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Effie Hunt - Rest in peace.

Liberty Belle

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 10, 2005
Messages
1,818
Location
northwestern South Dakota
We lost a wonderful lady here in western South Dakota yesterday. Effie Hunt was killed in a one vehicle accident down on the rez near Red Scaffold at age 72. She is was one of a kind and will be missed by her friends, her family, her students and the west river ranching community.

Here's a story about Effie and her family taken from Western Horseman:

South Dakota's Hunt family has built thriving horse operations based on these old-fashioned values.
By Jennifer Denison


The Hunts have ranched and raised horses on the rolling grasslands and along the rugged cedar brakes of the Cheyenne River Reservation near Faith, Dupree and Eagle Butte, South Dakota, since the 1940s. Today, this family, Geno and Effie, the family's patriarch and matriarch, and sons Jeff and Jim, plus their wives and children, has grown and formed separate operations, plus hosts two highly successful production sales. Still, the Hunts continue to foster a special kinship with each other, their horses and the land.
In his 2004 sale catalog, Jim and his wife, Joni, wrote, 'To become a good horseman, you have to be dependent upon a good horse. You take care of him, and he'll take care of your family's way of life for [more than] five generations."

The Hunt-Lopez Legacy
The Hunts have a truly historical horse operation that traces to more than 100 years ago, when horsepower was the only mode of transportation, and a good mount was just as important on the ranch as a tractor and four-wheel-drive pickup are today.

Geno's maternal grandfather, Ford Annis, was a wagon-boss on a Texas outfit, and his father, Jack Hunt, was a top hand on the Laurel Leaf outfit in Devils Tower, Wyoming. Jack eventually settled in Dupree Creek, South Dakota, to raise his family.

Geno, who grew up in agriculture during the Great Depression, says horses played a critical role in everyday life. "We did everything with horses," he recalls. "We rode 4 1/2 miles each way to school. As is common in closely knit, country families, Geno learned to love what he lived.

At the time, draft-horse crosses, called chunks, ruled the horse market for utilitarian reasons. South Dakota also was home to numerous breeders of Remount horses for the military, many of which worked their way into ranch-horse breeding programs. "A lot of the horses were Morgans," Geno reflects. "They were tough and liked to buck."

Effie also came from a rich ranching background that originated in the mid-1800s in southern Colorado. There Effie's grandfather, Elfido Lopez, a pioneer of Spanish descent, grew up and worked for such outfits as the Prairie Land and Cattle Company and the Bar 4 Ranch. In 1911, Lopez and his wife, Rebecca, homesteaded 160 acres near what's now Las Animas, Colorado, and raised eight children.

The couple's fifth son, Albert, was a savvy horseman and went to work for Warren Shoemaker, the New Mexico breeder of Quarter Horse foundation sire Nick Shoemaker, the sire of Skipper W. Then Albert served as wagon-boss for Diamond A Cattle Company, a nationally known outfit with holdings in Colorado, New Mexico and South Dakota, operating between 1885 and 1939.

In 1923, Albert headed north to South Dakota with the Diamond-A herd, where he was intrigued by the belly-deep, hardy grass and American Indians," Geno says. He met and married South Dakota horsewoman Luvisa Pelter of Hermosa. For many years, he continued to work for the Diamond A, which controlled substantial land leases on the Cheyenne River Reservation. In the 1930s, Albert obtained his own lease on the reservation to raise cattle and horses.

In those days, horse herds consisted of wild range horses or Indian mounts. But Albert had a keen eye for horseflesh and built his breeding program from only the best stock he could find. His selection criteria included a long stride to cover the vast range; large, sturdy feet for soundness; a short back for strength and balance; and prominent withers to hold a saddle in place.

By the 1940s, Albert had a solid band of approximately 100 broodmares, which were among the first South Dakota horses registered with the newly formed American Quarter Horse Association. One of his first stallions was a Paint Horse named McArther. AQHA also has record of him registering a stallion of unknown descent named Montana Playboy with the National Quarter Horse Breeders Association, prior to AQHA's formation in 1940.

A young Casey Tibbs, before his rodeo fame, worked with the Lopez family and helped break the ranch colts. On June 10, 1943, Tibbs and Lopez held their first horse sale in Fort Pierre, South Dakota, where they sold 25 palominos and buckskins, 20 fillies, 60 to 75 broke saddle horses and a carload of farm chunks.
Read the complete story in the September issue of Western Horseman.
 
Effie's funeral will be tomorrow at 2:00 in Eagle Butte. I'm going to try to make it if everything works for me that day. Geno and all the rest of her family are going to have a hard time getting along without Effie.

