Georgie Sicking


Georgie Connell Sicking was a rancher and active participant in cowboy poetry gatherings throughout the American West. A Wyoming resident in her later years, Sicking was inducted in 1989 into the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame. Described as "a cowboy who just happens to be a woman", Sicking was known for her old-fashioned feminine values and self-determination.

Background

Sicking was born in rural "brush country" of west central Arizona in Seligman in Yavapai County, some forty miles from the larger city of Kingman. Her parents, Oscar C. Connell and Mayne Connell, operated a ranch at Knight Creek. Her mother, who had been cooking on Dutch ovens, headed to Seligman a month before Georgia was expected to be born so that she could be rested for the delivery. However, after she reached Seligman in a Model T in a drive over rough roads, Mrs. Connell gave birth the next day, not the next month as had been expected. Because the Connells had hoped for a boy whom they would call "George", the newborn girl was instead named "Georgie".
Mayne Connell taught her daughter to ride a horse at the age of two. To keep up with the child, she designed a leather harness and tied it to a tree near the house to anchor Georgie so that she would be in view. By the time she was five, Georgie had her own horse, "Buster," whom she could mount by feeding the animal a biscuit. As Buster lowered his head to eat the biscuit, Georgie would climb on his head and neck and ease down to his back.
Her parents divorced by the time Sicking was in her late teens. She dropped out of school. A surviving sister, later Emma Jane Brocchini, lived with their mother. Another sister, Ada, married. Her late younger brother, Clyde, procured a ranch job. At first Georgie could not find a ranch job because she was female: "It was a country where they didn't ride mares, and they didn't hire women." Another surviving sister was Sammie Brockenbury of California.

Cowboy culture and poetry

Sicking preferred to be called a cowboy, rather than a rancher, because for years she did the same kind of work as her male counterparts: "Since I was a little girl I knew I was born to be a cowboy... Back then they thought women couldn't do it, and they weren't supposed to do it. Women were meant to stay indoors."
Sicking considered herself a "top hand," which she described as
Georgie married Frank Henry Sicking, a native of Muenster in Cooke County north of Dallas, Texas. The two operated several ranches in Arizona, California, and Nevada before they settled down on an unimposing spread near Fallon in Churchill County in western Nevada. There the couple reared their three children, Joe F. Sicking of Winnemucca, Nevada; Sue Jarrard of Kaycee, Wyoming, and Edward Sicking.
Sicking's poem, "Blood, Sweat, and Tears" highlights the difficulty of operating a ranch without financial backing and inheritance. Frank became a brand inspector in Fallon, while Georgia became a successful barrel racer. She described her husband as a "real cowboy" who even performed household chores while she was out riding the herd: "He was always there when the chips were down."
Georgie was widowed at the age of fifty-three when Frank was killed in a woodcutting accident on their ranch. She subsequently worked at various stockyards and ran her own herd of sixty Brahman cattle, roped wild horses, and frequented livestock auctions. When the Nature Conservancy purchased the water rights surrounding her Nevada land, she sold the ranch and began to spend her time in poetry, a pursuit that she had first began when she was seventeen. In her lifetime she has penned some seventy poems and has received many awards. Nevada honored her for having ridden 100,000 miles on horseback and for being the first resident of the state inducted into the Cowgirl Hall of Fame in Fort Worth, Texas. In 1994, she received the "Gail Gardner Award" for "Outstanding Working Cowboy Poet". This honor is named for Gail I. Gardner, an Arizona cowboy who was later the postmaster of Prescott, Arizona.
Though legally blind, she still performed at several cowboy poetry gatherings. In 1985, she participated in the first annual National Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nevada. She was a featured contributor at the Bar D Ranch Cowboy Poetry site in St. Helena in Napa County in northern California. She always memorized her poems.
Sicking's biography, by Glorianne Wiegand, is entitled A Mare Among Geldings. In 2004, Greg Snider and Dawn Smallman of Far Away Films produced Ridin' and Rhymin', an hour-long documentary about Sicking's life. Among her poems are "To Be a Top Hand", "Old Bay", "A Time for Remembering", "Be Yourself", and "Housewife". Her last poem, "When I Get to Heaven," was featured in the October 11, 2016, issue of the Kaycee Voice. Sicking received the Pioneer Woman Award at the National Cowboy Symposium and Celebration in Lubbock, Texas. She published three books of her original poetry and a compact disc of cowboy poems.

Later years and death

In retirement, Sicking rode her horse "Monty" along the Powder River into Kaycee in Johnson County, Wyoming, where she shared many of her stories of the Old West. Sicking said, "I know I have enjoyed the best of two worlds. I know what it is to rope a wild mustang and have him hit the end of the rope, and I know what it is to rock a baby. I think I've truly lived...."
Sicking died at the age of ninety-five at Johnson County Memorial Hospital in Buffalo, Wyoming. She is interred beside her husband at Churchill County Cemetery in Fallon, Nevada.