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4/ OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2018 THE RIDER HON. COL. A.W. FINN CD: Founder


BARRY FINN: barry@therider.com Publisher/ Editor/Advertising Manager


KELLY BOWERS: kellybowers1@gmail.com Advertising Sales


JOHN DAVIDSON: john.davidson@okd.com Advertising Sales


GLENDA FORDHAM: fordhampr@rogers.com Entertainment Columnist


Established in 1970, Published By 1677849 Ontario Ltd.


P.O. Box 378, Fonthill, ON L0S 1E0 1-877-743-3715 • (905) 387-1900 Email: barry@therider.com Web: www.therider.com


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• Eastern Ontario Quarter Horse Association • Ontario Cutting Horse Association • Ontario Paint Horse Club • Ontario Quarter Horse Association


• Ontario Reined Cow Horse Association • Ontario Reining Horse Association • Ontario Trail Riding Association • Quarter Racing Owners Of Ontario, Inc. • Western Horse Association Of Ontario


WHAO Founder Herb Towers Passes


By Kit Bartle. I’ve written quite a few


articles for the Rider over the years, but this is the hardest article I have ever written. Its about a man and his love for his wife, of over 65 years, his kids and his horses. Herb Towers loved life.


It is ironic that his


passing was just before Thanksgiving, where people celebrate what they are grateful for. So now when Thanksgiving comes next year, and people are show- ing their horses at Rockton and Norfolk Fairs, they will remember that Herb Towers and his colleagues were re- sponsible for getting these shows in past years by es- tablishing the Western Horse Association of On- tario back in 1952. Herb grew up by the


Brow in Hamilton, ON, steps from where the incline railway climbed the Moun- tain at Wentworth Street. School ended suddenly for Herb. “I got to the front door of Cathedral and had to go to work. Dad was up and gone and Mom needed Herb’s help to keep the fam- ily going. Herb and Jean met at


work They both worked for an area meat packer. Jean was 17 when they got mar- ried. Herb and Jean and the kids rented a little place at Mount Albion. They had a horse and Herb used to get home from work, saddle up, gallop all over what is now King’s Forest Park. “Just bush and trails and creek then,” he says. Then he got to know


Ken Soble, founder of CHCH. Soble had a spread on Highway 99 in Dundas and kept half a dozen horses there. He hired Herb to be his ranch foreman — free house and $85 a week. Du-


ties included teaching


Soble’s daughter to ride. Soble, too, though a slow- poke mare suited him best. The Bar 11 Ranch was on TV each weekday afternoon from 5 to 6:30. It lost a gui- tar-playing American named Bill Long and Soble asked Herb to take over. He was a natural. His


job was to introduce the cowboy picture, do some local interviews and handle the live ads in between — for products like Mammy’s Bread, Vam hair tonic, made-in-Hamilton Hoover vacuums. There were programming changes and the TV gig ended. Herb soon decided that from then on, he was going to work for himself. He became a blacksmith and stuck at it for 48 years. “Only kicked twice,” he says. He would head off, sometimes all week, shoe- ing horses from here to Kingston. He’d sleep in the truck, cook steak on the bar-


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becue. And he used his TV


speaking skills to announce


horse shows big and small. The most memorable was the WHAO show at the


CNE and the WHAO show at Garden City Raceway. He also became a well re- spected WHAO Judge all over Ontario. Back in 1952 a group


of cowboys got together and Photo Credit: The Rider


formed the Western Horse Association of Ontario. The first page of the WHAO rulebook hasn’t changed and it still reads “ To pro- mote horsemanship in On- tario, cultivate relationships with other Organization…. “ The WHAO shows lasted 50 years and in all those 50 years Herb and Jean spon-


about it? Herb would come out and tell you the best way, the best classes and would come out and judge your show. Herb and friends were instrumental in bringing Rodeo to Ontario. A sport that has grown in leaps and bounds and some- thing he was very proud of. It has been my pleasure to


Herb Towers on the far left and my grandfather Jack Price on the far right. Jackson Square. Photo Courtesy of Jen Ryan.


Do you love Fergus? New Fergus adventure coming this fall: https://www.horseandriderbooks.com/product/FEANNI.html


A Celebration of Life was held on Saturday, October 13 in Brantford, Pictured above are Bob Sisson, Aidan Finn, George Hewitt and Joe Carter who all attended.


The Rider welcomes letters on any subject but reserves the right to edit them for


brevity and clarity. Letters of 200 words or less are more likely to be published.


All letters, including those sent by E-mail, must include


thewriter’s name, address and daytime phone number. Reach us by E-mail: barry@therider.com


sored the Youth Horseman- ship Class every year. Herb also managed to get an over 50 class at the Ancaster Fair of which I managed to win, a trophy I will cherish. Herb always had great


stories to tell about all the old cowboys, Jack Price, George Southward, Jack Bridge, Leroy Kufsky just to name a few. Herb was al- ways there when you needed a question asked, Herb, we want to start a sad- dle club, how do we go


call Herb my friend over the past 50 or so years. Now we are celebrat-


ing his life, a full life, a life dedicated to his family, his love of golf but mostly his love of horses. His dedica- tion to this sport will always be remembered for years to come. Herb touched so many lives, judged moms and dads, their kids and their kids kids. Rest in peace Herb, ride the hills and val- leys in the sky with all your pals until we meet again.


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