S. Omar Barker - Fort Worth Stockyards - Fort Worth, TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuarrellaDeVil
N 32° 47.319 W 097° 20.948
14S E 654592 N 3629064
Cowboy poet and author S. Omar Barker is honored with a star on the Texas Trail of Fame in the Fort Worth Stockyards, Fort Worth, TX.
Waymark Code: WM11638
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 08/22/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member iconions
Views: 1

Mr. Barker's star is located on the east side of N Main St, just south of E Exchange Ave, and it reads:

Texas Trail of Fame
S. Omar Barker
Cowboy Poet and Author
Fort Worth Stockyards

The Texas Trail of Fame website has a photo of Mr. Barker, as well as this short biography, which looks a lot like his Wikipedia page (see Website, below):

Omar Barker – Cowboy Poet and Author (1894–1985) - an oft-recited cowboy poet was born in a log cabin in New Mexico where he lived his entire life as a rancher, teacher and writer. He published many books, including Vientos de las Sierras (1924), Buckaroo Ballads (1928) and Rawhide Rhymes: Singing Poems of the Old West (Doubleday, 1968).

Barker was a state legislator and a newspaper correspondent. He began writing and selling stories, articles, and poems as early as 1914 and became a full-time writer at the end of his legislative term in 1925. He once estimated his career output at about 1,500 short stories and novelettes, about 1,200 factual articles, about 2,000 poems. They appeared in a broad range of publications from pulp magazines to such prestigious slicks as Saturday Evening Post and a varied array of general newspapers and magazines. He produced five volumes of poetry, one book of short stories and one novel, Little World Apart, as well as one western cookbook with Carol Truax. He was even a co-writer for one episode of the TV western "Sugarfoot" in 1957.

The work probably best known to the general public was his poem, “A Cowboy's Christmas Prayer," which has been printed more than one hundred times, recorded by Tennessee Ernie Ford and Jimmy Dean, and plagiarized more than once. He won the Western Writers of America Spur Award twice and was the 1967 recipient of the Levi Strauss Saddleman Award for bringing honor and dignity to the Western legend. In 1975 he was named an honorary president of WWA, of which he was one of the founding fathers and an early president. Elsa also served a term as president. In 1978 he was the first living author to be inducted into the Hall of Fame of Great Westerners in the National Cowboy Hall of Fame, Oklahoma City. He often signed his books with his initials and trademark brand, "Lazy SOB."

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About the Texas Trail of Fame, established in 1997:

Celebrating Texas culture and our western heritage, The Texas Trail of Fame was established to honor those individuals who have made a significant contribution to our Western way of life. Throughout the walkways of the Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District, bronze inlaid markers have been placed in recognition of their achievements. These markers are patterned after a frontier marshal's badge and are inscribed with the honoree's name.

It is the desire of the Texas Trail of Fame that reflecting upon these Westerners's accomplishments will serve as both an educational adventure for the visitor and an inspiration.

Website with more information on either the memorial or the person(s) it is dedicated to: [Web Link]

Location: Fort Worth Stockyards

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