Remember the look in Brad Pitt's eyes in the classic, "Meet Joe Black". It definitely depicts a man with no soul--or a soul with no man! Either way, we all soon realize that he is the personification of "Death" on a holiday .
Well, this past week, "Death" was on no holiday. He was in Oklahoma. And he stole from us two of our most beloved citizens--Mr.Rodeo, Clem McSpadden ,and Mr. Yankee--Bobby Murcer.

Rodeo fans the world over know who Clem McSpadden is. He's the guy who paid a young unknown $10 to sing the national anthem during the run of the National Finals Rodeo when she was a college student at Southeastern State College and the National Finals were still held in Oklahoma City.
That gig set her on the road to superstardom. Yesterday, she returned to sing the National Anthem one last time for Clem--at his funeral. Later, she, her sister, and two nieces closed the solemn occasion with a salute to Clem's first love--Oklahoma--singing a medley of Oklahoma-themed tunes, including "Those Oklahoma Hills Where I Was Born."
As they concluded, McSpadden's widow took the stage with them, handing the superstar another $10 for her efforts. That redhead is none other than Reba McEntire, a friend of the McSpadden family since the days when her father was a world champion calf roper.
2500 people sat under three tents on Clem McSpadden's ranch at Bushyhead, Oklahoma, to listen to stories of McSpadden's life, including his famous Labor Day pasture roping contest. McSpadden had heard of such an event in Texas where the calf got a 100 foot head start. So McSpadden had his calves get a 101 foot head start when he inaugurated the event.
"I wanted Oklahoma to be better, so I made it one hundred and one," he said years ago with a big grin.
"That was Clem McSpadden. "He was an Oklahoman through and through, no matter where his boots carried him," as one writer stated. From the halls of the United States Congress to the wide-open country of Canada to announce the Calvary Stampede (the only U. S. citizen so honored) to the bluestem country of northeastern Oklahoma, the place he called home, McSpadden was the same.
He was a grand nephew of Will Rogers, among other things. In 1885, his gandparents, Tom and Sally McSpadden, a sister of Will Rogers, settled a little more than a mile away from the site of the Bushyhead Labor Day Pasture Roping. Clem was born in a house there on November 9, 1925. McSpadden died Monday at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. He was 82.


posted on July 13, 2008 6:46 PM ()