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It may be unusual to see a Black equestrian riding through the streets of Chicago, but Black cowboys and cowgirls have a long history in American culture

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The Black Equestrians Fighting Police Brutality

On May 29, Brianna Noble was one of thousands of people who attended an Oakland,California, protest in honor of George Floyd, who’d been killed by a white Minneapolispolice officer four days earlier. But unlike the other protesters, Noble hadn’t come on foot. Instead, she held her fist high as she rode through downtown on the back of her horse, Dapper Dan. A cardboard sign that read “Black Lives Matter” hung off Dapper Dan’s flank. Without even knowing it, Noble says, the crowd started following her, and drivers stopped in their cars to honk and stick their fists out in solidarity. Where she went, they went. Where she stopped, they stopped.

In one already-iconic from that day, Noble wears an expression of solemn tranquility as she and Dapper Dan lead the crowd. Behind her, protesters raisetheir signs andfists high. Local street artists have since this visualon a boarded-up storefront in the center of the city.

Noble, 25, is the owner and founder of , an equestrian businesswhere she trains and sells horsesand teaches beginnerriding lessons. This wasn’t her first time standing up against police brutality—at age 14, sheorganized youth town halls to discuss the issue in response to the 2009 killing of by a Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART)police officer in her hometown. But May 29was her first time protesting on horseback, and the image sent a strikingmessage. “If you look at a textbook, you usually see someone leading an entire army into war with a horse,” she says, “and I think me standing at the front of that protest was just a revamping of those images in our textbooks.”

As protests against police violenceswept through all 50 states and more than 60 countries, Noble wasn’t the only one to show up on horseback. On June 2, at least30members of , an urban trail-riding group for Blackequestrians in Texas, joined a protest in Houston. On June 7, the , a collective of Black cowboys in Southern California, organized and led a march of thousands through their hometown. In all,more than a hundred Black equestrians have joined protestsin the U.S.in the past month, emerging as a powerful force in the fight against police brutality.

A few days before Noble rode Dapper Dan through Oakland, Adam Hollingsworth, who calls himself , drove his horsefrom Chicago to Minneapolis to ride in the streets with othersin solidarity. Hollingsworth witnessed police officers teargassing and shooting rubber bullets at protesters, he says, but as he entered the sea of 3,000 people in front of a Minneapolis police station, everyone stopped what they were doing. People cleared out the walkway, made a circle around him, and gave him a bullhorn. It was as if he had been leading the protest all along.

Hollingsworth’s nickname,the Dreadhead Cowboy,is anod to the Black cowboys who’ve played an important role in American history. Black trail-riding groups have existed for centuries as a way for Black equestrians to subvert their exclusion from White cowboy culture;in , they trace their roots back to the 1700s. After the Civil War, herding was one of relatively few job options available to recently freed Black people, and ranchers badly needed their skills. Historians estimate that 19th-century cowboys were Black.

Despite this history, Black cowboys have often been left out of popular media narratives of the Wild West. Before he started riding in his early thirties,Hollingsworth, like many other residents in 󾱳’s Englewood neighborhood, had only ever seen a horse at a circus, in a movie, or with a police officer seated on top. During the Minneapolis and Chicago protests that Hollingsworth attended, children and adults alike stopped him to ask whether he owns his horse and why he decided to buy one. In the past, he’s even been asked if he was a cop.

In Chicago, mounted police patrol the city daily. Their horses, labeled by the police department, are used to make officers look more approachable to the public. But mounted police also have a dark history of racial injustice, one that’s often ignored in the TV shows and films that lionize forces like the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, known as the Mounties, and the Texas Rangers.

“Rangers and Mountieswere thought of as a way to wrest control of portions of the plains from their native inhabitants and were used to police people of mixed ancestry,” says historian Andrew Graybill, author of a about thosetwo police forces.Rangers in particular have a long history of racial animus and violence. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, they hundreds of Mexicans and Mexican Americans, hunted enslaved people who had run away, refused to investigate lynchings, and tried to force the NAACP out of Texas. “It was an open secret that an untold number of Rangers held Klan sympathies, if not memberships,” reporter Doug Swanson writes in ,an account ofthe Rangers that came out earlier this month.

Most mounted forces have a more ceremonial role today, but they’re also used to break up civil unrest. Since Floyd’s death, have shown up at protests in several cities, charging at civilians and dividing crowds.In both and , police horseseven trampled protesters, leaving people hurt and scared.

The shift in power dynamics is not lost on protesters, as Black equestrians join their ranks in the fight against police brutality. They’re sending a message that, as Hollingsworth says, “y’all aren’t the only ones with horses out here.”

Hollingsworth saysriding on horseback also allowed him to protect his fellow protesters. At the Chicago demonstrationhe attended, officers seemed to be taking extra care not to harm his horse, so he stood in front of the crowd to shield othersfrom rubber bullets and tear gasandused his position to de-escalate situations. “I stopped a lot of people from getting hurt that night,” Hollingsworth says.“My horse is Batman, and I’m Robin.”

In the days since those initial protests, Noble and Hollingsworth have received a flood of attention, and their images have circulated all over the internet. Recognized trainers have even reached out to Noble, asking her how they can help Mulatto Meadows. Emboldened by theoutpouring of support, Noble and Hollingsworth both want to train youth of color to hold the power that comes from mounting a horse. “From a very young age, I had two dreams—I wanted to be the first Black woman to jump in the Olympics, and I wanted to have a program to help inner-city people of color get into this sport,” Noble says. Beyond the fact that riding is often associated with White people, the costs associated with it can be astronomically high, making equestrian sports out of reach for many.

Noble grew up riding horses, a rare hobby for a Black girl in Oakland, she says. When she and her sister were young, they worked at stables to help pay for lessons at aUnited States Pony Club. At 14, she adopted a horse who’d been abused, persuading his owners to give him away for free. Noble would travel three hours each way by BART, bus, and on foot to reach the barn where she kept himand spent what little money she had dragging bales of hay onto public transportation to take to her horse.

After making so many sacrifices just to be around horses, she wants to crack the gates open for young kids of color and help close the income gapin the equestrian world. “There are low-incomeprograms just to help kids get intobasketball, but there’s nothing like that in the horse world in my community. I could only go so far, because I didn’t have the money to sponsor a horse,” Noble says.

Through Mulatto Meadows, she is now developing, a project that will open a fully-funded training program for kids from marginalized communities. Noblesays she’s inspired by the success of other nonprofit programs that provide free equestrian programming for urban youth, such as the , run by the Compton Cowboys, and . She’s currentlyfor the initiative on GoFundMe. For his part, Hollingsworth has been training kids from the barn outsideChicago where he stables his horses,and he hopes to eventually open his own barn in the city.

Noble knows that system-wide upheaval doesn’t happen overnight.

“What’s the chance that I’m going to be able to change the fact that police unjustly kill us?”she says. “It’s a huge issue, and it’s a systemic problem, but I am going to change what I can control, and horses are my thing. Maybe one of these kids will be able to change the world because we were able to change their story and their livesthrough these horses.”

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