Verna Lee Hightower
Verna Lee Hightower | |
|---|---|
| Born | Verna Lee Booker June 26, 1930 |
| Died | August 27, 1970 (aged 40) |
| Other names | Boots |
| Occupations | Rodeo cowgirl, civil rights activist. |
Verna Lee "Boots" Booker Hightower (June 26, 1930 – August 27, 1970) was an American rodeo cowgirl and civil rights activist. She is recognized for being the first African-American woman to become an official member of the Girl's Rodeo Association and compete in barrel racing at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.
Biography
[edit | edit source]Verna Lee Booker was born on June 26, 1930, in Spring, Texas. She was the daughter of Arthur Booker and Alvirita Wells and had a love of horses at an early age.[1] Arthur and Alvirita had five children and raised them on the family's fruit tree farm where Verna Lee gained her nickname "Boots".[1] The Booker's marriage ended in divorce when Verna Lee was still a child.
After her parents' divorce, Verna Lee and her siblings moved with her mother to Houston, Texas.[1] Verna Lee's mother Alvirita Wells Booker was working in a Houston beauty shop when she met her second husband, who would later become Verna Lee's stepfather, Sgt. Frank "Sarge" Little, an Army officer.[2] In 1947, Alvirita Wells moved to Japan to follow her new husband, bringing Verna Lee and her sister Vivian O'Dell Lee with her.[3] In 1951, Vivian followed their mother and stepfather when he was reassigned to a posting in Seattle, Washington.[2][4] Verna Lee would not join them.
Rodeo career
[edit | edit source]By 1949, Verna Lee returned to Texas, where she married Ted Roosevelt Hightower. After her marriage, Verna Lee Hightower raised livestock and rode horses more competitively, entering local rodeos.[1] She quickly began to distinguish herself as a barrel-racing competitor. Moving beyond Houston rodeos, Hightower started competing on the national black rodeo circuit, successfully competing in events in California and Oklahoma. In 1969, Hightower became the first African-American woman to compete in barrel racing at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.[1][5] Hightower was a member of the National Colored Rodeo Association and the Girl's Rodeo Association (now the Women's Professional Rodeo Association).[1]
Hightower would later receive a humanitarian award from the Black Heritage Committee of the Houston Livestock Show for her contributions to the rodeo.[6] In 2007, Hightower was inducted into the National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum's Hall of Fame.[7]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]Verna Lee and her husband Ted Hightower shared six children together. In 1963, the Hightowers won a lawsuit against the Houston Independent School District allowing their children to attend the White schools nearby their home rather than Black schools farther away.[1]
Hightower died on August 27, 1970.[1][8]
References
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- ^ "Death Notices" Daily Court Review Newspaper Archives September 25, 1970 Page 4
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