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Fayetta June “Faye” <I>Hudson</I> Blackstone

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Fayetta June “Faye” Hudson Blackstone

Birth
Diller, Jefferson County, Nebraska, USA
Death
30 Aug 2011 (aged 96)
Bradenton, Manatee County, Florida, USA
Burial
Parrish, Manatee County, Florida, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Faye Blackstone, Hall of Fame Honoree

Faye Blackstone, 96, of Parrish, died peacefully Tuesday morning after a brief illness. Mrs. Blackstone was the wife of the late Vick Blackstone. The famous cattle and rodeo couple had no children and only a few cousins left in Nebraska. Faye was inducted into the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame in 1982 and the Florida Agricultural Hall of Fame in 2004.

Services will be held Saturday, September 3rd, 2011 at the Parrish United Methodist Church starting with visitation at 10a and the service at 11a. Interment will be in the Fortner Cemetery. The ladies of the church will serve lunch in the church hall after the services. Pallbearers will be the members of the Manatee County Cattleman's Association.

In lieu of flowers donations will be accepted in Mrs. Blackstone's memory at the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame, 1720 Gendy Street Fort Worth, TX 76107-4064, 817-336-4475; Saint Jude Children's Research Hospital, 501 Saint Jude Place Memphis, TN 38105 and the Florida Junior Cattleman's Association, PO box 421929, Kissimmee, FL 34742-1929. Arrangements by Kicliter Funeral Home, 941-722-0204.

Published in The Herald on September 2, 2011
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Faye Blackstone, a rodeo trick rider who was elected to the Cowgirl Hall of Fame and was best known for her saddle-dangling signature move, the reverse fender drag, and who helped launch the career of country singer Reba McEntire, died Aug. 30 at a hospital in Bradenton, Fla.

She was 96 and had complications from cancer, said her great-niece Deanna Blackstone.

Mrs. Blackstone was 3 when she began riding horses on her family’s Nebraska ranch. She taught herself how to do tricks while riding her horse to school.

She and her late husband, Vic, a bow-legged bronc rider from Texas, married in 1937 on horseback in the center of a rodeo arena in Bladen, Neb. They performed on the rodeo circuit during the 1940s and ’50s. During that time, she also rode in a traveling show with Gene Autry and entertained crowds in New York’s Madison Square Garden and as far as Havana with her gymnastic feats.

Mrs. Blackstone could do headstands while her quarter horse galloped at full stride. She could drop down from the saddle, let her boots kick the arena dust and spin to the horse’s other side.

Diana Vela, the associate executive director of the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth, said that Mrs. Blackstone is credited with inventing three maneuvers: the flyaway, the ballerina and the reverse fender drag. For the latter, Mrs. Blackstone hung on to the lower left side of the saddle with her right leg and arm, extending her left leg and arm while her head bobbed by the horse’s haunches.

With the “horse going full speed,” Vela said, such a move required spectacular athleticism and a “great deal of horsemanship.”
Mrs. Blackstone said her innovations evolved because she was often among the last trick riders to perform at rodeos.
“You didn’t want to duplicate what they did,” she told the Tampa Tribune in 1989. “You wanted to do something special.”
Fayetta June Hudson was born June 3, 1915, in Diller, Neb. When she was 8, she watched as a female rider handled a bronco as the animal went berserk.

“The horse jumped over the fence and behind the grandstand,” Mrs. Blackstone told the Salt Lake Tribune in 1995. “She was riding that stuff with the greatest of ease. I thought, ‘Boy, I want to do that.’ ”

During the 1950s, the Blackstones settled outside Parrish, Fla., in Manatee County. There, Mrs. Blackstone and her husband arranged for the flame-haired daughter of some rodeo friends to get a spot performing at a local country fair in 1978. The young singer was Reba McEntire.

“That was my first big fair by myself,” McEntire told the Bradenton Herald in 2003. “It was huge to me.”
After Vic Blackstone retired in the early 1950s, he and Mrs. Blackstone worked cattle together on a sprawling ranch near their home. Mrs. Blackstone performed in rodeos into the 1960s.

Mrs. Blackstone was elected to the Cowgirl Hall of Fame in 1982, and her husband was elected to the Rodeo Hall of Fame the same year. He died in 1987. Mrs. Blackstone has no immediate survivors.

