Bill Pickett
Bill Pickett (born December 5, 1870?, Williamson county, Texas, U.S.—died April 2, 1932, Tulsa, Oklahoma) was an American rodeo cowboy who introduced bulldogging, a modern rodeo event that involves wrestling a running steer to the ground.
Pickett was descended from American Indians and enslaved African Americans in the Southwest. Like many of the Black Cowboys of his time, he grew up in Texas, where he learned to ride and rope as a boy. He eventually became a ranch hand and often performed simple trick rides in town on weekends. In 1900 he became a showman, sponsored by Lee Moore, a Texas rodeo entrepreneur. In 1907 Pickett signed with the 101 Ranch Wild West Show, becoming one of its star performers and assuming the status of a legendary figure for his masterful handling of both wild and domestic animals. For bulldogging, or steer wrestling, he perfected a technique of jumping from his horse, grabbing the steer around the neck or horns, sinking his teeth into the animal’s lip, and pulling it to the ground. Pickett’s most-grueling performance came in 1908 in a bullring in Mexico City. He there wrestled and rode a Mexican fighting bull for seven minutes before a riotous audience enraged at this original interpretation of the Mexican national pastime of bullfighting.
Pickett performed until about 1916, working as a cowhand and rancher thereafter. He later appeared in the silent films The Bull-Dogger (1921) and The Crimson Skull (1922). He died after being kicked by a horse in April 1932.