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Bill Stearns
is a 3rd-generation
Wyoming horseman, reared on a ranch in the edge
of the Black Hills near the Wyoming/South Dakota
border. He has spent more than six decades in
the livestock industry and covered more country
horseback than most men still living.
His paternal grandfather came to Wyoming with
300 head of Percheron mares around the turn of
the 20th Century, and shipped draft
horses to St. Louis and other major markets for
years. When the draft horse business subsided
due to motorized vehicles, Mr. Stearns crossed
his draft mares with Thoroughbred stallions and
produced a lot of horses for the U.S. Army
through the Remount program.Bill grew up riding
a 75-100-mile radius with his father, covering
the territory where they had holdings and
ranches and cattle and horses; and he was
horseback alongside his father from a very early
age, often riding horses that weren’t at all
gentle. He learned to ride broncs in the hills,
timber, rocks, and any kind of country there
was.
Bill has continued to work as an outside cowboy
throughout his life and is still active in that
occupation. He’s ridden thousands of miles in
several states and is known as one of the best
in handling cattle, horses and country – or
managing any kind of ranch work.
He’s also played polo in the US and Canada,
trained polo ponies and trained race horses;
spending time in the employ of well-known
Quarter Horse breeders C.O. Sage and Leo
Winters. He worked for rodeo producer Dale Small
for some time and flanked broncs and bulls, so
he knows the backside of the chutes as well as
the inside.
He was the South
Dakota State Champion All Around Cowboy, Saddle
Bronc Rider, and Bulldogger in 1958, and
competed at the National High School Rodeo in
Sulphur, Louisiana. The SD High School Rodeo
Association honored him at their 2008 State
Finals for the 50th
Anniversary of those championships.
He
did some college rodeoing from SDSU in
Brookings, SD and Sheridan Junior College in WY,
but work took precedence over school and rodeo.
In
the large 5-state rodeo association, Northwest
Ranch Cowboys Association, he was bronc riding
champion and bronc riding director and helped
re-vamp the rule book.
Later he was active in the Kansas State Rodeo
Association and won the KSRA Bronc Riding Finals
in 1983. He competed in the NARC Finals in Texas
that year.
Bill Stearns won the Saddle Bronc Riding Average
at the Old Timer’s National Finals in Amarillo,
Texas, in 1985. He hardly stepped on a bronc for
the next 9 years, but did ride enough in 1994 to
qualify for the Senior Pro National Finals in
Reno, and won the Bronc Riding Average there
again in 1994; at the age of 54.
Everyone knows the importance of being a good
enough hand to win the Finals average in your
event. To do it back-to-back after a 9-year
hiatus speaks strongly of ability and talent.
He
was the 50+ NSPRA World Champion Bronc Rider in
1995, and the Canadian Senior Pro Rodeo
Association 50+ Bronc Riding Champion that same
year. At one time during the year he was leading
the All Around standings. The all-around points
came from occasionally entering the team roping.
At Del Mar, California, Anson Thurman asked him
to rope with him. He hadn’t chased a steer for
years, but he borrowed the pickup man’s horse,
saddle, and rope, and they placed in every
round.
Bill Stearns made the high-marked saddle bronc
ride of the entire 1995 NSPRA Finals (all ages),
in the last go-‘round. He made the high-point
ride of the entire NSPRA ’95 year at East
Helena, as well.
Bill Stearns repeated the Canadian championship
in 1996, at the age of 56; and was Runner-Up to
the NSPRA World Champion Bronc Rider that year.
He
continued to ride some in 1997, but broke his
wrist at Longmont, Colorado and it didn’t heal
up very well. He competed at the ’97 National
Finals but his first bronc smashed him into the
arena’s cement wall and almost broke his leg;
and the pickup man dropped him the next night,
so he did not finish. At the age of 57 he
decided to retire from competitive bronc riding.
More than six decades spent working with cattle
and horses gives Bill Stearns rare authenticity
in the telling of cowboy stories or reading of
cowboy poems. He’s done that on many stages from
Montana to Texas; but always enjoys visiting
with the “real people” at cowboy gatherin’s more
than he does performing.
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