
Charles M. Russell (1864–1926)
The Branches Rubbed Me Out of My Saddle, ca. 1911
Ink and graphite on paper
Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Texas
1961.266
The Branches Rubbed Me Out of My Saddle, ca. 1911
Ink and graphite on paper
Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Texas
1961.266
In early 1910 Russell agreed to provide illustrations for a book written by Carrie Adell Strahorn titled Fifteen Thousand Miles by Stage: A Woman’s Unique Experience during Thirty Years of Path Finding and Pioneering from the Missouri to the Pacific and from Alaska to Mexico. That summer Mrs. Strahorn, a rather formidable and domineering character, rented a cabin near Russell’s summer retreat, Bull Head Lodge, in Glacier Park, Montana. For the remainder of the summer Mrs. Strahorn badgered and pestered Russell while he worked on the illustrations for the book, which turned out to contain more than 670 pages of text. Russell took the rest of the year to produce the majority of the 350 illustrations that accompanied the text. The book was published the following year in a handsome gilded edition by the Knickerbocker Press, a division of G.P. Putnam’s Sons.
Mrs. Strahorn related an incident during a stay with her husband in Middle Park, Colorado. “I gave my pretty bay a tap on the wrong side of the neck,” she wrote, “so that he went dutifully up to it, instead of going away from the tree; the branches rubbed me out of my saddle, throwing me backwards to the ground.” Fortunately, only her pride suffered injury.
