Thursday, July 31, 2025

Will Rogers

 


He left home chasing cattle, not crowds.

In early 1902, he and a friend hatched a plan to strike it rich cowboying in South America. That was the dream, anyway. The destination—and what came after—would be something entirely different.

Will sold his stake in the family cattle business and began a journey that would stretch far beyond what he’d imagined. He traveled first to Hot Springs, Arkansas, then down to New Orleans, where he boarded a steamer bound for New York City. From there, he sailed to Southampton, England, then boarded a Royal Mail ship headed south across the Atlantic—stopping in Cape Verde, Rio de Janeiro, and Montevideo—before finally stepping ashore in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Two and a half months at sea.

Nineteen days later, his friend gave up and headed home. But Will stuck it out. He stayed through the winter, picked up work where he could, and eventually booked passage on a livestock ship bound for Durban, South Africa. That September, he wrote to his father from a horse farm. By November, he was hauling mules near Ladysmith, chasing the next opportunity.

Then, on December 5, 1902, Will Rogers wandered into a world of canvas tents and smoke and sawdust.

A Wild West show.

They said the owner was from Texas. The name rang a bell. Will asked around, found the man in charge, and introduced himself. Was he really from Texas? And—more importantly—were there any jobs wrangling horses or working livestock?

The man squinted and asked, “You any good with broncs? Rope tricks?”

Will said he could rope a bit—better with a lasso than with a bucking horse. The man tossed him a rope.

Nearly a decade earlier, a young Will Rogers had visited Chicago with his father during the World’s Columbian Exposition. While the grand white buildings and modern marvels of the fair caught most people’s eyes, Will’s attention locked on a show outside the gates—Buffalo Bill’s Wild West.

In that arena, he saw the world’s greatest trick roper—Vicente Oropeza, a charro from Mexico—spin a rope like it was alive. Will was mesmerized. He bought the program, read it until it fell apart, then returned home to Indian Territory and practiced for hours, day after day, chasing the magic he’d seen.

Now, in a dusty showground halfway across the world, he stepped into the ring.

He started with a wide crinoline whirl—the rope circling overhead, loops widening with each pass. Before he could finish the sequence, the showman cut him off.

“You’re hired.”

That man was Texas Jack Jr.

When Rogers heard the name, something clicked. He remembered it—from the worn program he’d read over and over. Texas Jack. The man who’d written the piece on cowboys and buffalo hunts. The friend of Buffalo Bill.

Will asked if he was that Texas Jack.

Jack Jr. grinned and shook his head. No, he wasn’t that Jack—but he told the story. About how the original Texas Jack Omohundro had rescued him as a child from a Comanche camp. How he’d taken the name in honor of the man who gave him a life. He hadn’t been born into cowboying, he said. He’d chosen it. Chosen to carry on the legacy—and now, he was offering Will the same chance.

Only later did Rogers realize what he’d missed.

In a letter home, he wrote with a mix of frustration and amusement:

“I will tell you how I missed making $250…

The owner does a trick with a rope (the big whirl where he lets out all his rope around him) and he has been offering 50 pounds, that is $250, for anyone that could do it. And he has been offering it for five years—outside America.

Well, I didn’t know anything of this 50 pounds. I just walked into the show that morning, done the trick, and he gave me a job. But now, since I belong to the show, I can’t get it.

Oh, but I was mad.”

Still, he stayed.

Will Rogers had left Oklahoma to earn a living as a cowboy.

Instead, he found something else entirely.

In another letter, he confided what he was beginning to realize:

“I am going to learn things while I am with him that will enable me to make my living in the world without making it by day labor.”

And he did.

Texas Jack Jr. taught him how to hold a crowd. How to build suspense, how to deliver a moment. How to turn raw roping into refined performance. How to own the stage with charm and confidence.

He gave Will a job—and a new name:

The Cherokee Kid.

He hadn’t planned to chase the spotlight. But that dusty showground in South Africa set him on the path.

Will Rogers—the rope-spinning, wisecracking, unshakably genuine voice of America—was born that day.

The cowboy who joined the show became a star. Then a household name. Then something rarer still. By the 1930s, he was Hollywood’s highest-paid actor, America’s most popular radio host, and its most widely read newspaper columnist—all at once.

He made people laugh. He made them think. And, more than almost anyone, he made them trust him. Will Rogers became one of the most beloved, most human voices this country has ever known.

And it all began with a rope, a trick, and a job offer to a Cherokee boy far from home—on a windswept showground in Ladysmith, South Africa.

#WillRogersLegacy #CherokeeKid





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Will Rogers

  He left home chasing cattle, not crowds. In early 1902, he and a friend hatched a plan to strike it rich cowboying in South America. That ...