Unlike many trick riders, Mrs. Blackstone and her husband had the practical knowledge necessary for managing a large cattle herd.

“They knew cattle and knew about forages and grass and how to run a ranch,” said Jim Strickland, a longtime friend of the Blackstones and a past president of the Florida 1Cattlemen’s Association. “Faye was kind of a bundle of dynamite. Small, fearless and red-haired.”

She once stood on top of an elephant’s back for a circus act.

She told the St. Petersburg Times in 2002 about the experience: “Every time it trumpeted, my knees knocked.”

Written by T. Rees Shaprio for the Washington Post September 1, 2011
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Faye Blackstone (June 3, 1915 – August 30, 2011) was an American rodeo star, performer and elected member of the Cowgirl Hall of Fame.

She is credited with inventing three rodeo maneuvers, the reverse fender drag, the flyaway and the ballerina.

Blackstone was born Fayetta June Hudson in Diller, NE in 1915. She self taught herself to perform tricks on horses after watching a woman handle a flailing bronco when she was eight years old. In 1937, Blackstone married her husband, the Texan rodeo performer Vic Blackstone, in a ceremony held in the center of a rodeo arena in Bladen, NE. Faye and Vic performed together throughout the United States the 1940s and 1950s. She performed as far away from Nebraska as Havana, Cuba, and competed alongside well known celebrities, including Gene Autry.

Vic Blackstone retired during the 1950s, while Faye Blackstone continued to perform until her retirement during the late 1960s. The couple moved to a home on the outskirts of Parrish, FL, in Manatee County during the 1951. They worked and raised cattle at a nearby ranch.

In 1978, Blackstone and her husband helped McEntire, the daughter of friends, launch her career, by arranging for her to perform at a county fair in Florida. McEntire recalled the performance as a breakthrough in her career in a 2003 interview with the Bradenton Herald aying, "That was my first big fair by myself. It was huge to me."

Faye Blackstone was elected into the Cowgirl Hall of Fame in 1982, the same year that her husband was inducted into the Rodeo Hall of Fame. The Blackstones became the namsakes of Blackstone Park in Palmetto, FL.
Faye Blackstone, Hall of Fame Honoree

Faye Blackstone, 96, of Parrish, died peacefully Tuesday morning after a brief illness. Mrs. Blackstone was the wife of the late Vick Blackstone. The famous cattle and rodeo couple had no children and only a few cousins left in Nebraska. Faye was inducted into the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame in 1982 and the Florida Agricultural Hall of Fame in 2004.

Services will be held Saturday, September 3rd, 2011 at the Parrish United Methodist Church starting with visitation at 10a and the service at 11a. Interment will be in the Fortner Cemetery. The ladies of the church will serve lunch in the church hall after the services. Pallbearers will be the members of the Manatee County Cattleman's Association.

In lieu of flowers donations will be accepted in Mrs. Blackstone's memory at the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame, 1720 Gendy Street Fort Worth, TX 76107-4064, 817-336-4475; Saint Jude Children's Research Hospital, 501 Saint Jude Place Memphis, TN 38105 and the Florida Junior Cattleman's Association, PO box 421929, Kissimmee, FL 34742-1929. Arrangements by Kicliter Funeral Home, 941-722-0204.

Published in The Herald on September 2, 2011
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Faye Blackstone, a rodeo trick rider who was elected to the Cowgirl Hall of Fame and was best known for her saddle-dangling signature move, the reverse fender drag, and who helped launch the career of country singer Reba McEntire, died Aug. 30 at a hospital in Bradenton, Fla.

She was 96 and had complications from cancer, said her great-niece Deanna Blackstone.

Mrs. Blackstone was 3 when she began riding horses on her family’s Nebraska ranch. She taught herself how to do tricks while riding her horse to school.

She and her late husband, Vic, a bow-legged bronc rider from Texas, married in 1937 on horseback in the center of a rodeo arena in Bladen, Neb. They performed on the rodeo circuit during the 1940s and ’50s. During that time, she also rode in a traveling show with Gene Autry and entertained crowds in New York’s Madison Square Garden and as far as Havana with her gymnastic feats.

