Zizzy's Postcards. Cheyenne, Wyoming

Cheyenne Wyoming

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Location: 41°N to 45°N 104°3'W to 111°3'W, Zone 4

Trip Advisor: Local Expert for Cheyenne, Wyoming. How that happened, I'll never know. LOL

Friday, August 26, 2005

Cowboys

Red Sublett on Topsy. 1922 Cheyenne Frontier Days.More information about Red can be found at: http://phillip.l.sublett.com/family/RedSublett.htm
H. H. Hammen Cowboy Race with Wild Broncos Race. C.B. Irwin's brother, Frank, won this event in 1902.
Believe me, come time for the Daddy of Em All, this guy is ready to party.







postmarked 1911. sent to Rhode Island. :)













8420. Frontier Day in the Streets of Cheyenne, Wyo
postmarked Sep 21 1911
sent from Cheyenne to Cleveland, Ohio.
1¢ stamp.


2064
Cowboy Race.
Cheyenne, Wyo.
postmarked March 3, 1906
Cheyenne’s venture into public utility began with the Brush Arc Lamp and its battery current, in 1876 -- seen hanging above 16th Street.
Cowboys Rescue Stage at Cheyenne Frontier Days. Postmarked 1913, by which time, I suspect we were starting to miss the Old West.
C. B. Irwin, World champion "Roaper" is in the center of the Potato Race photo. top says "4—"The Potatoe Race."
C. B. Irwin is on the left... on the ground.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Capitol Avenue





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Ferguson Street was later named Carey Avenue.
The large building in the background almost centered was the Consistory Building.
















Postmarked 1924.













about 1957



If the sky looks like this (minus the postal cancellation marks).. you can bet that it's going to rain......in Nebraska. OR.. is it 3:30 P.M. during Frontier Days??














Saturday, August 20, 2005

Charles Burton Irwin



What is now Grier Furniture, at one time also housed the Hobbs, Huckfeldt and Finkbiner Funeral home. It was from this parlor that Charles Burton Irwin was buried after dying as the result of an auto accident. I truly hope that you can enlarge this and see the detail.

One of the best sites that I've found online, not only for information about Charlie, but about all of Wyoming is http://www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com . It is truly worth the days one can spend exploring the site.

I found C.B.'s grave at Lakeview and made a wee page for him at Find A Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=irwin&GScid=84061&GRid=11549782&pt=Charles%20Burton%20Irwin&&
the following is a clip showing C.B.s connection with horse trainer, Tom Smith -
http://www.washingtonthoroughbred.com/WaTbStats/HOF_Smith.htm
When the Unaweep ranch sold in 1921, Smith landed at a county fair in Wyoming where he handled all the training and shoeing of six racehorses that were used in rodeo relay races. His success at patching-up these often-sore steeds to display speed caught the eye of C. B. “Charlie” Irwin, a respected horseman and noted racing figure during the “roaring twenties.” Although his stable was perhaps the most sizeable in the country of the time, Irwin’s act, was largely of the circus variety, and his cast of characters traveled North America by rail. A mountain of a man, “Ten Ton” Irwin, as he was known to associates, was also a noted raconteur and promoter; sort of a cowboy P. T. Barnum. Racing Hall of Fame trainer Jimmy Jones would opine years later that “the minute [a man] got any money, Irwin would rob him of it. He was an old racketeer.” Tom Smith was hired as Irwin’s assistant trainer and blacksmith in 1923, positions he would hold for 10 years. Before he would train Irwin’s better horses, Smith was first tasked with patching-up old cow ponies for cavalry charges and Indian chases for Irwin’s wild west show.
These were tough times for Smith, who was sleeping on a cot in a horse stall and now caretaker and farrier for upwards of 50 head. Irwin worked his horses as hard as his help, often racing them every other day. As he nursed their maladies, Smith would concentrate on learning from the rag-tag lot, while Irwin was racking up the wins and being credited as the nation’s leading trainer. Irwin led the nation in Thoroughbred wins in 1923 (147) and 1930 (92). In the early 1930s, Irwin sent Smith with a string of horses to train on his own in Cheyenne. He won 29 races from 30 starts, which surely must have been a record of some sort, had such records been kept. Shortly thereafter, Irwin sent his top runners with Smith to race at Longacres. Smith would train at the Renton, Washington, oval during that track’s first four seasons. In March 1934, Irwin died in an automobile accident and Smith wound up in Seattle on his own. He trained for Mrs. C. B. Irwin the rest of that year and the next.

