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RODEO COUNTRY
Red Bluff, California
Snapshot
Pictures of 2004 Rodeo Parade and Rodeo Click
Here
A Little Round-Up History... 1918 Clough
Ranch Picnic - Tehama County's First Recorded Rodeo Imagine
Tehama County cattlemen and their hands gathering together
after the spring round-up of their herds to hold a picnic
and informal rodeo. The first of its kind was held in 1918
at the A.H.Clough Ranch in Los Molinos and drew a crowd from
far and near. The cowhands tried their luck at riding saddle
broncs and wild steers, bulldogging and roping contests. In
1919, Jess Bennett and Ivy Bell, who ran a cattle ranch near
Vina, decided to have an informal bronc riding and roping
contest on their ranch. The event was so successful, it was
followed by the Vina Festival in 1920. That same year, a group
of ranchers and businessmen from Red Bluff and Chico started
the Northern California Round-Up Association.
The First Red Bluff Round-Up After
the success of a spring Northern California Round-Up held
in Deer Creek, it was decided to form a Red Bluff Round-Up
Association and hold a rodeo during the Tehama County Fair
in October. Seventeen events were scheduled for the track
and infield. Seven thousand attendees cheered contestants.
While this rodeo proved to be a financial flop, the Board
of Directors decided to hold another rodeo the following September.
This event also proved a financial liability, so no rodeo
was held in 1923. In 1924, a hoof and mouth disease epidemic
cancelled all rodeos. The Northern California Round-Up Association
held its last rodeo in 1925. So, in March of 1926, the Red
Bluff Round-Up Association decided to reorganize and hold
a two-day spring show. Thanks in part to the efforts of traveling
advertising man Don Tait (alias Montana Red), the 1926 rodeo
hosted over 10,000 in attendance. "I've ridden at Pendelton,
Salinas, Cheyenne and many big shows in the country - talk
about salty birds and rough bronc rules - you fellows have
them all in one bunch You have every bit as much, if not better,
than those other shows." -1926 Rodeo Contestant
The Caravan Carries the Message In1928,
the Rodeo Committee formed its own publicity caravan which
consisted of fifty cars. They drove down the west side to
Corning, Orland and Willows and came back on the east side
of the Sacramento River through Hamilton City and Chico. In
the first caravan, led by Undersheriff Walter Williams, the
car's screeching siren led the way along with a saddle over
the hood for Mike Fish to ride on. Megaphone in hand, Mike
would climb on the "hurricane deck" to make his announcements
while, at the end of the caravan, forty-nine cars back, he
would be echoed by another megaphone. This "caravan effort
would continue throughout the 1960's. Because of the depression,
no rodeo was held in 1933. Also, World War II cancelled the
1942-45 rodeos. However, in all other years, the Red Bluff
Round-Up has prevailed.
Today's Round-Up Today's event includes
a week of events throughout the community including a bowling
tournament, foot race, pancake breakfast, street dance, antique
shows, Chamber mixer, golf tournament, chili cook-off, parade,
dances and more. The event is a major income booster to the
community filling hotels, restaurants and gasoline stations
like few other weeks of the year. Being a major PRCA spring
rodeo, its timing is ideal for securing top stock contractors
as well and world class contestants hungry for season points.
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Dandy World Foundation,
Red Bluff, California
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