Jesse Stahl (ca. 1879-1935)

September 07, 2010 
/ Contributed By: Tricia Martineau Wagner

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Jesse Stahl|

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African American cowboy and rodeo rider Jesse Stahl set the standard of performance in saddle bronc riding that continues to this day. Stahl was a top-notch horseman, a first-class gentleman, and a cowboy who was regarded by many who saw his performances as larger than life. Conflicting sources establish Jesse Stahl’s birthplace as Tennessee, Texas, or California sometime between 1879 and 1883.  Nothing is known about his childhood other than he had a brother named Ambrose. Both brothers joined the rodeo circuit but only Jesse went on to fame.

Jesse Stahl is most famous for his performance at the Salinas Rodeo in California in 1912.  Before over 4,000 fans, Stahl stole the show in the rodeo’s classic event of saddle bronc riding on the bronco named Glass Eye. The horse would buck, twist his body 180 degrees midair, and land in the exact opposite direction. Most observers felt that none other than Stahl stood a chance of staying on Glass Eye. He did, and that magnificent ride thrilled fans and cemented Stahl’s name into the annals of rodeo fame. Other stories of Stahl’s exploits have been passed down through oral tradition.

Stahl invented the rodeo technique of “hoolihanding,” literally leaping from a horse onto the back of a 2,000-pound bull, grabbing its horns, overpowering the animal, and rooting it into the ground tethered by its horns. He wowed sellout audiences with his bravery and exceptional performances until hoolihanding was outlawed.

With his reputation growing as one of the great performance riders of the West, Stahl was a contract headliner at rodeo expositions all over the country. His popular “suicide rides” performances, where he and fellow rodeo performer Ty Stokes rode a bucking horse sitting back-to-back, drew huge crowds.

Jesse Stahl retired in 1929 and died in Sacramento, California in 1935.  He is remembered today as a peerless roughrider. He was posthumously inducted into Oklahoma City’s Rodeo Hall of Fame in 1979, only the second Black cowboy (after Bill Pickett) to receive that honor.

Author Profile

Tricia Martineau Wagner is a North Carolina author and hands-on living history presenter. She is an experienced elementary teacher, reading specialist, and independent historian. Her four non-fiction books are: It Happened on the Underground Railroad (2007; 2nd edition 2015), Black Cowboys of the Old West (2011), African American Women of the Old West (2007), and It Happened on the Oregon Trail (2004; 2nd edition 2014). Ms. Wagner is a well-versed and entertaining speaker who brings history to life. She enjoys conducting presentations for schools around the country in grades 2 – 8 on: the Underground Railroad, Black Cowboys of the Old West, African American Women of the Old West, and the history of the Oregon Trail. She has spoken at the 4th Annual Black History Conference in Seattle, Washington sponsored by the Association for African American Historical Research and Preservation (AAAHRP), Presentation title: “Rewriting American History: The Untold Story of the Contributions & Achievements of African American Citizens.” Ms. Wagner also spoke at the Western Heritage Symposium for the National Day of the American Cowboy, Arlington Texas, (National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum in association with University of Texas at Arlington), Presentation title: “America’s New Vision of the Old West: Black Cowboys & Black Women Who Reformed and Refined Society.”

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Martineau Wagner, T. (2010, September 07). Jesse Stahl (ca. 1879-1935). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/jesse-stahl-c-1879-1935/

Source of the Author's Information:

Tricia Martineau Wagner, Black Cowboys of the Old West (Guilford,
Connecticut: The Globe Pequot Press, 2011); Paul W. Stewart and Wallace
Yvonne Ponce, Black Cowboys (Broomfield, Colorado: Phillips Publishing,
1986); Burton Anderson, “The California Rodeo: A Central Coast
Tradition,” Monterey County Historical Society (1997), http://www.mchsmuseum.com/rodeo.html.

Further Reading