Roy Rogers was one of the most important people in the history of American Western movies.
He starred in over 100 films and television series, such as The Roy Rogers Show, Sons of the Pioneers, and Wonder Woman.
Roy Rogers is now one of America’s most popular singers and actors of the 20th century.
Roy was passionate about horses and started riding when he was just 10 years old.
But horse riding wasn’t the only thing he did while living on the farm. Since the family didn’t have a radio or any other form of entertainment, they needed to keep themselves busy with all sorts of creative ways amongst themselves. So, when the family got together at the weekend, they would have fun playing music and dancing with their neighbors.
It all started when his sister Mary, who lived in California, encouraged him. After hearing about a local radio show, Midnight Frolic, holding a contest, she suggested he audition.
And it was a big opportunity because of the chance to join the music group The Rocky Mountaineers.
Bob Nolan and Tim Spencer, two of his bandmates from his first music group, The Rocky Mountaineers, teamed up again with Roy Rogers (then known as Len Slye). They formed a musical group called The Pioneers Trio, which later became the famous “Sons of the Pioneers.”
Within a few years, the Sons of Pioneers had already recorded over 30 songs, including one of their original hits, “Tumbling Tumbleweeds.”
In the early 1930s, Rogers also tried acting, inspired by the success of the Sons of the Pioneers. Since 1935, the music group has offered and made appearances in all sorts of movies.
1938, Rogers got his first big break when he starred as “Roy Rogers” in Under Western Stars. From then on, he continued to play the cowboy “Roy Rogers” role in all sorts of films, and fans loved him!
Roy and his wife, Grace Arline Wilkins, wanted to have a family, but they had trouble getting pregnant. However, that didn’t stop them from starting one of their own.
In 1943, the couple had another daughter, Linda Lou.
A few years later, the couple had another baby boy, Roy Jr., who became known as “Dusty.”
In the autumn of 1946, Roy and Grace had another son. Sadly, Wilkins suffered severe complications during the birth. Sadly, she died just a few days after their son was born.
Two years before this, in 1944, Roy Rogers had a role in the film Cowboy and the Senorita. He acted alongside his pony Trigger, who was very clever and was known as the “Smartest Horse in the Movies.” His co-star was Dale Evans, the “Queen of the West.”
It wasn’t until after Wilkins died that Rogers and Evans got back together. The two fell in love in a way nobody would have ever expected, and a little over a year later, in 1947, Roy Rogers, the King of the Cowboys, and Dale Evans, the Queen of the West, got married.
The couple had a happy pregnancy and gave birth to a lovely baby named Robin Elizabeth. Sadly, the baby had Down syndrome and mumps. Because of her health problems, she died before she was two.
Another fantastic thing that Rogers and Evans did was to open the Roy Rogers-Dale Evans Museum.
The museum focused on the power couple’s Hollywood careers and was filled with personal items and trinkets that Rogers had collected since the 1960s, including motorcycles and cowboy hats.
The museum was open for many years, from the late 1960s to the late 2000s, but it closed for various reasons.
The museum was originally located in Apple Valley, California, from 1967 to 2003. After Roy Rogers and Dale Evans died, it was moved to Branson, Missouri. But for the next six years, it couldn’t make enough money, so it was decided to close again. Most of the collection was sold in July 2010 for $2.9 million. During the auction, Roy Jr. was present to present the items, and he was very moved by the situation.
Roy Rogers was a real-life King of the Cowboys, and his life was full of adventures, love, loss, passion, and honor. Roy and Dale were in a happy relationship and loved each other until they died. They even killed similarly – what a romantic twist of fate.
Rogers died from heart failure at the age of 86 on July 6, 1998, and Evans was killed from the exact cause at the age of 82 on February 7, 2001.
The two Western legends are buried in California, and their legacy in Hollywood will continue to live on.