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The Utah Cutting Horse Association
is an affiliate of the National Cutting Horse Association.
The National Association oversees a sport that offers a
glimpse of the past and, with each new contest, renews the
legend and the spirit of the working cow horse and the great
American cowboy.
The
sport of cutting is a contest between a horse and rider,
and a cow. It is the only equine sport where the horse must
work on its own relying on strength, agility and intelligence.
It is also the only equine sport where the competitors assist
their opponents.
The
cutting horse was born out of necessity in the mid 1880’s
on the plains of West Texas. The ranch work of separating,
doctoring, and herding cows was easier if the ranch hand
used a horse that could
handle or “cut” a cow. These horses were the
elite ranch horses and only one in a hundred had the necessary
skill and intelligence to handle cattle. Reputations, bragging
rights and impromptu challenges set the stage for the first
cutting horse contest held in Haskell, Texas in 1898.
The growth of the sport led to the
birth of the National Cutting Horse Association in 1946.
The NCHA, with headquarters in Fort Worth, Texas, was started
as a means to standardize contest rules, promote cutting
contests, and to preserve the cutting horse heritage.
On a hot summer evening in 1948,
a prominent Arabian horse breeder gathered nine horsemen
from the Arab and Quarter Horse communities with an idea.
He wanted to expand the Arabian Horse Cutting Club into
an all breed cutting association. The breeder was Rich Whitmore.
The nine horsemen were: Keith Bowden, Bill Greene, Boone
Bruno, Roy Carpenter, Rudy Carpenter, Aut Beebe, Dwayne
Green, Emmit Ford, and Dan McArthur. These ten were the
founders of the Utah Cutting Horse Association. Their President
was Roy Carpenter, the Secretary, Rich Whitmore. The ten
original members were soon joined by six more: Dick Hammer,
Conny Bowler, Dick Robbins, Bruce Petersen, Swede Hansen,
and Doc Wilkinson. Two members are still with us today:
Keith Bowden and Bill Greene.
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