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Photojournalist Ron Tarver documented contemporary Black cowboys in The Long Ride Home: The Black Cowboy Experience in America, which was exhibited at the Chisholm Trail Heritage Center (2013) [35] and the Studio Museum in Harlem (2016–2017) and has been published in a book (2024). [36]
Other major projects include photography book The Long Ride Home: Black Cowboys in America (2024), The Long Ride Home: The Black Cowboy Experience in America, a nationwide project on Black cowboys, and the book We Were There: Voices of African American Veterans (2004), a collaboration with writer Yvonne Latty.
"Black, Hispanic riding clubs keep cowboy identity alive after years of 'whitewashing' ". ABC News. 29 Aug 2020. Hayley Bartels (3 Oct 2018). "Black cowboys of Mississippi 'so much more than just John Wayne or the Marlboro man' ". ABC News. William DeLong (24 Mar 2018). "The Forgotten Black Cowboys Of The Wild West". All That's Interesting.
Jim and Gloria Austin opened the National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum in 2001 to educate the community about the importance of the diverse history of Black, Hispanic, and Indigenous cowboys.
In 2017, Venerable started his series of children’s books call “Grandpa I Just Wanna be a Cowboy” that introduces young readers to notable Black figures from the Wild West like Bass Reeves ...
While Black cowboys and cowgirls were essential to the Western frontier, they’ve rarely been depicted in classic Western films.
Giant Bison of the type McJunkin found had gone extinct at the end of the last Ice Age; proof of a human kill established the antiquity of North America's native cultures. [6] McJunkin's discovery of the Folsom site changed New World archaeology, as it showed that people had inhabited North America since at least 9000 BCE, some 7000 years ...
Bose Ikard (1843 – January 4, 1929) was an American cowboy who participated in the pioneering cattle drives on what became known as the Goodnight–Loving Trail, after the American Civil War and through 1869. Aspects of his life inspired the fictional character Joshua Deets, the African-American cowboy in Larry McMurtry's novel Lonesome Dove. [1]