File - Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame & Western Heritage

advertisement
Berney Kempton (1870 – 1942)
2014 Legacy Inductee District 2
Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame & Western Heritage Center
Along the Yellowstone in Eastern Montana, Kempton is one of the oldest and most well-known
names. The Kempton ranch was established south of Terry, Montana by James Berney Kempton
in 1880 to raise horses for the US Cavalry. Berney Kempton was born July 8, 1870, at his
grandfather’s trading post, near Greely, Colorado. He was the eldest son of James B. and Mariah
(Gerry) Kempton. Berney’s grandfather, Elbridge Gerry, was the first white settler in Weld
County, Colorado. His grandmother was the daughter of Swift Bird and niece of Chief Red
Kettle of the Oglala Sioux.
As ranch hands, Berney and his five brothers grew up on horseback. At the age of 14, Berney
helped trail 1200 horses from Colorado to his father’s Montana ranch.
In the 1880’s version of “leaving home to join the circus,” Young Berney decided to use his
skills and talents and join a Wild West Show. He followed the recruiters for Doc Carver’s Wild
America Show from Montana to the Dakotas. Doc Carver was a sharpshooter and a rival of
William Cody. Berney rode a wild stallion into a saloon, stopped his mount and rode back out.
Depending on who told the story, it was either at Yankton, South Dakota or Fort Yates, North
Dakota on the Standing Rock Reservation where he was hired to join the show in Vienna,
Austria. He traveled the world as a performer, roping and riding. In St. Petersburg, Berney gave
a private performance for the dowager Empress of Russia. While there, a Cossack horse that had
thrown off an entire regiment was brought to the show. Kempton and another cowboy were able
to ride him within minutes. The show went to Petrograd, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Hamburg and
Berlin. In Berlin, the troupe gave a special show for the Crown Prince who later was known as
Kaiser Wilhelm.
They left Europe and traveled to Melbourne, Australia, where they performed for five months. It
was in Melbourne that Kempton roped a kangaroo, one of many that had been released into the
arena. He inadvertently roped two kangaroos in one loop and the crowd went wild. Thinking this
was part of the show, they expected this feat at each performance. It was memorialized in a
“Ripley’s Believe it or Not” and a Cartoon that appeared in American newspapers. Kempton
remarked that it was a much easier trick than roping wolves or antelope on the Montana range.
During their long stay in Melbourne, Berney became good friends with a young Aussie, named
O’Meagher. When the show moved on, the two young men agreed to name one of their male
children after the other. Berney named his third son Gerald O’Meagher and somewhere in
Australia there was probably a boy named Kempton.
After eighteen months of show business, the show reached San Francisco. Berney returned home
to the ranch and the cattle and horse business established by his father. He bred excellent draft
horses and found successful markets for them during the Boer War. His stock was considered
some of the best at horse sales in Montana and beyond. It was year- round work to break the
mounts they sold. Berney also trained horses for Steeplechase races and polo matches. Agents
from the British and French governments came to the ranch to buy these well-trained horses and
ship them to Europe.
Berney followed his father’s lead in ranching, which included a theory of dry land farming. The
ranch raised record crops, including a type of corn that produced in 90 days in the semi-arid land.
Berney continued the irrigation system drawn from springs that his father built. Because of this
system, the ranch always had a flourishing vegetable garden.
In 1892, Berney married Flora Casper, and they had two children. They divorced and he married
Martha Magnuson, a Swedish immigrant in 1909. They had five more sons. In 1913, Berney
began construction of the 40-room Kempton Hotel in Terry. He operated the ranch in
conjunction with the hotel and Berney acted as host to guests wanting a taste of life on a
Montana ranch. There were many dudes from Minneapolis and Chicago who spent some time
each summer working hard on the ranch and paying for the privilege. Sunday dinners in the
large dining room and the enclosed porch were very popular with the guests and the locals. Folks
came from neighboring counties for Sunday dinner and picnics where Berney regaled them with
his charm and story-telling.
Berney was known for his gift of gab and quick wit. He was a handsome man, with thick black,
wavy hair, and perfect posture. He was proud to let people know he was an enrolled member of
the Oglala Sioux tribe of the Standing Rock Reservation. He dressed in a suit, tie and a trimbrimmed hat in all his pictures. He’d pull a lock of his thick hair forward so it showed under his
hat. The artist, Charlie Russell, was a guest at a Miles City rodeo and Berney joined the town
dignitaries in a reception committee. The bankers and merchants were clad in wooly chaps and
twenty-gallon hats. Charlie said, “Well I see one real cattleman here,” and he shook Berney’s
hand.
In his later years, Berney said he was glad he lived in the time of pioneers on the frontier. He
also told friends and family that he wanted to die with his boots on. He said that if he ever felt
himself slipping, he was going to jump out of bed, because too many of his friends died in bed.
He got that wish and passed away suddenly on March 2, 1942. He died with his boots on sitting
in the lobby of the Kempton Hotel in Terry.
Berney Kempton’s lifetime spanned a romantic period in the history of the American West. He
was born in a frontier fort, helped show the world the mystique of the Wild West, and then did
the work he loved.
Sources:
Montana, Its Story and Biography: A History of Aboriginal and Territorial Montana and Three
Decades of Statehood; by Tom Stout, Volume III; the American Historical Society, Chicago and
New York; 1921; Pages 1369 – 1370.
Obituary; Terry Tribune; March 12, 1942
Berney’s sons shared the stories of their father with their children who were born after he died in
1942.
Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame Nomination: 2014
Nominated - Legacy
Berney Edmond Kempton of Terry, Montana 1870 - 1942
Nominated by Kay Kempton Raade, granddaughter
Kay Kempton Raade
92 Sunrise Court
Bozeman, Montana 59715
Ph: 406-586-3676 – Home 406-548-2875 – Cell
Email: sqrl625@hotmail.com (SQRL625)
Additional history collected by grandchildren: James B. Kempton, Napa, California
Trudy Kempton Dana, Edmonds Washington
Download