Cowgirls Saddle Their Own Horse

A New Documentary Film Seeks To Tell The
True Story About Little Known Western Heroes -
The Early 20th Century Rodeo Cowgirls

 

    

    A new hour long documentary film by Shirley Morris and Wild Rag Productions is in the works and will focus on a very special time in our history, early in the 20th century when women came West to homestead and ranch. Some had extraordinary talent and became our first professional women athletes in the new American sport called rodeo. These cowgirls participated, many times winning in head to head competition with the cowboys as saddle bronc riders, steer wrestlers, trick riders and trick ropers.

    They were about 600 strong. Some were better known and some were better Cowgirls.
All were bonded to each other and a common goal - To win! They were fierce competitors in rodeo arena's coast to coast and many were making a fantastic amount of money. Then, on a crisp September morning in 1929 one of the brightest stars in the rodeo world stepped into the arena at the Pendleton Round-Up and boarded Black Cat. Bonnie McCarroll's fateful ride that day would  help change the course of history for more than seven decades to come.

    This is the story of The Buckin' Horse Suffragettes. The Rodeo Cowgirls who worked and
played and paid in blood and have left a legacy so richly steeped in All-American Lore you wonder if it could be true or just the imagination of little girls needing heroes and longing for the life
of a cowgirl.

This is a true story and it's come full circle.


 

 

 

 

Copyright 2008 Wild Rag Productions. All rights reserved.

Web Hosting by Yahoo!