Early History of the Day of the Cowboy Day
Sponsored in the U.S. Senate in 2005, 2006, and 2007, by Wyoming’s late U.S. Senator, Craig Thomas, the National Day of the Cowboy is a day set aside to celebrate the contribution of the Cowboy and Cowgirl to America’s culture and heritage. In 2008, the National Day of the Cowboy resolution was sponsored simultaneously in the U.S. House of Representatives (for the first time) by Arizona’s U.S. Congresswoman, Gabrielle Giffords, and in the U.S. Senate by Senator Mike Enzi, WY. It passed in the Senate and the House concurrently, naming Saturday, July 26, 2008, as the 4th Annual National Day of the Cowboy.
On Friday, June 20, 2008, the National Day of the Cowboy resolution also passed in the Arizona State Legislature, making Arizona the first state to pass the resolution. We asked Arizona Representative, Jennifer Burns, to sponsor the resolution, which she readily agreed to do. In thinking it over though, Ms. Burns felt it would be more meaningful if it was sponsored by Senators Jake Flake and Jack Brown, the two remaining Cowboys in the Arizona legislature. Senators Flake and Brown both accepted that honor, but sadly, Jake Flake passed away before he was able to introduce the resolution. However, it was subsequently introduced in his honor, by Jack Brown, and passed easily and concurrently in both the Arizona House and the Senate. In 2009, the resolution passed in New York, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Arizona. It was also proclaimed by a number of governors, mayors and town councils.
In the words of the former President Bush, “We celebrate the Cowboy as a symbol of the grand history of the American West. The Cowboy’s love of the land and love of the country are examples for all Americans.”
Early in November, 2004, I (Bethany Braley) began working for Bill Bales, at the magazine he owned at the time. Soon after starting there, Bales asked me if I could make his “Vote for a Cowboy Day” project “happen.” At that time, I took charge of the project and with the guidance of several of my friends and former colleagues in Washington D.C., changed it to the National Day of the Cowboy project and enlisted Senator Thomas as a sponsor for a resolution. I worked with Thomas’s staff and helped craft the resolution itself. I put together a radio campaign to promote The Day and pursuaded the Bales to create a Hatch poster for the project.
Senator Thomas subsequently introduced the resolution in March 2005, but while it was in mark-up, the text defining the Cowboy Day was changed from the “Fourth Saturday in July” (permanent) to simply July 23, 2005 (once only) at which time Bill Bales informed me and Editor Paige Mckenzie, he was finished with the project and someone else needed to carry the ball while they went back to selling advertising. I resigned from the magazine in June 2005, expressing in my resignation letter my intention to form an organization to work to make the Day of the Cowboy permanent. Later, Bales sold the magazine to its current owner, media conglomerate Active Interest Media, Inc. and its operations were moved from Wyoming to Boulder, Colorado.
Cynthia Reed, Senator Thomas’s Legislative Aide, my contact as manager of this project for Bales, notified me in an email in May 2005 that the resolution would not actually be signed by the President. She also explained to me in a phone conversation that the highest acknowledgment the resolution could receive from a President was a Letter of Support.
From: Reed, Cindy (Thomas) [mailto:Cindy_Reed@thomas.senate.gov]
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2005 3:33 PM
To: bethany@cowboy.com
Subject: RE: Resolution signing
The resolution won’t be signed by the President. We have sent a letter requesting that he proclaim the day, but have not heard back. I do not believe there is any proclamation ceremony. Sorry, I guess we will have to celebrate on our own when the time comes.
Cynthia Reed
Legislative Aide
U.S. Senator Craig Thomas
(202) 224-6441
An important piece of our background
‘We’re not doing anything with it. We did our part. We need to go back to selling advertising and let someone else carry the ball now.” (Spoken by Bill Bales, in March 2005, then owner and Publisher of American Cowboy magazine, when asked by Editor Paige McKenzie, and NDOC Project Manager, Bethany Braley, what the magazine planned to actually do with the National Day of the Cowboy in the event it passed for 2005 in the U.S. Senate). The National Day of the Cowboy organization was subsequently founded in Wyoming, on June 5, 2005, for the purpose of seeking permanent passage of the resolution, several months after Bales expressed this position of having achieved his goal for the National Day of the Cowboy and having no desire to remain involved with it.
The image to the right is the first National Day of the Cowboy Hatch poster. It was proposed by National Day of the Cowboy Project Manager, Bethany Braley, and co-created by AC’s graphics person, Michelle, Hatch Show Print, and Braley, for American Cowboy Magazine in February 2005.
IRS Letter of Determination
We received our IRS Letter of Determination from the IRS in December 2007, retroactive to June 2005. A copy of the National Day of the Cowboy 501c3 IRS Letter of Determination, granting us nonprofit status, is available upon request. To request a copy, email info@nationaldayofthecowboy.com Subject IRS Letter request. Please include your reason for the request.
National Day of the Cowboy Bill text (2015)
Over the years from 2005 until the present, the text for the bill has changed very little. Below is the proposed verbiage we now send to state volunteers. We also encourage each state to include a ‘Whereas” or two specific to the cowboy culture and history of their own state.
National Day of the Cowboy Bill
Expressing support for the designation of the 4th Saturday in July as ‘‘National Day of the Cowboy’’
RESOLUTION
Whereas (your state’s name) pioneering men and women known as cowboys, helped establish America’s frontiers;
Whereas the cowboy archetype transcends gender, generations, ethnicity, geographic boundaries, and political affiliations;
Whereas the cowboy embodies honesty, integrity, courage, compassion, and determination;
Whereas the cowboy Vaquero spirit exemplifies patriotism and strength of character;
Whereas the cowboy is an excellent steward of the land and its creatures;
Whereas the core values expressed within the Cowboy Code of Conduct continue to inspire the pursuit of the highest caliber of personal integrity;
Whereas cowboy and ranching traditions have been part of the American landscape and culture since 1523, and today’s cowboys and cowgirls continue to strive to preserve and perpetuate this unique element of America’s heritage;
Whereas annual attendance at rodeos exceeds 30,000,000 fans worldwide,
Whereas membership and participation in the National Day of the Cowboy Organization and other organizations that encompass the livelihood of the cowboy, continues to expand both nationally and internationally;
Whereas the cowboy and his horse are a central figure in literature, art, film, poetry, photography, and music, and
Whereas the cowboy is a true American icon occupying a central place in the public’s imagination;
Now therefore, be it
Resolved, that the House of Representatives and the Senate —
(1) express support for the designation of a ‘‘National Day of the Cowboy’’; and
(2) encourage the people of (your state’s name) to observe the day with appropriate ceremonies and activities.
1st National Day of the Cowboy July 23, 2005 * 2nd Annual NDOC July 22, 2006 * 3rd NDOC July 28, 2007 * 4th NDOC July 26, 2008 * 5th NDOC July 25, 2009 * 6th NDOC July 24, 2010 * 7th NDOC July 23, 2011 * 8th NDOC July 28, 2012 * 9th NDOC July 27, 2013 * 10th NDOC July 26, 2014 * 11th Annual NDOC July 25, 2015