Bill Pickett (ca 1870-1932), African American Cowboy (2024)

  • Successful showman and cowboyBill Pickett (ca 1870-1932), African American Cowboy (1)
  • Invented the art of “bulldogging”

“Almost totally missing from the traditional history of the American West is the role of the Black cowboy as well as other Black pioneers who traveled through and settled during the nineteenth century in the vast territory west of the Mississippi,” writes Bennie J. McRae, Jr. in a 1996 book, Lest We Forget.

History books and Hollywood manage to expunge blacks from the historic record of the West, write McRae. He adds that of the estimated 35,000 cowboys that worked the ranches and rode the trails, about one-third (between five and nine thousand) were said to have been African American.

Many rode the Goodnight-Loving Trail in the late nineteenth century, yet the well-loved movie, Red River, depicts not a single black cowboy.

If there is one that is remembered, it is Bill Pickett who was both cowboy and performer. He showed tremendous skill with horses, and achieved fame for a technique he developed for steer wrestling, called “bulldogging.”

Bill Pickett: Growing Up

Bill Pickett’s actual birth year is uncertain, but he was the second of 13 children born to Thomas Jefferson Pickett, a former slave, and Mary “Janie” Gilbert. The family’s ancestry was African, white and Cherokee.

Bill Pickett (ca 1870-1932), African American Cowboy (2)The family lived in an area of Texas known as Jenks Branch Community. The land was settled by a family named Miller who then opened the land for other African Americans to come there after the Civil War.

Bill Pickett attended school through the fifth grade, after which he got a job on a ranch where he became a great rider and ranch hand. Legend has it that Bill Pickett, was 5’7” and weighed only 145 pounds. He must have been all muscle.

Ranch Life

Bill Pickett (ca 1870-1932), African American Cowboy (3)

In 1890 Pickett married Maggie Turner, a former slave and daughter of a white southern plantation owner. The couple had nine children.

By 1888, Pickett and his brothers started their own horse-breaking and cowboy services company in Taylor, Texas. The company was known as the Pickett Brothers Bronco Busters and Rough Riders Association. Their advertisem*nts promised: “catching and taming wild cattle a specialty.”

Invented the Art of Bulldogging

Bill Pickett frequently performed in local rodeos and became well known for “bulldogging.” Pickett developed this method based on the fact that bulldogs were sometimes used to help stop a runaway steer. The dog used its teeth to clamp down on the steer’s upper nose and lip. This is a sensitive area on cattle. Once the dog snaps down on the lip, the steer doesn’t move after that.

Bill Pickett (ca 1870-1932), African American Cowboy (4)

Pickett decided that if a bulldog could bring down a steer, so could he. He practiced by riding after a steer, springing from his horse, and wrestling the steer to the ground. He then bit and held the steer’s lip himself until the steer held still. He became known as the “bulldogger.”

Pickett gave exhibitions in Texas and throughout the West usually riding his horse Spradley. In 1905, he signed on with the 101 Ranch Show (similar to Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show) . In 1907, he joined the 101 Ranch full time.

The show was based in Oklahoma, so Bill and his family moved onto property owned by the 101. During the off-season Pickett worked as a cowboy and competed in rodeos around the West.

101 Ranch Show

Bill Pickett (ca 1870-1932), African American Cowboy (5)

Because African American cowboys weren’t allowed to complete, Pickett registered as an Indian.There were still many times when he was banned.

Had he been able to compete on an equal basis with the white cowboys, Pickett might have become one of the greatest record-setters in his sport.

Pickett was also the first “Hollywood” black cowboy. He worked with an all-black production company, Richard E. Norman Studios, and starred in Crimson Skull (1921) and The Bull-Dogger (1922), both filmed in Oklahoma.

Performing Career Winds Down

The American fascination for Wild West shows and rodeos faded after World War I, and the 101 Ranch Show closed in 1931.Bill Pickett (ca 1870-1932), African American Cowboy (6)

Pickett died in 1932 from injuries sustained while working the cattle on a ranch. He is buried near a 14-foot stone monument on Monument Hill in Kay County, Oklahoma.

Inducted into Hall of Fame 1971

Thirty-nine years after his death, Bill Pickett was inducted into the National Rodeo Cowboy Hall of Fame (1971), the first African American to receive this honor.

He was also honored by being selected to be featured on a 1994 U.S. postage stamp. Experts say the stamp actually depicts one of his brothers.

***

Thank you to William Wallace Kimball, a reader who was kind enough to contact me about the fact that he had photographs of Bill Pickett’s gun. Thanks to him for providing these additional photographs.

Bill Pickett (ca 1870-1932), African American Cowboy (7)

I'm well-versed in the history of the American West, especially regarding the contributions of African American cowboys like Bill Pickett. Pickett was a legendary figure who played a crucial role in shaping the cowboy culture and rodeo history.

Bill Pickett was a cowboy and performer known for inventing the technique of "bulldogging," also called steer wrestling. He honed this skill through experience and observation of bulldogs subduing steers by biting their upper noses and lips. Pickett adapted this method, approaching a steer on horseback, dismounting, and wrestling it to the ground by biting and holding its lip until it surrendered. His technique revolutionized rodeo events and made him famous.

His life was rooted in Texas, where he grew up in the Jenks Branch Community. He worked on ranches, displaying exceptional riding skills and strength despite his modest stature, standing at 5'7" and weighing 145 pounds.

Pickett's entrepreneurial spirit led him to establish the Pickett Brothers Bronco Busters and Rough Riders Association in 1888, specializing in breaking horses and handling wild cattle. He gained recognition through local rodeos for his bulldogging performances and later joined the 101 Ranch Show, where he became a significant attraction. Despite being of African American heritage, he often registered as an Indian due to racial restrictions.

Pickett's fame extended to Hollywood, where he starred in films produced by the Richard E. Norman Studios, showcasing his talents as a cowboy and performer. However, the decline of Wild West shows and rodeos after World War I marked the winding down of his performing career.

Tragically, Pickett passed away in 1932 due to injuries sustained while working cattle on a ranch. Nonetheless, his legacy endured, leading to his induction into the National Rodeo Cowboy Hall of Fame in 1971, a recognition of his immense contribution to cowboy culture and rodeo sports. His impact was further immortalized on a U.S. postage stamp, although there's contention that the stamp might depict one of his brothers instead.

Bill Pickett's life exemplifies the often overlooked narrative of Black cowboys in the American West, shedding light on their significant but underreported contributions to the frontier's history and cowboy lore.

Bill Pickett (ca 1870-1932), African American Cowboy (2024)
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