Cowboy Journal v22n2

Page 50

A TRUE TRAILBLAZER Alumnus leads others in the sport of rodeo

he rolling hills of Payne County, Oklahoma, are a far cry from the towering buildings in bustling Stamford, Connecticut, but if you ask Bud Bramwell, National Finals Rodeo first ever Forgotten Trailblazers Award winner, he will tell you these hills are his home. Growing up in Stamford, Bramwell led a typical life for a child in the city, he said. “We played football in the streets, we roller skated, nobody locked their doors,” Bramwell said. “Times were good back then.” Before Bramwell held reins in his hands he always wanted to be a cowboy, which was not normal for an inner-city kid in the northeast, he said. “When we were about 10 or 11 years old, I started horseback riding with my mother, dad and two sisters,” Bramwell said. “We took English riding lessons, and I was the only one in the family who kept it up.” Riding horses with his family 50 | COWBOY JOURNAL

ignited a passion, he said, and he became fascinated with cowboys he saw on TV. “There were a couple guys in Connecticut who went to Arizona and lived out there about a year,” Bramwell said. “They came back and bought a place in upstate Connecticut. We would go up there every week, and they would charge you 25 cents to run a calf. They started us and helped us learn how to rope.” The desire to lead the cowboy lifestyle was ultimately what drove Bramwell to leave his home state and venture south to the plains, he said. “I knew I wanted to come out here, to Oklahoma, and be a cowboy,” Bramwell said. Although he was accepted by the University of the Philippines and by Tuskegee University in Alabama, Bramwell chose to come to the plains on a rodeo scholarship to Oklahoma State University, Bramwell said. “School at OSU was good,” said

Bramwell. “Walt Garrison, an AllAmerican Cowboy football player, was in school then. He used to rope with us every day.” An animal science graduate of 1963 and a resident of Stillwater since then, Bramwell has seen many innovations and changes take place at OSU. “Stillwater has changed a lot,” Bramwell said. “None of the buildings had air conditioning in them when I went to school.” Even after Bramwell graduated from OSU, he continued to be involved with the rodeo program of his alma mater by practicing with the rodeo team members at his personal arena, said CR Bradley, a former OSU Rodeo Team member. “For two years, I roped with him almost every day of the week,” Bradley said. “I took all my classes in the morning, and then I would rope with him all afternoon almost every day.” Mentoring a younger generation is a reason Bramwell is so well respected


Articles inside

Moving Closer to Home

1min
page 67

For the Love of Plants

1min
page 57

A Family Investment

1min
page 45

Two Generations of 4-H Passion

1min
page 41

A Heart for Food

2min
page 37

A Cooperative Effort

2min
page 33

A Tale of Two Doctors

1min
page 21

A Journey Ferguson College of Agriculture names the 2019-20 Outstanding Senior of Success

4min
pages 68-71

Project Sustainability

3min
pages 55-57

A Lesson to Hold

4min
pages 43-45

Beyond the Boots

2min
page 25

In the Midst of Change

3min
page 5

A Small Brown Invader

3min
pages 58-59

Aim High

4min
pages 60-63

Renewing Rural Oklahoma

6min
pages 64-67

A True Trailblazer

5min
pages 50-57

Collaborating Progress

6min
pages 38-45

Climbing the Ranks

5min
pages 46-49

Bon Appétit

6min
pages 34-37

Fostering Leaders

4min
pages 30-33

Legacy

5min
pages 18-22

Preparing for the Big Reveal

5min
pages 15-16

Agriculture is...

3min
pages 23-27

Just Call Mary Ellen

3min
pages 28-29

Embarking on New Frontiers

7min
pages 10-14

One Family. One Vision

4min
pages 6-9
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