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home : latest news : latest news September 02, 2010


6/27/2009 11:16:00 PM
Days Past: Prescott icon Tom Mix - The early cowboy years
Sharlot Hall Museum/Courtesy photo
Tom Mix poses with Tony, the original wonder horse, in Prescott, July 4, 1920.
Sharlot Hall Museum/Courtesy photo

Tom Mix poses with Tony, the original wonder horse, in Prescott, July 4, 1920.

Days Past is a weekly feature in the Courier, supplied by Sharlot Hall Museum volunteers, chronicling historic events in Prescott.
By KEN EDWARDS
Special to the Courier

"King of the Cowboys" - not Gene Autry, Roy Rogers or John Wayne, but Tom Mix bore this soubriquet. As cowboy superstar of the silent screen, he was the matinee idol of many youngsters in the 1920s. Mix was the clean-cut hero of more than 300 short and feature-length Westerns. But before he became a cowboy star, he was a real-life cowboy.

Born in a small Pennsylvania town in 1880, Tom learned to rope, shoot, throw knives and train horses before he was 10. An ambitious kid, he aspired to become a sheriff in the Wild West but, just after he turned 18, the Spanish-American War was imminent and he enlisted in the army. He expected to go to Cuba to fight with the Rough Riders, but he never left the United States. Tales that he had fought in Cuba, the Philippines, in the Boxer Rebellion in China and in the Boer War in South Africa were all legends created by the Fox Movie Co. years later. Instead, Tom became a deserter from the army and took off for Oklahoma with his young bride, Grace.

He found little to do when he first arrived in Guthrie, Okla., where Grace taught school while Tom worked at various odd jobs like breaking horses, tending bar in a local saloon and running a youth physical fitness program. He coached the high school football team and became drum major for the Oklahoma Cavalry Band.

The band went to the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904, and there Tom met Will Rogers, who was working in a Wild West show. The two became lifelong friends.

Back in Oklahoma tending bar, he finally got into the work he wanted when he was hired to manage livestock and break horses for the 101 Real Wild West Ranch and Show near Bliss, Okla. Soon afterward, Mix married for a second time (his first marriage was annulled) and he became involved in law enforcement, serving in a quasi-official capacity as sheriff or marshal in new boomtowns in Kansas and Tennessee. During this period he continued to break horses and cultivate his skills as a stunt rider and showman with rope and pistol.

Tom, now 26, returned to the 101 Ranch in 1906 and took up residence in Dewey, Okla. In addition to working with the horses, he served as host for visiting "dudes" from the east. In 1908, he became a deputy sheriff and night marshal in Dewey and learned to deal with the rough crowds in the gambling houses and saloons.

After three years at the 101 Ranch, Tom, now with third wife, Olive, went to Amarillo, Texas, and joined up with the Widerman Wild West Show where he became a star roper. This arrangement soon ended over a salary dispute. The Mixes decided to go it alone and headed for Seattle. They recruited many talented cowboys and put on a Wild West show for the locals. With lots of rain and mud, the show was lucky to break even. But it was a start.

A famous story about the Mixes took place in the summer of 1909. Tom decided to participate in the Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo. The bronco he drew was infamous for throwing its riders in a hurry and the rodeo's producer didn't think Tom could stay on board. Olive, knowing her husband's toughness and determination, was willing to make a bet. Tom won the event and the $100 purse. Olive made $500 on her bet!

That same summer, Tom is reported to have made his first appearance in Prescott Frontier Days and also had his start as a Western movie extra. In 1910, he signed his first contract with the Selig Polyscope Company and remained with them for the next seven years. Even during his rise to motion picture stardom, he continued performing in Wild West shows in the U.S., Mexico and Canada. He was an incredible stuntman on a horse, always performing his own stunts in becoming a silver screen icon.

Many Tom Mix Westerns were filmed in and around Prescott. He was a star roper and bulldogger in our 1913 Frontier Days Rodeo and was a special guest rodeo performer here in 1922 while working for the Fox Studio as an established movie star.

For more on Tom Mix and many other cowboy performers, see www.b-westerns.com

Ken Edwards is a volunteer at Sharlot Hall Museum.

This and other Days Past articles are available on Sharlot.org/archives and via RSS e-mail subscription.

The public is welcome to submit articles for Days Past consideration. Please contact Scott Anderson at Sharlot Hall Museum Archives at 445-3122 for information.



Related Stories:
• Days Past: Marcus Aurelius Smith - Arizona's first senator
• Days Past: Samar Inzer Roman's memoirs





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