B2 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2021 Photos by Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Chuck Sams speaks to attendees at the ceremony celebrating the completion of the mural of George Fletcher in Pendleton. Mural pays tribute to ‘the people’s champion’ Fletcher competed in the Pendleton Round-Up By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON — Cow- boy George Fletcher rides again in Pendleton. A mural of Fletcher astride a bucking bronco at the Pendleton Round-Up has adorned a whitewashed wall near the intersection of Southwest Dorion Avenue and First Street since Sep- tember. But Travel Pendle- ton last week unveiled the latest tribute to the cow- boy, complete with tourism promoters, local govern- ment offi cials and organi- zations celebrating the art and its addition to the Ore- gon Mural Trail with a rib- bon cutting ceremony. A competitor at the famous 1911 Round-Up, Fletcher was never truly forgotten: The Pendleton Round-Up and Happy Can- yon Hall of Fame inducted him into its inaugural class in 1969, he was fi ctional- ized in Ken Kesey’s 1994 novel “Last Go Round” and his likeness was cast in bronze and erected on South Main Street in 2014. But his legacy was kept alive by the people who told his story as a part of oral history. Seeing as he is in the fi nal stages of the confi rma- tion process to become the next National Park Service director, Chuck Sams may have been the most high profi le speaker at the cer- emony. But Sams wasn’t there as a representative of the federal government, but as the immediate past presi- dent of the Oregon Cultural Trust. Sams, a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Res- ervation, also had stories about Fletcher to share. His grandfather was Fletcher’s contemporary and would tell stories of riding with Fletcher as they transported cattle or broke horses at the Sams’ ranch. Born in 1890 in Kan- Todd Davidson, CEO of Travel Oregon, speaks to attendees at the ceremony. sas, Fletcher, who was Black, moved to Pendle- ton as a child and learned to ride broncs on the Uma- tilla Indian Reservation while facing discrimination and racism from Pendleton residents. He entered the bronc riding competition at the Round-Up in 1911, mak- ing it all the way to fi nals. While Fletcher’s fi nal ride was a crowd favorite, the judges awarded fi rst place to white cowboy John Spain. Fletcher was quickly dubbed “the people’s cham- pion” and an impromptu fundraiser in the stands garnered him $700 for his eff orts. Fletcher remained in Pendleton until his death in 1973, although he stopped competing after he was injured in World War I. Fletcher’s story res- onated beyond Pendle- ton. Mariotta Gary-Smith, the chair of the Oregon Commission on Black Aff airs, went up to speak about her own grandfa- ther. Gary-Smith’s grandfa- ther migrated from the Deep South to Portland during the Jim Crow era. A huge rodeo fan, her grandfather would frequently take his family to the Round-Up and share stories about Fletcher. Those stories of the peo- ple’s champion made their way down to Gary-Smith’s mother and eventually Gary- Smith herself. It was some- thing on her mind when the Oregon Cultural Trust asked for ideas for its new license plate. The plate features a scenic Oregon vista, but on closer inspection, the scen- ery is composed of smaller pictures refl ective of the state’s culture and history. Gary-Smith submitted Fletcher, and she was pleas- antly surprised when she saw the fi nal design came out and Fletcher’s cowboy hat was near the top right hand corner, right under a wagon wheel signifying the Oregon Trail. Gary-Smith said she planned to take a picture of the mural to send to her mother. Travel Oregon CEO Todd Davidson said the mural was exactly what his organization had in mind for the next iteration of its “Only Slightly Exagger- ated” campaign. Davidson said the initial stages of the campaign focused heavily Family Holiday Workshops COMING TO CRMM REGISTRATION NOW OPEN Gyotaku/Nature Printing HOLIDAY FAMILY WORKSHOPS on Oregon’s natural beauty, but Travel Oregon now wants to shift its focus to people and communities. “We want these to be a point of community pride,” he said. The completion of the Join artist Duncan Berry to make your own holiday gifts for the season! DECEMBER 11 10:00AM - 12:00Noon OR 2:00PM - 4:00PM BARBEY MARITIME CENTER AT THE Details at https://www.crmm.org/youth--family.html mural means Pendleton is now a stop on Travel Ore- gon’s nine-city Oregon Mural Trail, which stretches from Gold Beach to Ontario. Travel Pendleton coordina- tor Kristen Dollarhide said the two agencies have been working together on the project for years. After securing funding from both travel agencies in addition to the Pendle- ton Foundation Trust, the Wildhorse Foundation and the Pendleton Arts Com- mittee, Dollarhide said they looked for mural sites all over town. They soon settled on the spot by the Old West Fed- eral Credit Union parking lot, which was desirable due to its close proximity to a busy street. The mural only takes up a small section of the long wall, an intentional move meant to make it eas- ier for people to take pic- tures by the art. If tourists fl ock to the mural like tourism promot- ers hope they do, it means Fletcher will be the back- ground of many more social media posts to come.