BOSE IKARD (1847-1929)

Enjoyed this video? Join my Locals community for exclusive content at eachonehelponebecomebetter.locals.com!
1 year ago
17

This video is brought to you by, Fiverr: https://go.fiverr.com/visit/?bta=500952&brand=fiverrhybrid

Fiverr Learn: https://go.fiverr.com/visit/?bta=500952&brand=fiverrlearn

Fiverr Business: https://go.fiverr.com/visit/?bta=500952&brand=fb

Become a Fiverr Affiliate: https://go.fiverr.com/visit/?bta=500952&brand=fiverraffiliates

Fiverr Workspace: https://go.fiverr.com/visit/?bta=500952&brand=workspace

Welcome to "Forgotten Black History". On this channel we talk about special places, events and people in Black History, This page serves as an index to the prominent figures featured throughout the Black History society. Black history is the story of African Americans in the United States and elsewhere. We want to celebrate, remind, and pay respect to not only African Americans but Black people of all races and backgrounds. We hope you subscribe to join the family, so we can grow a small community to help people of all races know just how special black people actually are in the world. Thank you for taking the time out to visit our channel. We hope you subscribe, if you hadn't already. We wish you peace and love, and for you to stay safe out there.

#BlackHistory #ForgottenBlackHistory #BlackPeople

Check out our Rumble page for exclusive videos: https://rumble.com/c/c-1788327

Bose Ikard was born a slave in Summerville, Mississippi, in June 1847 according to the best available evidence. It is likely that his slave master, Dr. Milton Ikard, was his father and his mother was a slave named “King.” The Ikard family, slave and free, made the sojourn to Texas in 1852 and settled in western Parker County on the Comanche-Kiowa frontier. As an adolescent, Bose was introduced to the dangers of Indian raids and the requirements of cowboy life.

He gained his freedom following the Civil War and began a memorable cowboy career with Oliver Loving and Charles Goodnight. It was Bose’s pioneering efforts in opening up the Goodnight Loving Trail, and the friendship established with its founders, that etched his name into western lore. Charles Goodnight, legendary West Texas cattleman, immortalized Bose with the following words on an engraved monument: “Bose Ikard served with me four years on the Goodnight-Loving Trail, never shirked a duty or disobeyed an order, rode with me in many stampedes, participated in three engagements with Comanches, splendid behavior.” Ikard died January 4, 1929 in West Texas at the ago of 81.

Loading comments...