The+Bucking+Horse+on+the+License+Plate

Every year questions are asked about the bucking horse insignia on Wyoming’s license plates. Claims from several sources seem to confuse the history of just where the emblem originated.
 * The Bucking Horse on the License Plate **



License plates were not issued in the first decade of automobile use in Wyoming. In fact, according to file materials in the Wyoming State Archives, Division of Cultural Resources, State Department of Parks and Cultural Resources, the first plates were issued in 1913 from the Secretary of State’s office.

The 1913 law read: “Such number plate shall be an enameled plate or placard on metal...in the upper left hand corner of which there shall be a facsimile of the seal of the state, underneath which there shall be the abbreviation ‘Wyo’.... Said number plate shall be of a distinctive different color or shade for each year, to be designated and selected by the Secretary of State.”

Previously, numbers had been issued to individuals, but it had been their responsibility to fashion them into “plate” for their vehicles. The 1913 plates, red figures on a white background, had a state seal made of German silver. Two years later, the seal was embossed on the metal and in 1916, the plate was enameled. For the first five years of their issuance, license plates did not note the year. In 1918, it became the standard feature.

Another important change occurred in 1930 when each county was given the responsibility for license plate issuance. Numbers were assigned to each county, not on the basis of their populations at the time, but according to the assessed valuation of property within their borders. These designations are retained without change to this day with Natrona County designated “1” and Sublette County designated “23.”

The first announcement of a pending change in the 1936 license plates was made by a //Wyoming State Tribune// article on July 15, 1935: “A boldly embossed picture of a cowboy doing a good job of riding a wildly-bucking bronco will adorn Wyoming’s automobile license plates of next year. Secretary of State Lester C. Hunt today approved a design for the next edition of the plates, taking his choice from two that were submitted. The picture of the rider and horse was drawn by Allen T. True of Denver, brother of James B. True, Wyoming State Highway engineer.” True had been the artist for the murals in the House and Senate chambers in the Wyoming State Capitol so Hunt called him and offered $75 for a drawing appropriate for the plates.

The controversy has continued about the identity of the horse and the cowboy on the plates. It was asserted that the rider was “Stub” Farlow of Lander, but Hunt, then a U. S. Senator wrote to Lola Homsher, then director of the State Archives and Historical Department: “Many stories have appeared in the press from time to time--their origin I do not know--saying that the bucking horse license plate was a certain horse and the rider was Mr. Farlow. Such is not the case, but I did have ‘Stub’ Farlow in mind when designing the plate.”



Controversy still rages as to whether or not Steamboat is the horse portrayed on the Wyoming license plate. For more than a decade just after the turn of the 20th century, Steamboat became a legend as “the horse that couldn't be ridden.”

Born in Wyoming, the famous rodeo bucking horse was raised by Frank Foss. Steamboat, wild even in his youth, resisted the branding iron and, in so doing, struck his nose, breaking a small piece of the bone. Sam Moore, foreman of the Swan Company, bought the young horse and trimmed away the protruding bone. The horse was left with a peculiar whistle. Cowboy Jimmy Danks told the Swan foreman that the horse “sounds like a steamboat.” With that, the bucking horse had a name.



Steamboat made his first public appearance in a rodeo in Denver in 1901. For the next 13 years, he rarely allowed a cowboy to ride him to time. A rare exception, ironically, was Clayton Danks, the brother of the man who named Steamboat. Clayton Danks won the world championship at Cheyenne Frontier Days in 1907 by riding Steamboat.

As the prize bucking horse of Irwin Brothers, rodeo contractors from Laramie County, Steamboat made what was to be his last rodeo appearance at Salt Lake City in 1914. After the show, a lightning storm caused the rodeo stock, held in a wire enclosure, to spook. In the ensuing melee, Steamboat received a serious wire cut. The Irwin Brothers brought Steamboat back to Cheyenne but he didn’t recover from the blood poisoning caused by the cut.

The famous bucking bronc is immortalized on the University of Wyoming campus. In 1990, the 14-foot bronze sculpture, “Fanning a Twister,” by Cody sculptor Peter Fillerup was dedicated during homecoming festivities. It is a fitting tribute to one of Wyoming’s greatest horses and toughest athletes.

The origin of the design is still a matter of debate. Did it originate with the Wyoming National Guard in France during World War I? Did it first appear on an airplane that flew against the Germans in that war? Or was the idea “entirely original” with Hunt who wrote that “no other person had ever mentioned such a plate in my presence”?

Whatever its origin, the symbol of the Old West, Wyoming’s bucking horse license plate, retains the same popular appeal it had when it was first issued.