Happy Birthday Will Rogers 

U.S. #975 was issued on Rogers’ 69th birthday.
U.S. #975 was issued on Rogers’ 69th birthday.

William Penn Adair Rogers was born on November 4, 1879, in Oologah, Cherokee Nation (present-day Oklahoma).

Rogers’ parents, Clement Vann Rogers and Mary Schrimsher, were both part Cherokee Indian. Rogers loved cowboys and horses and learned to ride and rope at a young age, earning a place in the Guinness Book of World Records for throwing three lassos at one time.

In 1901, Rogers and a friend traveled to Argentina hoping to find work as gauchos on a cattle ranch. When they failed to find work and lost all their money, they parted ways. Rogers then went to South Africa where he worked on a ranch before joining Texas Jack’s Wild West Circus.

U.S. #975 FDC – 1948 Rogers First Day Cover.
U.S. #975 FDC – 1948 Rogers First Day Cover.

Rogers became a true showman during his time with Texas Jack. While Rogers created a roping and riding act, he learned a great deal about performing from Texas Jack, including what he thought was the secret to show business – leaving the stage early so the crowd would want more.

While Rogers enjoyed his time with Texas Jack, he was anxious to keep moving, so he traveled to Australia and joined the Wirth Brothers Circus. He continued to do his riding and roping and worked on a pony act. Rogers then returned to America in 1904, performing at the St. Louis World’s Fair. From there he got into vaudeville. During a performance in New York City, Rogers roped a steer that had broken free and climbed into the viewing stand. The story became front-page news, helping to make him more famous. He worked in vaudeville for the next 10 years. During this time he married and fathered four children, one of whom would become a World War II hero and later play his father in two movies.

U.S. #1801 was issued on Rogers’ 100th birthday.
U.S. #1801 was issued on Rogers’ 100th birthday.

In 1915, Rogers began performing in Florenz Ziegfeld’s Midnight Frolic. Rogers would take the stage in his cowboy outfit, twirling his lasso, and say, “Well, what shall I talk about? I ain’t got anything funny to say. All I know is what I read in the papers.” He’d then tell jokes about the news. His popularity earned him a spot at the Ziegfeld Follies, where Rogers did daring rides and lasso tricks. He also continued to fine-tune his satire, “roasting” Woodrow Wilson’s policies when the president attended one of his performances.

Rogers got into silent films in 1918, when he appeared in Laughing Bill Hyde. He moved west for a three-year Hollywood contract and also set up his own production company. Though Rogers enjoyed this, silent films couldn’t capture the best part of his act, but he did write a lot of the title cards for the films he appeared in.

U.S. #1801 FDC – 1979 Rogers First Day Cover.
U.S. #1801 FDC – 1979 Rogers First Day Cover.

Rogers appeared in 48 silent films before he found his greatest success in sound films. His first was They Had to See Paris in 1929. Rogers went on to do 21 feature sound films with such stars as Boris Karloff, Hattie McDaniel, and Mickey Rooney. He worked with John Ford three times and often considered him to be his favorite director.

Audiences responded positively to Rogers’ performances, which still managed to include his ad-libbing and political commentaries. Plus, most of his films were family-friendly, so schools would often take students to see them.

In addition to acting, Rogers was also a talented speaker and writer. He was a regular on the lecture circuit and had a weekly column in the New York Times from 1922 to 1935. Beginning in 1926, his daily “Will Rogers Says” column was read by some 40 million newspaper readers. Rogers also wrote for the Saturday Evening Post and had another weekly column called “Slipping the Lariat Over.” And he produced a number of humor books over the years.

U.S. #1801 FDC – Will Rogers Silk Cachet First Day Cover.
U.S. #1801 FDC – Will Rogers Silk Cachet First Day Cover.

Beginning in 1929, Rogers started doing radio broadcasts for the Gulf Oil Company. The Sunday night show, The Gulf Headliners, was immensely popular. But Rogers had a tendency to lose track of time and talk beyond his half hour time limit. So he began using a wind-up alarm clock to remind him it was almost time to end the show. Eventually, the show was introduced as “Will Rogers and his famous alarm clock.”

Rogers was also interested in politics. He served as a goodwill ambassador to Mexico and served briefly as mayor of Beverly Hills. He also went on a cross-country fundraising tour for the Red Cross during the Depression.   In 1928, Rogers ran for president as the “bunkless candidate” of the “Anti-Bunk Party,” to poke fun at the campaigning process. On Election Day he claimed he had won and resigned, as he initially promised he would.

In the 1920s Rogers became very interested in aviation. He was the first civilian to fly coast to coast with airmail flights and became friends with such notable aviators as Charles Lindbergh. Rogers used his newspaper columns to inform the American public of the safety and convenience of flying.

U.S. #C95 – Wiley Post was the first man to complete a solo flight around the world.
U.S. #C95 – Wiley Post was the first man to complete a solo flight around the world.

On August 15, 1935, Rogers and his friend Wiley Post were flying in Alaska. Post was exploring the possibility of an airmail route to Russia. Rogers went along to gather material for his newspaper column. They encountered bad weather near Point Barrow, Alaska, and crashed, killing both men instantly.

Before his death, Rogers allowed a statue of him to be placed in the U.S. Capitol to represent the state of Oklahoma. He asked that it face the House Chamber so he could “keep an eye on Congress.” It’s the only statue there to face the chamber entrance. Also, whenever a president enters the chamber to deliver their State of the Union address, they rub his left shoe for good luck.

Click here for some quotes by and about Will Rogers.

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10 Comments

  1. Very informative on an American icon. I notice that whenever I view the voting scores, there is always someone voting one. How anyone could give this article a one is sad. I suspect it’s the same individual every time. Mystic does a great job in telling the story and occasionally misspell a word or two, but no one is perfect.

  2. What this country needs is a good laugh! We need to get back to a lot of things and one of them is some good old down-home humor. We don’t laugh at ourselves anymore. Thank you William Penn Adair Rogers!

  3. This article contains the kind of feel good stuff to start your day off. I expected to see the quote, “I never met a man I didn’t like.” Was that not Will who said that?

  4. Ed Saramak, you will find that quote on the stamp above (#975). I’m 91 now and remember seeing many of his movies during the early ’30s. I also remember the date he and Willy Post were killed and exactly where I was and what I was doing when I heard that terrible news. My wife always kidded me about remembering that date but couldn’t remember what I had read in the morning paper.

  5. Thank you Mr. Coble. I hope my eyes are as good as yours in 25 years when I’m your age. Anyone who thinks as much of Will Rogers as you obviously do is a friend of mine.

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