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Dakota Datebook
January 14, 2004
"George Defender, Rodeo"
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The annual Cowboys Reunion started out somewhat
accidentally at the first Mercer County Fair in 1915. Among the exhibits
was a shorthorn bull, and Frank Chase of Fort Berthold decided he wanted
to ride it which he did. The crowd was impressed and passed a hat,
and Chase walked away with $30.
It was the first rodeo event in Beulah, and in the following
three years, rodeos became an annual event there. Ed Boland described
how it all began: One day during the month of August, I was mowing
along the creek when A. D. Brown (newspaper editor) and George Slowey
came driving across the flat in a shiny new contraption. They stated their
mission flatly Could we stage a rodeo at Beulah the following
month? We sat in the shade of the shiny monster and endeavored to
separate the possible from the impossible. When they left some two hours
later, the foundation had been laid for the now famous Cowboy's Reunion.
...on the following Sunday, (we) chartered a Model
T and journeyed up to the old HS horse ranch... for a string of bucking
horses. A deal was also made for corral lumber, with the Beulah lumber
yards, on a rental basis... Transporting stock by truck was yet to be
heard about in those days, so all stock was trailed in...
Among the famous bucking horses of that yesteryear
were Rattlesnake, Blizzard, Jail-Bird, Screw-Driver, White Sox, Whirligig,
Tailspin, Warbonnet and Raggin' Peggy. All had an undying hatred for cowboys,
and could be relied upon to kick up plenty of dust when their turn came
to swing into action.
One of the riders on that first day was George Defender.
He was born in South Dakota in 1891 and started working as a rough
string rider for the DZ Cattle Company at Standing Rock when he
was 16.
Most of Georges spectacular rides never got into
the record books; one of these was a first-place win in Montana at the
1914 Miles City Roundup. The Roundup was one of the biggest rodeos on
the circuit at that time, and Defender quickly earned a reputation as
a top bronc rider. He held onto it by competing all over the continent,
including wins at Madison Square Garden and the Calgary Stampede. At one
point, he was a final contender for the world championship as all-around
cowboy.
A bronc rider is not alone out there, and George rode
some outstanding broncs: Spinning Boy, Sky Rocket, Grand River Blue, Heart
River Croppy, Z Horse, Black Diamond, Leave Me with a Smile, Golden Rule
and Tipperary.
He also competed in wild horse races, bulldogging, wild
cow milking, bareback riding, calf roping, relay races and buffalo riding.
George Defenders ranch was on the Standing Rock
Reservation, but he later worked in Arizona after contracting tuberculosis.
In 1932, he was injured during a cowboy roundup in New England, North
Dakota, and it was on this date in 1933 that he died at Fort Yates. He
was inducted into the North Dakota Rodeo Hall of Fame in 2001.

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