People, Locations, Episodes

Mon, 12.05.18705

Bill Pickett, Cowboy born

Bill Pickett

William Pickett was born on this date in 1870. He was a Black, Native American cowboy.

He was born in the Jenks-Branch community of Williamson County, Texas.  (Jenks Branch, also known as the Miller Community, is in western Williamson County, five miles southeast of Liberty Hill and near the Travis County line.  He was the second of 13 children born to Thomas Jefferson Pickett, a former slave, and Mary "Janie" Gilbert. Pickett had four brothers and eight sisters. The family's ancestry was African and Cherokee.

Pickett began his career as a cowboy while in grade school.  He soon began giving exhibitions of his roping, riding, and bulldogging skills, passing a hat for donations. By 1888, his family had moved to Taylor, Texas, and Bill performed in the town's first fair that year.  He and his brothers started a horse-breaking business in Taylor, and he was a member of the National Guard and a deacon of the local Baptist church.

He signed on with the 101 Ranch Show in 1905, becoming a full-time ranch employee in 1907. Soon, he moved his wife and children to Oklahoma. From 1905 to 1931, the 101 Ranch Wild West Show was one of the great shows in the country. The 101 Ranch Show introduced bulldogging (steer wrestling), an event invented by Bill Pickett, one of the show's stars.  Riding his horse, Spradley, Pickett came alongside a Longhorn steer, dropped to the steer's head, twisted its head toward the sky, and bit its upper lip to get full control. Cowdogs of the Bulldog breed were known to bite the lips of cattle to subdue them. This was how Pickett's technique got the name "bulldogging."

He later performed in Canada, Mexico, South America, and England. He became the first Black cowboy movie star.  Had he not been banned from competing with white rodeo contestants, Pickett might have become one of the greatest record-setters in his sport. He was often identified as a Cherokee or of an ethnic background other than Black to be allowed to compete.  Bill Pickett died in 1932 after a horse kicked him in the head.

Humorist Will Rogers announced the funeral of his friend on his radio show.  His grave is on what is left of the 101 Ranch near Ponca City, Oklahoma.

In 1989, years after being honored by the National Rodeo Hall of Fame, Pickett was inducted into the Pro-rodeo Hall of Fame and Museum of the American Cowboy at Colorado Springs, Colorado. Bill Pickett is also in the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City.

Reference:

Legends of America.com

Bill Picket Rodeo.com

The Black West, by William Loren Katz.
A Touchtone Book, published by Simon & Shuster Inc.
Copyright 1987, 1996 by Ethrac Publications, Inc.
ISBN 0-684-81478-1

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