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“Powder River, Let ‘er Buck”

“Powder River, Let ‘er Buck”
By
Phil Roberts
Professor of History, University of Wyoming  

Former UW football coach Joe Glenn (2003-08) often repeated the familiar mantra “Powder River, Let ‘er Buck,” as an expression indicating resolve—“we’re going to go out and do this task successfully, whatever the obstacles.”  The derivation of the expression was debated as long ago as the 1920s because it had been used frequently by American soldiers in World War I. A succession of veterans assumed it had origins in their respective home states—not all of them from Wyoming.

According to an old-time Wyoming cowboy who wrote about the origins of the expression in Annals of Wyoming, the term first gained notice in central Wyoming—right where you’d expect—along the banks of the Powder River. In the winter of 1928-29, the Annals editor asked Edward J. Farlow of Lander, a well-known former mayor of Lander and state legislator, to tell the story in order to resolve the question that “has been revived by an eastern publication.”

Here’s how Farlow explained the origins in “Powder River, Let ‘er Buck: Famous World War Slogan Came from Lips of One Missouri Bill,” in Annals of Wyoming, January 1929:

“In the fall of 1893, the L outfit, Four Jay, Horse-collar and IX outfits pooled their herds of 1,600 beef steers and dry cows to be driven to the railroad and shipped east to market at the Double Dives, on the south side of the Big Wind River, just south of where the town of Riverton now stands…. When this roundup was over, the beef bearing the brands I mentioned above were all put in one herd, and the outfit shaped up for the long drive to the railroad. This time to Casper, as we had never shipped from Casper before, and this was our first trip and the trail was new to all of the cowboys, but myself.”

The outfit consisted of eight cowboys, one cook, one horse wrangler, and Farlow who was boss of the outfit. As Farlow pointed out, usually the herds were taken south to Rawlins to the train, and sometimes to Medicine Bow. But this time, it was to Casper.

“None of them had ever seen Powder River and they were all excited. In the morning when they were catching horses for the day, I called out to them to get their swimming horses as we were going to cross Powder River several times before night. Missouri Bill, who already roped his horse, turned him loose, muttering that ‘this damn buckskin couldn’t even wade a river.’

“About 10 o’clock the lead of the herd reached the river and it was almost dry, the water standing in holes and barely running from one hole to the other. The herd followed down the stream for a distance of about two miles before they were watered, and we crossed it many times.

“When Missouri Bill saw it, he looked at it very seriously for some time, and then said, ‘So this is Powder River,’ and that night in camp he told us he had heard of Powder River and now he had seen Powder River, and he kept referring to Powder River nearly every day until we reached Casper, which we did in 28 days.

“In the evening before we were going to load for shipping, and the cattle were all bedded down near the stockyards, the boys all adjourned to the saloon for a social drink, and Missouri Bill said, ‘Boys, come and have a drink on me; I have crossed Powder River.’ They had the drinks and a few more and were getting pretty sociable.

“When Missouri Bill again ordered, he said to the boys, ‘have another drink on me; I swam Powder River,’ this time with a distinct emphasis on the words ‘Powder River.’ ‘Yes, sir, by `Powder River,’ a little stronger emphasis. When the drinks were all set up, he said, ‘Well here’s to Powder River, Let ‘er Buck.’….

The slogan was shouted louder and louder along with other similar references to the stream, very tiny most the year where the cowboys had crossed it en route to Casper.

As Farlow concluded his story, “that is the first time I ever heard the slogan, and from there it went around the world. Farlow added that “Missouri Bill’s name was William Shultz and I have not heard of him for more than 20 years. He was a good cow hand and while here he worked for the L Outfit most of the time.”

Heard frequently in the Powder River country, the term apparently was not generally used elsewhere in the state. Eventually, however, the phrase became associated with the University of Wyoming, probably as a result of returning soldiers from World War I and Powder River Basin students repeating the phrase.

In the late 1920s, competition was announced for a school “fight song” for UW.  The winning entry, written by Lorna Simpson, wife of Milward Simpson (later, a UW trustee, governor and U. S. Senator), included the words, “Powder River, Let ‘er Buck.” (The song was sung at the dedication ceremonies for the Simpson Family Plaza on the UW campus in September 2006).

