Showing posts with label girls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label girls. Show all posts

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Girls of Early California by Anne Schroeder



Hi, Thanks for having me. My name is Anne Schroeder and I’ve spent most of my life living around the California Missions that sit beside El Camino Real, The King’s Highway, a former wagon track that brought Padre Junipero Serra and his motley crew of soldiers and brave families from Spain.

Life in early California was clearly a guy’s thing. Back in the day, a true caballero, a highborn Spaniard man, didn’t do anything he couldn’t manage from the back of a horse. Women rode side saddle, with huge skirts that frightened their mares. There were two kinds of Spanish horsewomen: Experts and dead.

Spanish papas trotted out their daughters at 14 to bat their eyelashes over the tops of their fans at eligible bachelors. But no kissing allowed! Once Papa arranged a marriage, the bride’s job was to start producing a family. Sisters competed against sister to see who was the most fertile and each couple often produced 24 or more children. Starting early was the key. Sixteen was considered a spinster. Too much education was thought to weaken the body, so girls weren’t taught to read or even to sign their names.

El Camino Real crawled with wild and licentious men looking for opportunity. Soldiers carried disease from the brothels and prisons of Mexico City. Later, starving Yanqui gold miners ransacked the land. Indian girls were the only available females.

As was done to protect the señoritas in their homeland, the Padres built a rectangular room called a monjerio. Indian girls were taken from their families at age 8 and taught to conduct themselves like “little Spaniards,” and to prepare themselves for marriage. When a girl received a proposal of marriage, she left and took up married life in a small apartment or a tule hut with her husband. If she never married, she remained in the monjerio and taught the younger girls.

The girls were locked inside each night. The Padre kept the key, usually under his pillow so that no one had access until the maestra led the girls to morning prayers. The maestra was a Spanish woman of good virtue, a wife of one of the soldiers, who never let the girls out of her sight. She spent her days overseeing these girls and teaching them to cook, sew, spin, clean, hoe, wash clothes and keep their bodies immaculate.

The adobe rooms of the monjerio had high adobe walls and usually only a single window for young Indian men to stand outside until the girl made up her mind about him. This could take several visits while she tested his sincerity. The room was crowded and often smelled like a stable, but the suite usually had a patio with shade trees and a fountain. Mission Santa Barbara’s was 47 feet by 19 feet and held from 100-150 girls.
  
Maria Ines, my newly released historical fiction, tells the story of a Salinan Indian girl from Mission San Miguel Arcángel. She witnesses the political intrigue and greed of Spanish, Mexican and Yanqui invaders who plunder California, destroying everything she loves. She struggles to survive while she reclaims her family, her faith and her ancestral identity. You can request that your local library order a copy. My publisher, Gale/Cengage sells to the library market as well as in bookstores and online. http://anneschroederauthor.com/   or  http://anneschroederauthor.blogspot.com/


Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Pikes Peak Rangerettes

Spencer Penrose
Spencer Penrose is synonymous with Colorado Springs. A man of great insight, he was valuable in shaping the city and building it up for tourism. Among his many accomplishments was his teaming with Charles Leaming Tutt and Jasper Ackerman to found three organizations: the Colorado Rodeo Associations (CSRA), the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA), and Norris-Penrose Event Center. Penrose is also credited with bringing the first rodeo to Colorado Springs after the city enjoyed much success in 1936 with its Pikes Peak or Bust Days.

The first rodeo was held in July 1937 at the Cheyenne Mountain Polo Field. The stadium could only seat 500 people, so Penrose built the Will Rogers Memorial Stadium to house 10,000 people on the west side of the Broadmoor Hotel. In August of 1938, the stadium was dedicated and hosted the Pikes Peak or Bust Rodeo. Tutt and Ackerman helped to promote the rodeo, and after World War 11, the rodeo was dedicated to the men and women who gave their lives during the War. The tradition of honoring and supporting the military continues to this day, with the rodeo now being held at the Norris-Penrose Event Center. 


Pikes Peak Rangerettes
Of the many acts designed to entertain the crowd while the cowboys prepare for their events is the Pikes Peak Rangerettes. The Rangerettes were founded in 1957 to promote the rodeo. They are an all-girl precision riding team (think the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes on horseback), and a spectacular sight to see. Ranging in age from 12-20, the girls gallop and canter around the arena in groups of two or four, weaving in and out of each other in intricate steps meant to dazzle and delight the crowd. The Rangerettes also ride in the Pikes Peak or Bust Parade and perform at other local rodeos and county fairs, encouraging unity, responsibility, self-improvement and enjoyment of horse-related activities. 

The Rangerettes standing at attention as the rodeo begins
To become a Rangerette, the girls must meet several criteria. The first is she must own or have access to one specific horse. She is also responsible for the care and transportation of her horse to and from events. Besides practicing several hours per week with the team, each girl must also practice at home. Members of the Rangerettes are required to pay dues, provide her own saddle and tack, boots, belt and hat, and must take exceptional care of the uniforms provided. Personality traits include good attitude, commitment and responsibility to herself and to the group and each must prove efficient in horsemanship.

The Rangerettes are a group of 20. Should they have more young ladies trying out, there is a waiting list. This summer alone the girls have given their time to help out with local charity events, such as the National Western Stock Show where they gave inner city kids with good grade rides on their horses. These young women are true ambassadors to the west and will take your breath away when you watch them perform.
Rangerettes at the PPOB Rodeo July 2014