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Wyoming
Related: About this forumWhere did all the real western cowgirls go? They ditched the skirts and became everyday legends
Laramie 1868-2020
Where did all the real western cowgirls go? They ditched the skirts and became everyday legends
By JUDY KNIGHT Contributing History Columnist Aug 16, 2020
The term cowgirls has special meaning in Laramie, where it refers to the UW womens athletic teams. Appropriately enough, the earliest cowgirls of renown were female athletes too, the trick riders and shooters of the Wild West shows.
The first use of the word cowgirl, however, referred to girls who did what was considered to be mens work on western ranches. In 1885, the Cheyenne Democratic Leader newspaper referred to a beautiful cowgirl from Nebraska who was a wonder to behold doing work on the range. Of course she was beautiful, that was part of the myth.
That was the first reference I found for use of the word in a Wyoming newspaper. But the next year the Lusk Herald remarked about a certain Montana girl who actually sat hair-pin fashion on a cow pony to cut out cattle. Evidently it wouldnt do to say she sat astride the horse like a man.
These girls could have been labeled as tomboys. However, Elizabeth King, writing in The Atlantic magazine in 2017, points out that today tomboy can be a sexist, racist and gender-bending term and it is fair to wonder whether adults should refer to nontraditional girls as tomboys. There is no such confusion with the word cowgirls. They are girls.
A problem: skirts
According to Wyoming writer Teresa Jordan, in her 1962 book Cowgirls, Women of the West, the first western women were portrayed as a prairie Madonna, with long calico skirts and a babe in each arm. This mythical ranch woman might have tended a garden along with all the household and child-rearing chores, but the men did the real ranch work. Zane Gray and other writers of western fiction sometimes perpetuated this myth, as did myriads of western movies. Frontier women could be schoolteachers or ranch wives, but cowgirls were a highly unusual plot twist.
But the fact was that unless there were plenty of hired hands, there were times when everyone on a ranch had to pitch in to move cattle, mend fences and other necessary outdoor chores, often on horseback. If there were no boys in the family old enough, the girls were pressed into service or happily volunteered. There was a problem to surmount in the early days, howeverthe skirts.
{snip}
Where did all the real western cowgirls go? They ditched the skirts and became everyday legends
By JUDY KNIGHT Contributing History Columnist Aug 16, 2020
The term cowgirls has special meaning in Laramie, where it refers to the UW womens athletic teams. Appropriately enough, the earliest cowgirls of renown were female athletes too, the trick riders and shooters of the Wild West shows.
The first use of the word cowgirl, however, referred to girls who did what was considered to be mens work on western ranches. In 1885, the Cheyenne Democratic Leader newspaper referred to a beautiful cowgirl from Nebraska who was a wonder to behold doing work on the range. Of course she was beautiful, that was part of the myth.
That was the first reference I found for use of the word in a Wyoming newspaper. But the next year the Lusk Herald remarked about a certain Montana girl who actually sat hair-pin fashion on a cow pony to cut out cattle. Evidently it wouldnt do to say she sat astride the horse like a man.
These girls could have been labeled as tomboys. However, Elizabeth King, writing in The Atlantic magazine in 2017, points out that today tomboy can be a sexist, racist and gender-bending term and it is fair to wonder whether adults should refer to nontraditional girls as tomboys. There is no such confusion with the word cowgirls. They are girls.
A problem: skirts
According to Wyoming writer Teresa Jordan, in her 1962 book Cowgirls, Women of the West, the first western women were portrayed as a prairie Madonna, with long calico skirts and a babe in each arm. This mythical ranch woman might have tended a garden along with all the household and child-rearing chores, but the men did the real ranch work. Zane Gray and other writers of western fiction sometimes perpetuated this myth, as did myriads of western movies. Frontier women could be schoolteachers or ranch wives, but cowgirls were a highly unusual plot twist.
But the fact was that unless there were plenty of hired hands, there were times when everyone on a ranch had to pitch in to move cattle, mend fences and other necessary outdoor chores, often on horseback. If there were no boys in the family old enough, the girls were pressed into service or happily volunteered. There was a problem to surmount in the early days, howeverthe skirts.
{snip}
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Where did all the real western cowgirls go? They ditched the skirts and became everyday legends (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 2020
OP
No joke, my great grandmother helped clear land in Texas as a sharecropper with my GGfather.
Thomas Hurt
Aug 2020
#1
Thomas Hurt
(13,903 posts)1. No joke, my great grandmother helped clear land in Texas as a sharecropper with my GGfather.
while watching the kids...during the Depression. I don't know if she was wearing a dress but she was out there.