Coach Glenn  re-popularized the phrase, but many others followed, even after the coach’s departure from UW in 2008. Long-time students and faculty are re-introducing Wyoming students (and younger state residents) to a commonly used expression of resolve dating from the days of the range cowboys in the early statehood period.

Phil Roberts, “Powder River, Let ‘er Buck.” Professor of History, University of Wyoming    

Learn more about the phrase “Power River, Let ‘er Buck,” Professor Phil Roberts and Wyoming. 

University of Wyoming History Resources

Deborah Hardy, Wyoming University: The first 100 years 1886-1986 (Laramie, Wyoming: University of Wyoming, 1986)

T.A. Larson, History of Wyoming (University of Nebraska Press, 1978)

Rick Ewing and Tamsen Hert, University of Wyoming (Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing, 2012)

Union Pacific Expedition Members, Fossil Discoveries in Wyoming (Omaha, Nebraska, Triple R Press, 1909)

Charlie Peterson and the Laramie Plains Museum, Laramie – Images of America (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2007)

Faculty of University of Wyoming, In Memoriam; Grace Raymond Hebard, 1861-1936 (Laramie, Wyoming: University of Wyoming, June 1937)

Mike Mackey, Inventing History in the American West (Casper, Wyoming: Mountain States Lithographing, 2005)

Wyoming State Archives, accessed February 2014 – October 2014, wyoarchives.state.wy.us

American Heritage Center (at the U. of Wyoming), accessed January 2014 – November 2014,   www.uwyo.edu/ahc, http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/digital.html

University of Wyoming, accessed, March 2014 – September 2014, www.uwyo.edu/anniversaries/history-of-uw

Wyoming Tales and Trails, accessed February 2014 – November 2014, www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com

Wyoming Territorial Prison Museum, accessed June 2014 – August 2014, www.wyoparks.state.wy.us/Site/SiteInfo.aspx?siteID=33

History of Laramie Commerce Resources

Mary Kay Mason, Book Project Director, Laramie, Gem City of the Plains (Curtis Media Corporation, 1987)

T.A. Larson, History of Wyoming (University of Nebraska Press, 1978)

Lola M. Homsher, The History of Albany County, Wyoming to 1880 (Lusk, Wyoming: Privately Published, 1965)

Charlie Peterson and the Laramie Plains Museum, Laramie – Images of America (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2007)

Wyoming State Archives, accessed February 2014 – October 2014, wyoarchives.state.wy.us

American Heritage Center (at the U. of Wyoming), accessed January 2014 – November 2014,   www.uwyo.edu/ahc, http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/digital.html

University of Wyoming, accessed March 2014 – September 2014, www.uwyo.edu/anniversaries/history-of-uw

Laramie Plains Museum, accessed February 2014 – August 2014, www.laramiemuseum.org

Wyoming Tales and Trails, accessed February 2014 – November 2014, www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com

Wyoming Territorial Prison Museum, accessed June 2014 – August 2014, www.wyoparks.state.wy.us/Site/SiteInfo.aspx?siteID=33

Peter Baumann, ‘Fire Destroys ‘Ice House,’ The Laramie Boomerang, February 20, 2009

Jerry Hanson, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, Laramie Plains Museum, January 2014 – October 2014

Sharlene Castle, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, April 2014 – September 2014

Judy Knight, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, June – September 2014

Ranching in Wyoming Resources

T.A. Larson, History of Wyoming (University of Nebraska Press, 1978)

Mary Kay Mason, Book Project Director, Laramie, Gem City of the Plains (Curtis Media Corporation, 1987)

Lola M. Homsher, The History of Albany County, Wyoming to 1880 (Lusk, Wyoming: Privately Published, 1965)

Robert Hower Burns, Wyoming’s Pioneer Ranches (Laramie, Wyoming, Top-of-the-World-Press, 1955)

Charlie Peterson and the Laramie Plains Museum, Laramie – Images of America (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2007)

Wyoming State Historical Society, accessed August 2014, www.wyshs.org

Wyoming State Archives, accessed February 2014 – October 2014, wyoarchives.state.wy.us

Buffalo Bill Center of the West, accessed July 2014, www.centerofthewest.org

American Heritage Center (at the U. of Wyoming), accessed January 2014 – November 2014,   www.uwyo.edu/ahc, http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/digital.html

