I did come across this article about Bobbi Reeves' father,
Dean Reeves
By Mel Anderson
Dean Reeves, a cowboy rancher and breeder of fine foundation registered Quarter Horses, will be honored posthumously at The Old Timers' Breakfast and Pioneer Awards on Friday, Feb. 5, 2010 at The Best Western Ramkota Hotel in Rapid City in conjunction with the Black Hills Stock Show and Rodeo events.
Dean took his new bride, Emma Lou (Johnson) to a location southeast of Eagle Butte, SD. They eagerly started to build a ranch and raise a family on this gumbo plain next to the Oahe Reservoir. He built his ranch up from scratch as there were no corrals, buildings, or even a fence post to tie a horse to.
His story reads like a sequel to Little House on the Prairie. Dean and his constant companion, Dell Louis (Scope) Yellow Head moved three granaries to the site where he planned to spend the balance of his life ranching, producing the best Foundation Quarter Horses in the breed and to raise his family.
Daughter Bobbi remembers her big brother, Jim, and she sitting on a cement block eating chicken and dumplings while watching her dad and Scope nail up chicken wire with a nail punched through bottle caps, readying the building for stucco. Dean and Scope trowled the mud to the surface with mom (Emma Lou) mixing the cement with a hoe in a trough.
The family was completely satisfied with the results of their newly-remodeled home. The day they moved in will never be forgotten as this was the day they heard on their radio in the old Chevy pickup that the young President Kennedy had been shot.
No running water nor bathroom in the house for 17 years! Since the Oahe Reservoir was more than 2 ½ miles distant, the stock dam just over the hill was more available.
Dean would hitch his team to the wagon loaded with 50-gallon barrels, back the wagon into the dam and proceed to dip the barrels full with a bucket. I don't imagine that they wasted much water.
Dean wasn't a bragger or a glory seeker. The only vain thing about him was his boots. He always wore custom-made boots.
He did, however, make the spotlight once in Las Vegas. (He loved to go there to watch son, Tom, ride.) Dean got passed some counterfeit money and, not knowing it, proceeded to use it at the tables. He was unceremoniously escorted off by security and detained for several hours. He was finally released when they discovered he was just an old cowboy and not a counterfeiter.
Emma Lou and Jim looked for him for half a day before they found him. Dean said with a big grin on his face, "it was jut like TV with a light hanging above my chair!"
He knew when to speak and when to be silent. To take the good with the bad. Perhaps, Bobbi says it best as she remembers her dad braiding her hair when she was a child, and how he loved giving gifts at Christmas. "Basically, dad taught me how to make it through the tough times," says Bobbi.
Mary, Bobbi's sister, says, "Dad was always calm. I could always talk to him. He said if I couldn't handle a problem, it wouldn't have been dealt out to me in the first place!"
Oldest son, Jim, who rode broncs in the Badlands Circuit with great success, said of his dad, "He was a real cowboy. He had no fear of a horse, and they sensed it. Dad showed respect to his horses and wouldn't be rough with them. He might get bucked off, but he would get back on." There wasn't much Dean couldn't do horseback on about any horse!
Tom, the youngest son is in the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame and went to the National Finals Rodeo 18 times. Probably one of his most memorable occasions was winning the World Championship in 2001. "I was just always wanting my dad to be proud of my accomplishments," says Tom.
Daughters, Bobbi and Mary, never rodeoed a lot, but they 'sure could get around horseback', as Tom puts it.
Bobbi, not to be outdone by her brothers, took a Reeves' bred horse to the famous Bad River Suicide Race at Fort Pierre where they ran up steep inclines, slid down shale banks at breakneck speed and raced through water holes. Bobbi and her horse, Cat, were put in the record books as the first woman to ever win the race in 1981. Eighty-two entries were in that race and Bobbi still holds the record for the fastest time.
Bobbi won the Suicide Race several times. This particular race she won in 1981 holds special significance for Bobbi.
"Times were hard for us that year," she says. "Money was important to us. Dad bought me in the Calcutta for $1,000. We won the race and the Calcutta paid off much more than the prize money."
Mary, who lives near Belle Fourche, is taking advantage of her father's mentorship by starting horses and training them for barrel racing.
Dean Reeves was born Oct. 12, 1936 and died on May 25, 2008, resulting from an accident while working on his ranch. Emma Lou Reeves said, "He died with his boots on doing what he loved to do."
The Reeves Family has established a scholarship in Dean's name to be awarded to a participant in High School Rodeo who excels at both ends of the arena: two riding events and one roping event.