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Recognizing the Women of the Wild West
Edited by Madelyn Miller, the Travellady
2006 National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame Inductees
Announced
The National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame is proud to
announce the 2006 National Cowgirl Hall of Fame Inductees. These five
astounding women will be honored during the 31st Annual Induction Luncheon
Ceremony on Thursday, October 26, 2006 at the Will Rogers Memorial Center in
Fort Worth, Texas.
The 2006 Inductees are as follows:
Minnie Lou Bradley
She was the first women to receive a degree in animal husbandry from
Oklahoma State University, formerly known as Oklahoma A&M, and their only female
member of the Intercollegiate Livestock Judging Team. She paved a way for young
girls to enter into the arena of livestock breeding and management programs.
She was the first female president of the American Angus Association and the
recipient of numerous awards for her vision and dedication to the improvement of
beef cattle. As owner and operator of Bradley 3 Ranch, Bradley implements
innovations into her ranching operations that gained her notoriety and
recognition as a leader in the beef industry. And in helping share her passion
for ranch work, she has partnered with the Ranch Management Program at Texas
Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas for the past 46 years helping young
men and women learn the ranching industry.
Esther Hobart Morris (1814 – 1902)
Esther Hobart Morris, honored in Statuary Hall in Washington D.C. as a
women’s suffrage leader, became the United States’ first female justice of the
peace in 1870. Her influential efforts achieved the right for women to vote in
the Wyoming Territory in 1869. Her triumph there set a course for equality that
would not be fully realized in the rest of the United States until 51 years
later with the passage of the 19th Amendment. She was a true pioneer for women.
Sharon Camarillo
As an accomplished barrel racer, horsemanship clinician and four-time
National Finals Rodeo contender, Camarillo made her mark on rodeo history in
1995 as one of the few select women to ever co-announce the prestigious Houston
Livestock Show and Rodeo. Not only does Camarillo teach horsemanship clinics on
barrel racing throughout the year, she wrote an industry-leading book on barrel
racing called Training, Tuning and Winning.
Rose Cambra Freitas
Rose Cambra Freitas represents the best of Hawaiian cowboy or “paniolo” culture
through sharing knowledge of western lifestyle with people of all ages.
Recognized as one of Maui’s 100 most influential people in the past 100 years,
Freitas co-founded the Maui All Girls and Junior Boys and Girls Rodeo
Association, Hawaii’s only incorporated non-profit organization of its kind and
has earned the respect of community and civic leaders across the island. She
and her husband donate their private arena for horse shows and clinics to
educate people in horsemanship and have been ranching in Makawao in Maui’s
“upcountry” for more than 40 years.
Bonnie McCarroll (1897 – 1929)
This a champion bronc rider, made rodeo history in 1922 by winning the
cowgirl bronc riding championship at the two most prestigious rodeos in the
nation, Cheyenne Frontier Days and the first Madison Square Garden Rodeo.
Already an accomplished rodeo performer, McCarroll dazzled kings, queens,
dignitaries, an American president and countless rodeo fans across the world.
Her tragic death at the 1929 Pendleton Round-Up changed the face of women’s
rodeo when rodeo officials began exercising more scrutiny on rules and
regulations for women in bronc riding.
“All five of these women set themselves apart from the
crowd and distinguished themselves as true pioneers,” said Patricia Riley,
executive director of the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame.
The National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame honors and
documents the lives of women who have distinguished themselves while
exemplifying the pioneer spirit of the American West. Located at 1720 Gendy
Street in Fort Worth’s Cultural District, the museum includes interactive
exhibit galleries, three theaters, a retail store and a grand rotunda housing
the Hall of Fame. The museum is open seven days a week – Monday through
Thursday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Sunday,
11:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Please visit
www.cowgirl.net or call 817/336-4475 or 800/476-FAME (3263) for more
information on admission, special exhibits and events.
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Madelyn Miller is a writer and web entrepreneur who writes
for
www.travellady.com,
www.chocolateatlas.com,
www.cocktailatlas.com,
www.teaatlas.com, and
www.carladynews.com. She has other websites launching soon
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