Many of us in the gay
community are familiar with the "Imperial Court" system that exists in
many larger cities around the country. The idea for a "gay rodeo"
originated with Phil Ragsdale in 1975. As the "Court Emperor" of Reno,
Nevada, Ragsdale decided to raise money for the Muscular Dystrophy
Association by means of a gay rodeo. The first available date at the
Washoe County Fairgrounds was October 2nd, 1976, and Ragsdale began
planning at once. At first, he was not able to find any farmers or
ranchers willing to lease livestock for a gay rodeo, but eventually the
animals were secured and the rodeo went on as scheduled. There were not
very many contestants or spectators that first year, but Ragsdale
decided to keep it as an annual event. The event became known as the
National Reno Gay Rodeo and every year thousands of dollars were raised
for Muscular Dystrophy through competition of the titles of Mr., Ms.,
and Miss National Reno Gay Rodeo.
In 1981, an energetic group
of Texas contestants attended the Reno rodeo. During the weekend, Miss
Texas bumped into Wayne Jakino of Denver, Colorado. "She" ridiculed
Wayne because of the small representation from Colorado, and Wayne
vowed that the next year his state would show up in force. One-month
later Wayne, Ron Jesser, and seven other men formed the Colorado Gay
Rodeo Association (CGRA).
When Colorado returned to the 1982
National Reno Gay Rodeo they were 400 strong, including a mounted drill
team and some 43 contestants. Comedienne Joan Rivers was the Grand
Marshall that year, and there were over 10,000 spectators in the
grandstands. The contestants from Colorado gained support from other
contestants to push for uniform rules in order to improve the quality
of the rodeo.
That following winter, a group from Colorado
traveled to Houston to encourage the formation of the Texas Gay Rodeo
Association (TGRA) and a rodeo in that part of the country. Texas
promised to support Colorado if they would lead the way with their own
rodeo. On June 3rd, 1983, Denver became the second city in the U.S. to
host a gay rodeo. Many contestants came from Texas and California to
the first Rocky Mountain Regional Rodeo, only to experience torrential
rain throughout the weekend. But the rodeo went on anyway! They had all
been through too much to let a little water stop the festivities. In
late June, the TGRA was formed and scheduled their first rodeo for the
following year. The Eighth National Reno Gay Rodeo was held in August
with the largest number of gay dance groups ever assembled at a rodeo
and the grandstands filled with over 12,000 people.
In 1984
the Golden State Gay Rodeo Association (GSGRA) was formed in
California. That was also the year of the Ninth Annual National Reno
Gay Rodeo, which was the last rodeo held in that city due to financial
difficulties. In November of that year, Texas held their first rodeo a
few miles outside of Houston and in December, the Arizona Gay Rodeo
Association (AGRA) was organized in Phoenix.
In March of
1985, gay rodeo moved to the West Coast as GSGRA hosted their first
rodeo at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center in Burbank. The rodeo
organizations from Colorado, Texas, California, and Arizona decided
that it was time to have more uniformity in their rodeos and scheduled
a convention in order to standardize rules and objectives of their
associations. In September, the convention was held in Denver, where
the Oklahoma Gay Rodeo Association (OGRA) was seated as the fifth
Member Association, the International Gay Rodeo Association (IGRA) was
formed, and Jakino was elected as the Founding President.
IGRA
continued to expand in 1986 with repeat rodeos in Colorado, Texas, and
California as well as two new rodeo locations in Phoenix and Oklahoma
City. Jakino served his second term as IGRA President and Denver was
again the location for IGRA's second convention where three new Member
Associations were seated: Kansas (KGRA), Missouri (MGRA), and New
Mexico (NMGRA).
In 1987 Les Krambeal (OGRA) began serving as
IGRA's second President. At the IGRA Annual Convention in Albuquerque,
the Silver State Gay Rodeo Association (SSGRA) from Nevada was seated
as the newest Member Association. Many new contestants decided to
compete that year and several of the rodeos lasted up to twelve hours
each day. As a result of these lengthy rodeos, it was decided to split
the Member Associations into two geographical areas. Division I
consisted of California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Nevada while Division
II consisted of Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Missouri. This
split would place three rodeos in each region with approximately half
the number of contestants competing in each.
This was also
the first year that a Country/Western dance competition was held during
the IGRA Annual Convention. Several gay country bars around the country
organized it and it proved to be popular evening entertainment. The
convention delegates voted to add the dance competition as an annual
convention event. This was also the year for IGRA's first International
Finals Rodeo which was held in Hayward, California, near San Francisco.
The IGRA Finals Rodeo brought the top contestants from throughout the
year to compete for each Event Championship buckle as well as the
titles of All-Around Cowboy and All-Around Cowgirl.