What I heard is that she rolled the car, but I don't have any idea if that is true or not. I understand that she had a passenger who was injured, but I don't know who that was either.
 
PIERRE – A one-vehicle rollover accident on a gravel road near Red Scaffold has claimed the life of an Eagle Butte woman.  72-year-old Effie Hunt was driving a Dodge Durango on BIA Route 6 about three miles west of Red Scaffold Thursday morning about 7:30 a.m. when the accident occurred.   Cheyenne River Tribal Law Enforcement Chief Charles Fischer says an investigation into the accident continues, but it appears that when the vehicle hit a washboard surface on the roadway, Hunt lost control of it and the Durango went into the ditch and rolled five times.  Hunt was thrown from the SUV.  A passenger in the vehicle, 50-year-old Elaine Widow of Red Scaffold was able to crawl out of the vehicle until help arrived.  Faith Ambulance crews took both women to the I.H.S. Hospital in Eagle Butte where Hunt died as a result of her injures.  Widow was flown to Rapid City Regional Hospital, where she's listed in fair condition.  The Highway Patrol has been called in to help reconstruct the circumstances of the accident.
( It was on a curve.)
  :(
 
Effie Hunt


Funeral services for Effie Hunt, 72, of Eagle Butte, will be held at 2 p.m. MDT Wednesday, May 10, 2006, at the Eagle Butte High School Auditorium with the Rev. Wayne Olson officiating.

Burial will be at the Hunt Family Cemetery located on the Hunt Ranch south of Eagle Butte under the direction of Kesling Funeral Home of Mobridge.

Visitation will begin at 5 p.m. MDT Tuesday, May 9, at All Saints Catholic Church in Eagle Butte. A prayer service will be held at 6:30 p.m. MDT Tuesday at the church.

Mrs. Hunt died on May 4 at Indian Health Services Hospital in Eagle Butte from injuries received in a single-car accident near Red Scaffold.

Effie Rebecca Lopez was born April 17, 1934, in Eagle Butte to Albert and Luvisa (Pelter) Lopez. She attended country school in the Eagle Butte and Timber Lake areas, as well as one year at the Timber Lake Catholic School and her eighth-grade year at the Philip Public School. Effie graduated from Eagle Butte High School in 1952.

Following high school, Effie attended Ball State Teachers College in Indiana where she received her teaching credentials. Her first teaching job was at Ridgeview.

On Dec. 27, 1953, Effie married "Geno" Hunt at Pierre. Following their marriage, Effie continued to teach while Geno returned to Germany to finish his service to the Army. Following his discharge they moved to Belle Fourche, where Effie taught school and Geno attended Black Hills State Teachers College. They then taught in Meteetse, Wyo., and Plevna, Mont.

In 1962 they moved to the Cottonwood Ranch south of Eagle Butte with their two young sons, Jeff and Jim, where they lived and ranched for the past 44 years.

In 1964 Effie got a teaching job in Eagle Butte and also started taking summer classes at BHSC to complete her bachelor's degree in elementary education.

She started teaching in the Midland school system in 1982 and taught there until her retirement in 2000. While teaching, Effie continued to go to summer school and obtained her master's degree in education in 1990 from the University of South Dakota in Vermillion.

Effie spent her retirement years at the ranch busier than ever, fixing her yard and house and taking part in all her families' activities. She loved to stay in touch with family, old friends and former students and attended many weddings, funerals, graduations and anniversaries.

Effie is survived by her husband of 52 years Geno; sons Jeff (Mitzi) Hunt of Dupree and Jim (Joni) Hunt of Faith; grandchildren Jody, J.J., Jakki, Tom, Jessica, Justin, Josh, Jordan, Jeb, Jana, J.T. and Jimmie Jean Hunt; great-grandchildren Daycen, Mackenzie, Travis, Natasha, Keysha and Jalen Hunt; one sister Anna Belle (Sam) Mortenson of McLaughlin; one brother Lee Lopez of Meadow; her mother-in-law Jennie Hunt of Eagle Butte; a special nephew John Lopez of Rapid City; and many nieces nephews, cousins, and beloved friends, neighbors and 38 years of students.

Effie was preceded in death by her parents Albert and Luvisa, an infant child, and one brother, Carl Kaiser.
 
Anyone go to her funeral? My dad did and said it was a big funeral with lots of people. Effie was like my second cousins wife's sister-in-law or something. But they have been around for years and dad grew up knowing them, and my grandpa Ancel and her dad Albert Lopez knew each other well.

Just curious if anyone else went and what ya'll thought of it?
 

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