Wyoming Tales and Trails, accessed February 2014 – November 2014, www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com

Annals of Wyoming, accessed June 2014 – October 2014, www.archive.org/search.php?query=annals%20of%20wyoming

Albany County Cattlewoman (nee. Cow Belle’s), accessed April 2014 – November 2014, https://www.facebook.com/wyalbanycountycattlewomen

Jerry Hanson, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, Laramie Plains Museum, January 2014 – October 2014

Sharlene Castle, Interviews by Deborah Linden, In Person, Laramie, Wyoming, April 2014 – September 2014

The Rodeo Resources

T.A. Larson, History of Wyoming (University of Nebraska Press, 1978)

Mary Kay Mason, Book Project Director, Laramie, Gem City of the Plains (Curtis Media Corporation, 1987)

Elizabeth Alwood Lawrence, Rodeo: An anthropologist looks at the Wild and Tame (Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press, 1982) Chapter 3

Candy Vyvey Moulton and Flossie Moulton, Steamboat: Legendary Bucking Horse (Glendo, Wyoming: High Plains Press, 1992)

Wyoming State Archives, accessed February 2014 – October 2014, wyoarchives.state.wy.us

Buffalo Bill Center of the West, accessed July 2014, www.centerofthewest.org

American Heritage Center (at the U. of Wyoming), accessed January 2014 – November 2014,   www.uwyo.edu/ahc, http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/digital.html 

University of Wyoming, accessed, March 2014 – September 2014, www.uwyo.edu/anniversaries/history-of-uw

Wyoming Tales and Trails, accessed February 2014 – November 2014, www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com

Leisure in Laramie Resources

Mary Kay Mason, Book Project Director, Laramie, Gem City of the Plains (Curtis Media Corporation, 1987)

Lola M. Homsher, The History of Albany County, Wyoming to 1880 (Lusk, Wyoming: Privately Published, 1965)

Charlie Peterson and the Laramie Plains Museum, Laramie – Images of America (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2007)

Gladys B. Beery, The Front Streets of Laramie City (Laramie, Wyoming: Albany Seniors, Inc., 1990)

T.A. Larson, History of Wyoming (University of Nebraska Press, 1978)

Jerry Hanson, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, Laramie Plains Museum, January 2014 – October 2014

John Spiegelberg, Interview by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, June 2014

Charlie Peterson, Interview by Deborah Linden and Bella Pope. Phone Interview, Laramie, Wyoming, June 2014

Ann Boelter, Interview by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, July 2014, September 2014

Dick Van Pelt, Interview by Deborah Linden and Bella Pope. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, June 2014

Judy Knight, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, June – September 2014

Wyoming Tales and Trails, accessed February 2014 – November 2014 www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com

Wyoming State Historical Society, accessed August 2014, www.wyshs.org

Wyoming State Archives, accessed February 2014 – October 2014, wyoarchives.state.wy.us

American Heritage Center (at the U. of Wyoming), accessed January 2014 – November 2014,   www.uwyo.edu/ahc, http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/digital.html

Laramie Plains Museum, accessed February 2014 – August 2014, www.laramiemuseum.org

The Laramie Boomerang Newspaper, accessed March 2014 – November 2014, http://www.laramieboomerang.com

Laramie Fire Resources

Mary Kay Mason, Book Project Director, Laramie, Gem City of the Plains (Curtis Media Corporation, 1987)

Lola M. Homsher, The History of Albany County, Wyoming to 1880 (Lusk, Wyoming: Privately Published, 1965)

Charlie Peterson and the Laramie Plains Museum, Laramie – Images of America (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2007)

Gladys B. Beery, The Front Streets of Laramie City (Laramie, Wyoming: Albany Seniors, Inc., 1990)

Wyoming Tales and Trails, accessed February 2014 – November 2014, www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com

Wyoming State Historical Society, accessed August 2014, www.wyshs.org

Wyoming State Archives, accessed February 2014 – October 2014, wyoarchives.state.wy.us

American Heritage Center (at the U. of Wyoming), accessed January 2014 – November 2014,  www.uwyo.edu/ahc, http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/digital.html

Laramie Plains Museum, accessed February 2014 – August 2014, www.laramiemuseum.org

The Boomerang Newspaper, accessed March 2014 – November 2014, http://www.laramieboomerang.com

