CHIEF JOSEPH DAYS Wallowa.com Wednesday, July 28, 2021 B3 Memories ride with CJD royalty for life By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain JOSEPH — It may seem fl eeting, but being a member or rodeo royalty is an expe- rience that goes with a girl through young womanhood and into her later years, even lasting a lifetime. That’s certainly the case with members of past Chief Joseph Days Rodeo courts. The rodeo began in 1946 when founder Har- ley Tucker got it going near his ranch three miles out- side of Joseph, his daughter, Darlene Turner said. Unlike today, it was fi rst held on the East Moraine. “He just drove the horses up there,” Turner said of her father. “I was only a little kid when all this happened.” Senior royalty Members of a CJD Rodeo court from the furthest back the Chieftain was able to locate included former Prin- cess Marian Mawhin Birk- maier, who lives just outside of Joseph, and Ruby Mallon Zollman. Other members of the 1949 court were Queen Beverly Oliver Graham, who is now dead, and Prin- cess Diane Snoderly, who was unavailable. Birkmaier, who will be 90 in September, recalls ser- vice on the court to be sim- pler in 1949. “We didn’t have any rid- ing trials and no speeches,” she said. “We didn’t have to do anything at the rodeo other than the grand entry.” She and the other court members often appeared in regional parades, but since the Joseph Chamber of Commerce was hurting for money, they couldn’t take their horses and they rode in a convertible. “It was exciting, time-consuming and I made a lifetime friendship with Ruby.” She recalled that well- known Hollywood character actor Walter Brennan had an important part in starting the Chief Joseph Days. “He had a big ranch near Imnaha and wanted to pro- mote Joseph and the rodeo,” Birkmeier said. “It was a fun time and an exciting time. It was something we hadn’t experienced before.” She also recalled the dif- ferences in then and now. “We were raised in an older time. We all had horses. We were an older generation,” she said. “I can remember my dad haying with horses. … Later on, the tractors came. … We weren’t the expert horsewomen that the girls are now. We had no 4-H or anything. I rode horses to school at Alder Slope country school for eight years.” But she didn’t dare ride her horse to high school. “That would be an insult to ride a horse to high school,” she said. “My dad would take me and then I’d walk home.” Since her reign, Birk- meier fi nished high school in 1949 in Enterprise, attended Eastern Oregon College and then came home to marry Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Marian Mawhin Birkmaier, a princess in the 1949 Chief Joseph Days Rodeo court, stands in the shadow of Mount Joseph with her high school sweetheart and husband of 68 years, Mack Birkmaier. Contributed Photo The 1949 Chief Joseph Days Rodeo court included, at front, Queen Beverly Oliver Graham and in back, from left, Princesses Ruby Mallon Zollman, Diane Snoderly and Marian Mawhin Birkmaier. Crow Creek rancher Mack Birkmeier. “This guy was my high school sweetheart. We had our fi rst date in 1946 but didn’t marry until 1953,” she said. “We’ve been ranching ever since. That’s where he took me as a bride and I’ve been a rancher’s wife ever since.” They have two sons and a daughter, as well as nine grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. The youngest son, Tom, runs the ranch. Zollman, who is now 89, served with Birkmaier as a princess in 1949. “In ’49, the chamber didn’t have a court and at last minute decided they had to have one,” she said. As a result of the last-minute decision, they didn’t have usual rivalry, but got the high schools in Wal- lowa, Lostine, Enterprise and Joseph to have their own rivalries. She won at Joseph High School. Contestants sold tickets for a dance. She said there usually were three dances then. “They got more money from that one dance than they usually got for three dances,” Zollman said. After serving on the court, the court was given a plane ride from the Joseph Airport — quite an adven- ture for 1949. That year also was the fi rst year Brennan chartered a plane from Joseph to Lew- iston and Spokane for the court. Brennan did that for a couple years, Zollman said. Brennan also garnered nationwide publicity for the area by fl ying the winner of the old radio and television show “Queen for a Day” to Joseph. Zollman married Mar- lin “Bud” Zollman, with whom she had three sons, fi ve grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. The Zollmans ran a meat market in Enterprise and were part- ners in meat market/slaugh- terhouse in Joseph, as well as running Bud’s Hardware (now Joseph Hardware) for 29 years. She stayed involved with the court for quite a while, helping with the queen’s lun- cheon for several years and riding in the CJD parades until about 20 years ago. The queen from furthest back the Chieftain could contact was Barbara Roun- savell Lamoreaux, who reigned in 1952. She was interviewed in early July and had hoped to attend this year’s rodeo, but she died July 12 at 86. “At the time, one of my best girlfriends from Wal- lowa was in it,” Lamoreaux said. “I was chosen and she wasn’t. It didn’t aff ect our friendship, but I felt bad.” A queen at just 17, she graduated from Wallowa High School in 1953. “I’d been riding ever since I was a child. I rode all the time,” she said. “It was exciting for me and the audi- ence. The afternoon of the grand entry, the girls came in from the front of the (Har- ley Tucker) arena and they rode in from the far corner. They opened the gate and the horse reared. She didn’t fall, but normally she didn’t do that.” Lamoreaux recalled the CJD court included an hon- orary Indian Princess Patti Murphy, who was later Queen of the West at Mad- ison Square Garden in New York City. “She had the most beau- tiful black hair and voice,” Lamoreaux said. “If there ever was a queen, I thought Patti should’ve been it.” After her time on the CJD court, Lamoreaux worked as a switchboard operator fi rst See Royalty, Page B4 Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Ruby Mallon Zollman holds memorabilia from her time as a princess for the 1949 Chief Joseph Days Rodeo. 75 years of Award-Winning Rodeo See you at the Chief Joseph Day Celebrations ODFW ODFW License Agent License Agent Fencing • Clothing • Automotive • Purina Feed • Pet Food & Supplies • Tack • Animal Health • Livestock Equipment • Lawn & Garden • Plumbing & Electrical • Hunting & Camping Supplies Fencing • Clothing • Automotive • Purina Feed Pet Food & Supplies • Tack • Animal Health Livestock Equipment • Lawn & Garden Plumbing & Electrical • Hunting & Camping Supplies 7 Days A Week! 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