Update about blogCa

Who knew all this would happen afterwards! Lake Tomahawk, Black Mountain NC July 2025

Friday, July 11, 2025

Let's have a cool one

 

 
At the turn of the 19/20th century in Terry, Montana, photographer Evelyn Cameron captured a quietly revolutionary moment in the American West: the Buckley sisters mounting their horses while dressed in split skirts. Far from a fashion statement, these garments were a practical innovation for women who worked alongside men in the rugged ranchlands of eastern Montana. Traditional long skirts were not only cumbersome but dangerous on horseback, while split skirts offered freedom of movement and a safer, more efficient way to ride astride—rather than sidesaddle. Cameron, a British-born photographer and rancher, had introduced this style to the region, challenging Victorian notions of femininity with every click of her shutter.
The Buckley sisters, like many frontier women, were not content to be passive observers of the western experience. They rode, worked cattle, and lived lives defined by grit, endurance, and self-reliance. Evelyn Cameron's images of them were not staged performances but authentic moments of daily life—moments rarely seen or documented in a male-dominated era. Her photography offered a counter-narrative to the romanticized cowboy myth, placing strong, capable women at the heart of the western story. The Buckleys, dressed in their now-iconic split skirts, came to represent a new ideal of frontier womanhood—unapologetically practical, competent, and unbound by convention.
Through Cameron’s lens, the Buckley sisters and women like them were immortalized as pioneers not only of the land but of changing social norms. Evelyn’s body of work, now treasured for its historical and artistic value, documented more than landscapes and livestock—it recorded transformation. The split skirt, simple in design yet radical in implication, was a symbol of quiet rebellion and the evolving role of women in the American West. In those dusty corrals outside Terry, Montana, Evelyn Cameron didn’t just take photographs—she captured the spirit of frontier feminism.
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(by Facebook - Old West Remembered, Shawn Brooks)

I sure do bet those guys in the swimming hole (a bit small) were enjoying cooling off. Their friends either just sat down on the banks, or stayed in the saddle...and the photographer pulled out his tripod and set to work on the opposite bank!


Inside of the Miller and Shoemaker soda fountain shop, Kansas, 1899.


Friends sharing cokes and jokes.

Sharing with Sepia Saturday!


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Today's quote:

We are nature and we are it all the time, no matter how far away or how close we perceive it to be at each moment.

Fabiana Fondevila

Personal old photo:


At 14 I was in Home Ec, and learned how to make a skirt (wearing I think red with white polkadots) and a cake. Here I offer sweets to celebrate my creativity. This started me in making my own cakes each year, and decorating them. Nobody seemed to mind.


7 comments:

  1. Great revolution in those riding outfits. I wonder if they had pockets?

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    Replies
    1. Me too. Of course they did. Can't imagine otherwise!

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  2. Great sepia images. My favorite is the last photo you!
    Take care, have a great day and a happy weekend!

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  3. Excellence post: loved the sisters.

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There is today, more than ever, the need for a compassionate regenerative world civilization.