Jerry Hanson, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, Laramie Plains Museum, January 2014 – October 2014

John Spiegelberg, Interview by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, June 2014

Charlie Peterson, Interview by Deborah Linden and Bella Pope. Phone Interview. Laramie, Wyoming, June 2014

Peter Baumann, ‘Fire Destroys ‘Ice House,’ The Laramie Boomerang, February 20, 2009

Laramie History Resources

Mary Kay Mason, Book Project Director, Laramie, Gem City of the Plains (Curtis Media Corporation, 1987)

Lola M. Homsher, The History of Albany County, Wyoming to 1880 (Lusk, Wyoming: Privately Published, 1965)

Charlie Peterson and the Laramie Plains Museum, Laramie – Images of America (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2007)

Gladys B. Beery, The Front Streets of Laramie City (Laramie, Wyoming: Albany Seniors, Inc., 1990)

Gladys B. Beery, Saint and Sinners (Glendo, Wyoming: High Plains Press, 1994)

Shirley Gillespie, The Corner of Second and Grand (Laramie, Wyoming, Two Dogs Publishing, 2010)

Bill Betenson, Butch Cassidy, My Uncle (Glendo, Wyoming: High Plains Press, 2012)

Frances E. Strayer-Hanson, Medicine Bow Valley Pioneers: Closing the Overland Trail Opening the Union Pacific Railroad (Bloomington, Indiana: iUniverse Inc., 2009)

Dick Kreck, Hell on Wheels: Wicked Towns along the Union Pacific Railroad (Golden, Colorado: Fulcrum Publishing, 2013)

Carol Lee Bowers, Less than ladies, less than love: Prostitution in Laramie, Wyoming, 1868-1920 (Laramie, Wyoming: Carol Lee Bowers, 1994)

George W. Hufsmith, The Wyoming Lynching of Cattle Kate, 1889 (Glendo, Wyoming: High Plains Press, 1993)

Larry K. Brown, Coyotes and Canaries: Characters who made the West Wild…And Wonderful! (Glendo, Wyoming, High Plains Press. 2002)

Anne M. Butler, Daughters of Joy, Sisters of Misery: Prostitutes in the American West 1865 – 90, (Urbana and Chicago, University of Illinois Press, 1987)

T.A. Larson, History of Wyoming (University of Nebraska Press, 1978)

Larry D. Ball, Tom Horn in Life and Legend (University of Oklahoma Press, 2014)

Wyoming Tales and Trails, accessed February 2014 – November 2014, www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com

Wyoming State Historical Society, accessed August 2014, www.wyshs.org

Wyoming State Archives, accessed February 2014 – October 2014, wyoarchives.state.wy.us

American Heritage Center (at the U. of Wyoming), accessed January 2014 – November 2014, www.uwyo.edu/ahc, http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/digital.html 

Laramie Plains Museum, accessed February 2014 – August 2014, www.laramiemuseum.org

Wyoming State Archives, Museums, and Historical Dept., Annals of Wyoming, accessed June 2014 – October 2014, www.archive.org/search.php?query=annals%20of%20wyoming

Wyoming Territorial Prison Museum, accessed June 2014 – August 2014, www.wyoparks.state.wy.us/Site/SiteInfo.aspx?siteID=33

Jerry Hanson. Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, Laramie Plains Museum, January 2014 – October 2014

Phil Roberts. Interview by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, April 2014

Kim Viner, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, April 2014, July 2014

Judy Knight, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, June – September 2014

Tom Horn the Noted desperado dies on the Gallows, (Cheyenne, Wyoming, The Wyoming Tribune, November 20, 1903)

William Owen, Diary as a boy in Laramie, (Laramie, Dakota Territory, 1868)

Wyoming Newspaper Project http://pluto.wyo.gov/awweb/main.jsp?smd=2&nid=$3/357931&hnt=browse5,browse8

F.K. Freeman, Frontier Index, (Laramie, Dakota Territory, Freeman and Company) April 2, 1868 – July 21, 1868
Frontier Index EditionsApril 21 & 28, 1868
Frontier Index EditionsMay 5, 19, 22, 26 &29, 1868
Frontier Index Editions – June 2, 5, 9, 12, 16, 19, 23, 26 & 30, 1868
Frontier Index Editions – July 3, 7 & 21, 1868