Mrs. Blackstone could do headstands while her quarter horse galloped at full stride. She could drop down from the saddle, let her boots kick the arena dust and spin to the horse’s other side.

Diana Vela, the associate executive director of the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth, said that Mrs. Blackstone is credited with inventing three maneuvers: the flyaway, the ballerina and the reverse fender drag. For the latter, Mrs. Blackstone hung on to the lower left side of the saddle with her right leg and arm, extending her left leg and arm while her head bobbed by the horse’s haunches.

With the “horse going full speed,” Vela said, such a move required spectacular athleticism and a “great deal of horsemanship.”
Mrs. Blackstone said her innovations evolved because she was often among the last trick riders to perform at rodeos.
“You didn’t want to duplicate what they did,” she told the Tampa Tribune in 1989. “You wanted to do something special.”
Fayetta June Hudson was born June 3, 1915, in Diller, Neb. When she was 8, she watched as a female rider handled a bronco as the animal went berserk.

“The horse jumped over the fence and behind the grandstand,” Mrs. Blackstone told the Salt Lake Tribune in 1995. “She was riding that stuff with the greatest of ease. I thought, ‘Boy, I want to do that.’ ”

During the 1950s, the Blackstones settled outside Parrish, Fla., in Manatee County. There, Mrs. Blackstone and her husband arranged for the flame-haired daughter of some rodeo friends to get a spot performing at a local country fair in 1978. The young singer was Reba McEntire.

“That was my first big fair by myself,” McEntire told the Bradenton Herald in 2003. “It was huge to me.”
After Vic Blackstone retired in the early 1950s, he and Mrs. Blackstone worked cattle together on a sprawling ranch near their home. Mrs. Blackstone performed in rodeos into the 1960s.

Mrs. Blackstone was elected to the Cowgirl Hall of Fame in 1982, and her husband was elected to the Rodeo Hall of Fame the same year. He died in 1987. Mrs. Blackstone has no immediate survivors.

Unlike many trick riders, Mrs. Blackstone and her husband had the practical knowledge necessary for managing a large cattle herd.

“They knew cattle and knew about forages and grass and how to run a ranch,” said Jim Strickland, a longtime friend of the Blackstones and a past president of the Florida 1Cattlemen’s Association. “Faye was kind of a bundle of dynamite. Small, fearless and red-haired.”

She once stood on top of an elephant’s back for a circus act.

She told the St. Petersburg Times in 2002 about the experience: “Every time it trumpeted, my knees knocked.”

Written by T. Rees Shaprio for the Washington Post September 1, 2011
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Faye Blackstone (June 3, 1915 – August 30, 2011) was an American rodeo star, performer and elected member of the Cowgirl Hall of Fame.

She is credited with inventing three rodeo maneuvers, the reverse fender drag, the flyaway and the ballerina.

Blackstone was born Fayetta June Hudson in Diller, NE in 1915. She self taught herself to perform tricks on horses after watching a woman handle a flailing bronco when she was eight years old. In 1937, Blackstone married her husband, the Texan rodeo performer Vic Blackstone, in a ceremony held in the center of a rodeo arena in Bladen, NE. Faye and Vic performed together throughout the United States the 1940s and 1950s. She performed as far away from Nebraska as Havana, Cuba, and competed alongside well known celebrities, including Gene Autry.

Vic Blackstone retired during the 1950s, while Faye Blackstone continued to perform until her retirement during the late 1960s. The couple moved to a home on the outskirts of Parrish, FL, in Manatee County during the 1951. They worked and raised cattle at a nearby ranch.

In 1978, Blackstone and her husband helped McEntire, the daughter of friends, launch her career, by arranging for her to perform at a county fair in Florida. McEntire recalled the performance as a breakthrough in her career in a 2003 interview with the Bradenton Herald aying, "That was my first big fair by myself. It was huge to me."

Faye Blackstone was elected into the Cowgirl Hall of Fame in 1982, the same year that her husband was inducted into the Rodeo Hall of Fame. The Blackstones became the namsakes of Blackstone Park in Palmetto, FL.

Inscription

NATIONAL COWBOY
HALL OF FAME
1982
HONOREE
HEREFORD, TEXAS
MARRIED Aug 27 1937



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