Krambeal
began his second term as IGRA President in 1988 and the six divisional
rodeos were all very successful that year. At the fourth IGRA Annual
Convention in Fort Worth, two more Member Associations were seated.
They were Oregon and Wyoming as the tenth and eleventh members of IGRA.
The 2nd IGRA Finals Rodeo, which had been scheduled for Reno, did not
take place. Originally scheduled for the Lawler Events Center, the
contract was canceled and court action to force the center to perform
was not successful.
A contract with a private ranch sixty
miles east of Reno was made void when the local homophobic District
Attorney filed an injunction two days before the rodeo in order to stop
the event. Two days in court as well as a trip to the Nevada Supreme
Court failed to overturn the injunction. Many people canceled their
trips when word got out about the possibility that the rodeo would not
happen. More than 100 contestants and 600 spectators who did arrive
found themselves only to attend the evening parties. IGRA officers
referred to the bylaws and awarded two sets of Event Championship
buckles and All-Around Champion buckles to the top point contestants
throughout the year from each of the two rodeo divisions.
In
1989, Division I added one more rodeo to the circuit. The Greater San
Diego Rodeo brought the total number of divisional rodeos to seven.
Gerald Ford began serving as the third President of IGRA. The 5th IGRA
Annual Convention returned to Albuquerque that year where two more
associations joined IGRA. They were Montana's Big Sky (BSGRA) and Utah
(UGRA). Early in the rodeo year, Ford found it necessary to resign from
the presidency because of increased personal business obligations. The
IGRA Board of Directors appointed Linn Copeland (KGRA) for the
remainder of the year. The 3rd IGRA Finals Rodeo was held in Phoenix as
scheduled and was very successful.
The year of 1990 was one
of tremendous growth for IGRA. Copeland began her second term as IGRA
President and the IGRA Annual Convention was held in Wichita where four
new Member Associations were seated. Northwest (NWGRA) representing
Washington, Oregon, and Idaho; North Star (NSGRA) representing
Minnesota and Wisconsin; Tri-State (TSGRA) representing Ohio, Indiana,
and Kentucky; and Diamond State (DSRA) representing Arkansas were added
to the IGRA family. This was also the second year in a row that the
IGRA Finals Rodeo was held in Phoenix and it turned out to be another
very crowded event.
In 1991 Bob Pimentel (NMGRA) began his
first term as the fifth President of IGRA. The 7th IGRA Annual
Convention was again held in Albuquerque where two more associations
joined IGRA. They were the Atlantic States (ASGRA) representing
Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C. and the Southeast (SEGRA)
representing the state of Georgia. New rodeo locations were approved
for Colorado Springs, San Francisco, Tucson, and Washington, D.C. IGRA
then split the rodeo circuit into three divisions with plans for a
fourth division when at least one more rodeo was scheduled in the
eastern part of the country. IGRA's first International Sponsor came on
board when the Miller Brewing Company agreed to have the Miller Lite
brand provide support for all rodeos around the country. The 5th IGRA
Finals Rodeo was held in Wichita.
The 1992 rodeo year was
Pimentel's second term as IGRA President. The 8th IGRA Annual
Convention was held in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul. The
Nevada Gay Rodeo Association (NGRA) became a Member Association and the
Northwest Gay Rodeo Association (NWGRA) added the Canadian Province of
British Columbia to their group of three states, making IGRA a truly
international organization. In October, IGRA finalized the negotiations
and entered into a three-year agreement with Miller Lite to become an
International Sponsor of gay rodeo. Phoenix was once again the location
for the 6th IGRA Finals Rodeo.
In 1993 Roger Bergmann (GSGRA)
began serving his first of three terms as IGRA's sixth President.
Billings was the site of the 9th IGRA Annual Convention where three new
Member Associations were seated: Illinois (ILGRA), Heartland (HGRA)
representing Nebraska, and the Alberta Gay Rodeo Association (AGRA) as
the second Canadian Province to join IGRA. Three new rodeos, located in
Minneapolis/St. Paul; Kansas City, and Seattle were part of the total
of 15 rodeos leading up to the 7th IGRA Finals Rodeo held in Fort Worth.
The
10th IGRA Annual Convention was held in Little Rock where the Michigan
International Gay Rodeo Association (MIGRA) was seated and the state of
Iowa was included as a part of HGRA. Since the Alberta association's
acronym of AGRA was the same as Arizona's, there had been considerable
confusion during the past year. Alberta agreed to have their membership
establish a new name for their association. Within a few months Alberta
had changed their name to the Alberta Rockies Gay Rodeo Association
(ARGRA). The 1994 rodeo year had four new rodeos in the United States
(Palm Springs, Chicago, Little Rock, and Atlanta) and the first
IGRA-sanctioned rodeo held outside of the United States (in Calgary,
Alberta, Canada). Because of the additional rodeos in the eastern part
of the United States, IGRA implemented the change to four rodeo
divisions. For the 1994 rodeo year, there were a total of twenty rodeos
leading up to the 8th IGRA Finals Rodeo in Denver.