Wyoming Railroads Resources

Stephen E. Ambrose, Nothing Like It In the World: The Men Who Built the Transcontinental Railroad 1863-1869 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001), Chapter 12

Charlie Peterson and the Laramie Plains Museum, Laramie: Images of America (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2007)

Mary Kay Mason, Book Project Director, Laramie, Gem City of the Plains (Curtis Media Corporation, 1987)

Lola M. Homsher, The History of Albany County, Wyoming to 1880 (Lusk, Wyoming: Privately Published, 1965)

Wyoming State Archives, Museums, and Historical Dept., Annals of Wyoming (Cheyenne: Wyoming Historical Department, 1939)

T. A. Larson, History of Wyoming (University of Nebraska Press, 1978)

Wyoming State Historical Society, accessed August 2014, www.wyshs.org

Wyoming State Archives, accessed February 2014 – October 2014, wyoarchives.state.wy.us

Union Pacific Railroad Museum, accessed February 2014 – June 2014, http://www.uprrmuseum.org/museum/exhibits/about_transcontinental.shtml

American Heritage Center (at the U. of Wyoming), accessed January 2014 – November 2014, www.uwyo.edu/ahc, http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/digital.html 

Wyoming Tales and Trails, accessed February 2014 – November 2014, www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com

Jerry Hanson, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming: Laramie Plains Museum, January 2014 – October 2014

Phil Roberts, Interview by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie Wyoming, April 2014

Kim Viner, Interviews by Deborah Linden. In Person. Laramie, Wyoming, April 2014, July 2014

Wyoming Newspaper Project http://pluto.wyo.gov/awweb/main.jsp?smd=2&nid=$3/357931&hnt=browse5,browse8

F.K. Freeman, Frontier Index, (Laramie, Dakota Territory, Freeman and Company), April 2, 1868 – July 21, 1868
Frontier Index EditionsApril 21 & 28, 1868
Frontier Index EditionsMay 5, 19, 22, 26 &29, 1868
Frontier Index Editions – June 2, 5, 9, 12, 16, 19, 23, 26 & 30, 1868
Frontier Index Editions – July 3, 7 & 21, 1868

J.M.Wilson, Union Pacific Railroad and Credit Mobilier (Washington, D.C.: U.S. House of Representatives, March 3,1873)

Trappers & Native American History Resources

Elliott Coues, The History of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (New York: Dover Publications, 1893) Volume 1

Hiram Martin Crittenden, The American Fur Trade of the Far West (Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 1986) Volumes 1 & 2

LeRoy R. Hafen, Editor, Mountain Men and Fur Traders of the Far West (Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 1965)

Leighton L. Baker, Jim Baker, The Redheaded Shoshoni (Self-published, 1994)

Fred R. Gowans and Eugene E. Campbell, Fort Bridger, Island in the Wilderness (Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press, 1936) Forward, Chapter 1

Fred G. Gowans, Rocky Mountain Rendezvous (Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press, 1936)

Ron Tyler, Editor, Alfred Jacob Miller: Artist on the Oregon Trail (Fort Worth, Texas: Amon Carter Museum, 1982)

Grace Raymond Hebard, Sacajawea: Guide and Interpreter of Lewis and Clark (Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, 2002)

Grace Raymond Hebard, Washakie: Chief of the Shoshones (University of Nebraska Press, 1995)

Wyoming State Archives, accessed February 2014 – October 2014, wyoarchives.state.wy.us

Buffalo Bill Center of the West, accessed July 2014, www.centerofthewest.org

American Heritage Center (at the U. of Wyoming), accessed January 2014 – November 2014,   www.uwyo.edu/ahc

Wyoming Tales and Trails, accessed February 2014 – November 2014, www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com

Museum of the Mountain Man, accessed June 2014 – October2014, www.museumofthemountainman.com

Museum of the Fur Trade, accessed June 2014 – October 2014, www.furtrade.org

The Walters Art Museum, accessed July 2014 – November 2014, www.art.thewalters.org/browse/category/18th-and-19th-centuries

Smithsonian Institution, accessed June 2014 – September 2014, www.si.edu

Wind River Reservation Museum, accessed July 2014 – October 2014, www.windrivervm.org