there is much much more about this man to be found and posted. I am absolutely fascinated by him and am currently reading a book written about him by Anna Lee Waldo - titled Prairie. She is the same author that wrote Sacajawea. I am enjoying the book and will be posting much more info about "Charlie".. who is probably responsible for rodeo being as famous as it is from Coast to Coast.

Charlie was inducted into the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame in 1907. I imagine there was some dilemma in choosing the category. Champion roper, horse breeder and trainer, rancher, cowboy and friend to "powerful people". At one time, Charlie was the foreman on the I-M ranch, owned by John Coble and one of the cowboys under his command was Tom Horn. Charles and John Coble are darned near toe to toe in the Lakeview Cemetery. The house which C. B. bought for his wife, Etta, in town was or is located at 2712 Pioneer- I have not gone exploring in that direction yet. I will soon and of course, I'll bring back photos. :)

Saturday, August 13, 2005

Other.

a fine specimen.


I was born on Jenny Lind's birthday

















These are goats. they are weeding that ditch. I think that this is neat. They move around the town, munching.

Friday, August 05, 2005

Cowgirls





Bonnie McCarroll. Bonnie was trampled to death by a bronc at the Pendelton Roundup in 1929. This was the beginning of the end of cowgirl bronc riding.








1921 photo by Ralph Doubleday (read more about him at Cowboys and Cameras)
Bea Kirnan, Prairie Rose, Mabel Stickland, Princess Mohawk, Ruth Roach, Kittie Canutt and one unnamed- far right.





Rose Smith











Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Indians







Indian Dancer at Cheyenne Frontier Days in Indian Village on 7/24/05.







Chief Hollow Horn Bear. (Sioux) Chief Hollow Horn Bear was the son of Chief Iron Shell. Hollow Horn Bear was a leader among the Plains Indians and fought valiantly in the subjugation of the insurgents during the 1870s. He gained fame as the Chief who defeated Lieutenant William Fetterman. Chief Hollow Horn Bear was quite a linguist and orator - because of his abilities with languages he was invited to attend the inauguration of Teddy Roosevelt's in 1905. In 1913, he led a group of Indians in Woodrow Wilson's inaugural parade and during this visit to Washington, D.C, he caught pneumonia and died. This is a fascinating person from our history. you can read more about him, if you'd like to do so at : http://www.snowwowl.com/nativeleaders/hollowhornbear.html
There are also some fantastic photos of him online.



Red Cloud (Makhpiya-luta, `scarlet Cloud). A principal chief of the Oglala Teton Sioux of Pine Ridge reservation, the largest band of the Sioux nation, and probably the most famous and powerful chief in the history of the tribe
























Chief American Horse, one of the wisest of the Oglala Chiefs. More to come on this one.




Chief Running Antelope. He appears on the 1899 $5.00 Silver Certificate. There was a ruckus as he is wearing a Pawnee head dress ---the original headwear, that of the Sioux, his tribe, was too tall for the engraving. He was an advisor to Sitting Bull.






Scorched Lightning-Miniconjou Lakota Sioux Dakota
noted warrior in Spotted Eagle's band












Chief Two Strike (1832-1923)













Chief Spotted Eagle, Wanblee Gleshka
http://www.firstpeople.us/FP-Html-Legends/Spotted-Eagle-And-Black-Crow-Sioux.html. There is a very good legend about Chief Spotted Eagle at that site. It is a tale of love, treachery, war, forgiveness.














Thomas White Face