horses. He would die at the 101 Ranch on April 2, 1932, after being kicked by a horse. Miller eulogized Pickett as the "greatest sweat and dirt cowhand that ever lived-- bar none." Pickett became the first black cowboy admitted to the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in 1971.


Like other cowboys, African-American cowboys are still very much alive. The National Black Cowboys Association claims more than 20,000 members. Most members compete in amateur rodeo or otherwise enjoy life on horseback. The Black West Museum in Denver offers a glimpse at the regional history and culture of African-Americans.

In Texas at the beginning of each year, the kickoff of the Houston Live Stock Rodeo honors the trail riders with a week long rodeo. Over three thousand Black Riders ride from all over Texas.

     
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