NATHAN PIERCE (PETE) KERSHNER 1903-1958
Pete was born March 10, 1903 at Vale, Oregon to George W. and
Martha Pierce Kershner. There were
seven boys and two girls in the Kershner Family. Pete was the fourth child in this large family. He received his education in Vale and
Ontario, Oregon. Pete spent his summers
on the family ranch. The family moved
to Homedale, Idaho in 1916.
Pete was the best rider in the family. Ranch work and rodeoing came naturally to him. Pete had a love for horses and he liked
working with them, whether it was running them or riding them.
In 1916, at the age of 23, Pete won the Idaho State Championship
Cowboy at the Nampa Harvest Festival. The Nampa Harvest Festival was the
forerunner to the Snake River Stampede.
Pete was presented with a saddle made by Hamley Saddle Company of
Pendleton, Oregon. Pete made his
winning ride on a horse called “Widow Maker”, the most famous bucking horse in
the Northwest for several years. The
following year Pete was making his winning ride for the Championship in
Winnemucca, Nevada when he was injured.
He was in a coma for about a month.
After this accident Pete discontinued his rodeo career.
In the 1920’s Pete worked various ranches at Paradise Valley,
Nevada. Lay Land and Livestock Company
owned by Albert Lay, Deer Creek Ranch, 96 Ranch, William Stock Land and
Livestock Company and for Able and Curtner, which is known as the Circle A
Ranch.
Pete’s Grandfather George W. Pierce was a Blacksmith in Paradise
Valley, Nevada from 1874 to 1883. The
family had roots in Paradise Valley before Pete worked there. Pete also helped Arthur Drummond run wild
horses on the Owyhee Desert. He made
several trips to Winnemucca, Nevada trailing chicken feed horses to be shipped
on the train.
On December 13, 1943, at the age of 40, Pete enlisted into the
U.S. Navy. He served in the South
Pacific theatre; this was shortly after Pearl harbor. He was injured in the New Hebrides Campaign in 1944. Pete was on
a ship that was being unloaded when a crane fell on him. He was paralyzed from the waist down and had
very little use of his left arm. He was
confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life.
Pete married Josephine Fox of Oreana, Idaho on September 1, 1947
in Winnemucca, Nevada. The couple made
their home in Van Nuys, California until 1952, when they returned to Homedale,
Idaho. The couple had two children,
Jack Melvin and Linda Jo.
After Pete’s injuries he learned how to do leather craft. He did this as a hobby to occupy his spare
time. Pete owned a gravel operation in
Homedale, Idaho during this time.
Pete’s enthusiasm for rodeos never waned and he attended all of the
local rodeos, viewing them from a “ringside seat” in his wheelchair. Pete enjoyed going downtown, in Homedale in
his motorized wheelchair and visiting his friends. One person that he liked to visit with was Leo Coc, a bronc
rider. They would relive their rides
and discuss the different horses that they had ridden.
Pete Kershner passed away at the age of 55 in March of 1958 at
Boise, Idaho. He was an honorary member
of the Homedale American Legion and an honorary member of the Owyhee Wranglers.
Nathan Pierce (Pete) Kershner was inducted into the Buckaroo
Hall of Fame in September 1995.