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Cowboy Pictures Of Working Cowboys

Below are cowboy pictures of cowboys (and a cowgirl) roping calves. After the calves are headed and heeled, or just heeled, they are "worked" by the ground crew. When a calf is worked it might be vaccinated, castrated, de-horned, branded, de-wormed, sprayed for external parasites, ear tagged, and/or other things depending on the preferences of the ranch or owner. Please scroll down for a description of the evolution of the word "cowboy," and information on the early history of rodeo.

All photos are copyrighted © and property of Cowboyway.com.

Cowboy picture of a cowboy roping a calf
This calf has been roped "deep" which in
 this case means the loop went past the
 calf's head and is behind both front legs.
A working cowboy roping a calf
This calf has been caught a little
 deep and has one leg in the loop.
A cowgirl roping a calf
A cowgirl leads a calf to a waiting heeler.
Cowboy Picture - A cowboy controllilng a wild calf
A wild calf pulls on the rope.
Roping calves in a wheel corral
A cowboy keeping his eye on the calf
so it doesn't get behind his horse.
A cowboy has roped a calf deep
Another cowboy keeping an eye on his calf.

All photos are copyrighted © and property of Cowboyway.com.


The Term "Cowboy"

Up until the late 1800's, the term "cowboy” was a rotten thing to call someone. During the American Revolution a “cowboy” (or "cow boy" or "cow-boy") was a Loyalist who stole Patriot cows, often luring the cows into the brush to shoot them. As the new country of America expanded to the west the word "cowboy," with a growing list of negative connotations, went along with it.

According to authors Joseph G. Rosa and Robin May in their book “Buffalo Bill and His Wild West, A Pictorial Biography” it was Buffalo Bill Cody who rehabilitated the word in the minds of the American public. In Buffalo Bill's famous Wild West shows a "cowboy" was a man of bravery and honesty, often cast in roles during daring reenactments of wild west adventures as that of a hero. Flamboyantly dressed and displaying extraordinary riding and marksmanship skills, the cowboys of Buffalo Bill's Wild West soon etched a new, much more positive meaning of the word "cowboy" into the minds of Americans.

Cowboys And The Early Days Of Rodeo

The heyday of the early American cowboy was barely a blink in time, from about the end of the Civil War in 1865 to approximately the mid 1880’s, a bare 20 years later. Around this time a new event was born, an exciting, breathtaking, showcase of the early American cowboy and his skills. Eventually, this new event would be called rodeo.

The early exhibitions or contests of cowboy skills were often parts of Wild West shows, and had very different events than what we see in present day rodeos. The first ones often had a lineup of events that included things like bronco busting, steer and/or buffalo roping, sharp shooting, and horse races. A little later they would also frequently have trick riding, an event often reserved for just the ladies.

While many of these events were held annually in various towns across the Southwest and the West, the birth of the Wild West show brought even greater exposure to these exhibitions and contests. Instead of being tied to just one location like most shows organized by towns, the Wild West show traveled the country and even abroad, taking the show on the road directly to millions of eager spectators.

By 1920 rodeos often featured three events just for cowgirls: bronc riding (saddle bronc, not bareback), trick riding, and at facilities with a race track, the relay race. The broncs had to ridden for 8 seconds (in those days men rode for 10), and the women could use two reins if they wanted to (the men used only one rein). Like the men, the women rode one handed. 

By the mid-1920’s events that had been known as "cowboy tournaments" and "cowboy contests" were starting to be called rodeos. Championship events at Boston Garden and New York City’s Madison Square Garden were attracting nationwide attention. In 1936 a group of rodeo cowboys walked out on a rodeo when the event's promoter refused to add the contestants’ entry fees to the rodeo’s total purse, and shortly thereafter the Cowboy's Turtle Association, the first organized body of American rodeo, was formed.


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