Cowgirl Connie Reeves
August 21, 2003
Connie Reeves, who taught three generations of girls how to ride horses at Camp Waldemar in the Texas Hill Country and was an honoree of the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame, died Sunday from the effects of a fall from her horse. She was 101.
In her 67 years at Waldemar, Reeves taught more than 20,000 girls, including my neighbor, Amanda, how to ride. She told them her motto: Always saddle your own horse."
Her own horse, Dr. Pepper, is 28 years old. The horse had kicked and thrown her several times, and once Connie suffered fractures. Her affection for Dr. Pepper, however, never wavered. She liked a lively horse, she said.
Born in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Sept 26, 1901...1936 she took a job as a counselor for horseback riding at Waldemar, where she met her future husband, Jack Reeves, a rodeo star and keeper of the camp's horses. Jack died in 1985.
In 1995, she wrote an autobiography, I MARRIED A COWBOY.
So, when you're not sure where you are going in life, or how to get there, just remember: Always saddle your own horse!
posted by Sara Hickman at 08:35 am
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