6 U N I V E R S I T Y O F T E X A S P R E S S | S P R I N G 2 0 2 4 SARAH BIRD austin, texas Bird is the author of eleven novels and three books of essays, includ- ing Last Dance on the Starlight Pier and A Love Letter to Texas Women. She is also a journalist, two-time Texas Institute of Letters award winner, Dobie Paisano Fellow, and member of the Texas Literary Hall of Fame. DEMETRIUS W. PEARSON houston, texas Pearson is an associate professor of health and human performance at the University of Houston. His research focuses on sports history, and he is the author of Black Rodeo in the Texas Gulf Coast Region. the m.k. brown range life endowment release date | JUNE 10 x 10 inches, 128 pages, 80 b&w photos ISBN 978-1-4773-2954-2 $45.00 | £40.00 | C$55.95 hardcover ISBN 978-1-4773-2955-9 $45.00 PDF e-book Long before Americans began to officially commemo- rate Juneteenth, in the heat of East Texas, saddles were being cinched, buckles shined, and lassoes limbered up for a day on the Black rodeo circuit in honor of the holiday. In the late 1970s, as they had been doing for generations, Black communities across the region held local rodeos for the talented cowboys and cow- girls who were segregated from the mainstream circuit. It was to these vibrant community events that bestselling Texas writer Sarah Bird, then a young photojournalist, found herself drawn. In Juneteenth Rodeo, Bird’s lens celebrates a world that was undervalued at the time, capturing everything, from the moment the pit master fired up his smoker, through the death-defying rides, to the last celebratory dance at a nearby honky-tonk. Es- says by Bird and sports historian Demetrius Pearson reclaim the crucial role of Black Americans in the Western US and show modern rodeo riders—who still compete on today’s circuit— as “descendants” in a more than two-hundred-year lineage of Black cowboys. A gorgeous tribute to the ropers and riders—leg- ends like Myrtis Dightman, Rufus Green, Bailey’s Prairie Kid, Archie Wycoff, and Calvin Greeley—as well as the secretaries, judges, and pick-up men, and especially the audience members who were as much family as fans, Juneteenth Rodeo fills a void in the historical record and puts Black cowboys and cowgirls where they always belonged: at the center of the frame. Juneteenth Rodeo P H O T O S A N D E S S A Y B Y S A R A H B I R D A F T E R W O R D B Y D E M E T R I U S W. P E A R S O N Timeless photos offer a rare portrait of the jubilant, vibrant, vital, and now all-but- vanished world of small-town Black rodeos | t e x a s : p h o t o g r a p h y | Black Studies