In 1995
Bergmann began his final term as IGRA President. The Pennsylvania Gay
Rodeo Association (PGRA) was seated at the 11th IGRA Annual Convention
in Chicago. In this year there were 21 divisional rodeos scheduled
which included one new rodeo, the Greater Motown International Rodeo in
Detroit. The 9th IGRA Finals Rodeo was again held in Denver.
Minnesota's
own Tom Vance began his first term as the seventh President of IGRA at
the start of the 1996 rodeo year. During that year, IGRA entered
cyberspace by establishing a Web site at http://www.igra.com where you
could find current information about the IGRA and all of the rodeos
around the country. You could also link to Web sites for many of the
IGRA Member Associations. The 12th IGRA Annual Convention was held in
Omaha and the 10th IGRA Finals Rodeo was held in Albuquerque.
The
1997 rodeo year was the second term for Vance as IGRA President. The
13th IGRA Annual Convention was held in Salt Lake City during the last
weekend of July. At this convention, only the second woman ever to be
elected President hailed from Kansas, the same state where the first
woman elected as President of IGRA. The 11th IGRA Finals Rodeo moved
back to Phoenix during the weekend of October 23rd-26th, 1997.
The
1998 rodeo year represented Linda Frazier's (KGRA) first term as
President of IGRA. The 14th IGRA Annual Convention was held in
Baltimore from July 29th-August 3rd. The 12th IGRA Finals Rodeo was
held in Phoenix during the weekend of October 22th-25th. The year of
1998 was also the first year that IGRA eliminated using divisions for
rodeo competition. All IGRA contestants competed equally for the 20
slots open in each event at the Finals Rodeo.
The 1999 rodeo
year will be Frazier's second term as IGRA President. The 15th IGRA
Annual Convention was held in Long Beach, California from July
28th-August 2nd. The 13th IGRA Finals Rodeo was held in Little Rock
October 28th-31st. The 1999 rodeo schedule welcomed a new rodeo to the
circuit, the Sierra Stampede in Sacramento, California in mid-August
and welcomed back the Southern Spurs Stampede (formerly the Dixieland
Rodeo) in Atlanta in mid-September.
California's own Craig
Alan Rouse began his first term as the ninth President of IGRA at the
start of the 2000 rodeo year. The 16th IGRA Annual Convention was held
in Las Vegas from August 3rd-6th and the 14th IGRA Finals Rodeo was
held in Albuquerque from October 19th-22nd. The 2000 rodeo schedule
welcomed a new rodeo to the circuit, the Salt Lake City Rodeo from June
2nd-4th.
The 2001 rodeo year was Rouse's second year as IGRA
President. The 17th IGRA Annual Convention was held in Long Beach from
July 26th-29th and the 15th IGRA Finals Rodeo was held in Palm Springs
from October 18th-21st.
The 2002 rodeo year was Rouse's third
year as IGRA President. The 18th IGRA Annual Convention was held in
Cleveland from July 25th-28th and the 16th IGRA Finals Rodeo was held
in Wichita from October 10th-13th.
The 2003 rodeo year was
Rouse's fourth year as IGRA President. The 19th IGRA Annual Convention
was held in Phoenix from July 31st-August 3rd and the 17th IGRA Finals
Rodeo was held in Tulsa from October 23rd-26th.
The 2004
rodeo year will be Rouse's fifth year as IGRA President. The 20th IGRA
Annual Convention will be held in Denver from October 14th-19th and the
18th IGRA Finals Rodeo will be held in Omaha from October 14th-18th.
As
with any large organization, there are losses as well as gains. Over
the years Oregon, the Cowboy State (Wyoming), Silver State (Nevada),
Tri-State (Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky), Northwest (Washington, Oregon,
Idaho, and British Columbia) and Big Sky (Montana) were not able to
keep their individual members active and their organizations have since
dissolve. Two of those associations were able to reorganize and become
involved with IGRA. That was the state of Nevada, who joined as the
Nevada Gay Rodeo Association (NGRA) and the Pacific Northwest Gay Rodeo
Assocition (PNWGRA).
The International Gay Rodeo Association
(IGRA) currently has 20 Member Associations representing 25 states, the
District of Columbia, and two Canadian provinces. IGRA is going strong
and hope that you will get involved with one of our Member Associations
or perhaps promote the formation of a new association where IGRA is not
active.
The above information is provided courtesy of the International Gay Rodeo Association
© IGRA 2004. All rights reserved.