Do you know the name of the man sitting on the horse? It’s American entertainer, radio personality, film actor, and writer who was famous for his pithy and homespun humor and social commentary. It’s the country’s beloved, Will Rogers. The statue of Will and his horse, Soapsuds, sit in front of his Fort Worth namesake, Will Rogers Coliseum and Pioneer Tower.
Will was a close friend to Fort Worth’s, Amon G. Carter, and visited Fort Worth often to enjoy time with his good buddy. August 15th, 1935 brought sad news to many, Will Rogers died in a plane crash at Point Barrow, Alaska territory along with pilot, Wiley Post.
On a trip to the northwest in search of new material for his shows, Rogers decided to join Wylie Post who would be piloting his pontoon plane. The trip had gone well, but on takeoff from Point Barrow, Alaska Territory, the plane flipped nose first killing both Rogers and Post.
The country was devastated by losing one of it’s most beloved stars, but none more brokenhearted than Amon G. Carter. He would use his immense power and influence to insure that his great friend would be remembered in Fort Worth through the ages.
In 1936 a great memorial would come to fruition in the building of the Will Rogers Memorial Center as part of the grounds of the Frontier Centennial celebration. Amon would commission a bust, a mural and a bronze statue depicting his good friend, Will, even capturing his horse, Soapsuds. The bronze statue, Riding Into The Sunset, would be sculpted by Electra Waggoner Biggs. The niece of Fort Worth’s well known, Electra Waggoner of Thistle Hill, the Wharton-Scott House on Pennsylvania Avenue.
“Riding Into The Sunset” is 9’11” tall, 3200 lbs, solid steel poured and in cased in brass. There were four made and all identical. In 1942, the first one was finished and installed in 1947 in front of Will Rogers Coliseum. The second was installed in 1950 on the campus of Texas Tech in Lubbock. The third was also made and installed in 1950 at the grave of Rogers in Claremore, Oklahoma. In 1989, a fourth statue was made and installed at the Anatole Hotel in Dallas.
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Special thanks for article collaboration with historian, Mike Musgrove. Photo Courtesy: Fort Worth Star-Telegram and Special Collections, UTA Library W.D. Smith collections