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Clark Crouch, a prize-winning Cowboy Poet of Bothell,
Washington, delivers the reality of the West through his
western and cowboy poetry. His performances are drawn
from more than 400 original poems which capture the
humor and the pathos of the west of yesterday and today.
He is especially known for the brevity and wit of his
poems, many of which end with a humorous twist. His
book, Western Images, won the 2008 Will Rogers
Medallion Award for Cowboy Poetry and was named as one
of the top five cowboy poetry books of 2008 by the
Western Music Association.
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2008
Will Rogers Medallion Award
to
Western Images
for Outstanding Achievement in the
publishing of Western Literature
which exemplifies excellence in content
and design with an enduring quality
that preserves and celebrates the history
and spirit of the west. |
He was born
in 1928 and spent his youth in the Sandhills of
Nebraska, earning his own way as a cowboy from the age
of twelve until he was nearly eighteen. His interest in
poetry stems from a 1940's acquaintance with Badger
Clark, then Poet Laureate of South Dakota, who inspired
him to write his first cowboy poem in 1941. In 2002 he
began writing and performing cowboy poetry
professionally.
He has performed in the Northwestern U.S. and Western Canada
at cowboy gatherings, county fairs, retirement homes,
and community events. His appearances have included:
Kamloops Cowboy Festival in British Columbia; Legends of
Country Tour in Idaho, Oregon, and Washington; the
Tumbleweed Music Festival in Richland, Washington; the
Jefferson County Fair at Port Townsend, Washington; the
Clatsop County Fair at Astoria, Oregon; and the Benton
Franklin County Fair at Kennewick, Washington.
He
has six books of poetry in print, the last four of which
are in traditional ballad format: Voices of the Wind
(2002), Reflections (2003), Where Horses Reign
(2004), Sun, Sand & Soapweed (2005), Western
Images (2007) and
Views from the Saddle (2009). He also has a CD,
Where Horses Reign, containing thirty-five of his
poems. Selected poetry has been syndicated to some fifty
regional editions of
The Country Register,
an antiques and crafts tabloid, in the U.S. and Canada.
His work has appeared in
Open Range Magazine
.
You can read a selection of his poetry on
his beautiful web site:
http://poetry.crouchnet.com/western.html . In
addition he is featured on the premier web site
http://www.cowboypoetry.com .
He is a member of the Washington Poets
Association, Columbia River Cowboy Heritage Society,
Poets West, and Western Music Association.
His
life and attitudes were shaped by drought and The Great
Depression. He and his parents lived for a time
on a ranch occupying a one room sod house which was about
twenty feet square with an earthen floor and a sod roof.
Cheesecloth strung beneath the roof caught falling dirt and
insects and sheets strung on wires provided partitions for
two rudimentary bedrooms. The amenities were strictly
mid-19th Century.
Clark attended a succession of rural, one-room schools walking
or riding his pony as much as five miles morning and
evening. Employed as a ranch hand during the summers from
the time he was twelve until he was nearly eighteen, he
worked his way through high school, supplementing his summer
income by working at various times as a retail clerk,
telephone operator, janitor, and truck driver. Clark
joined the Army Air Corps right out of high school
toward the end of WWII and was recalled to the U.S. Air
Force during the Korean conflict.
He was employed by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.
During his 32 years of service, he held such positions as Director
of Contracting and Procurement, Assistant to the
Director of Nuclear Materials Safeguards, Assistant to
the Director of Engineering and Construction, Contract
Administrator for programs valued at nearly
$500-million, Public Information Officer, Freedom of
Information Officer, and Technical Information Officer
for all reporting on the Hanford Project in Washington
State.
Following his retirement, he started a management
consulting firm specializing in strategic planning,
group facilitation, and team-building. The planning
resources which he developed include a simplified
strategic planning model and tools for its application
which he used in working with clients and in conducting
workshops and seminars for continuing education programs
at several colleges and universities. The model
was successful and is now in use around the world in
colleges and universities, government agencies, and
industrial and business organizations. It was published
in a graduate text, Marketing for the 21st Century,
authored by two professors at Hofstra University in New
York. Although the model is copyrighted, Clark freely
gave permission for its use and never accepted payment
except when he was directly involved in its
implementation within an organization.
Now,
past 80, Clark does a lot of volunteer work.
His service includes the following: vice-chair of the Washington State
Hanford Area Economic Investment Fund Committee (an
economic development agency which invests in job
creation), chairman of the Richland Housing Authority (a
regional agency), board member and immediate past
president of the Tri-Cities Food Bank (a regional
organization serving four small cities and a large rural
community), member of the Economic Development District
of the Benton Franklin Council of Governments, president
of a local chapter of the National Active and Retired
Federal Employee Association (NARFE), planning
coordinator for the Washington Federation of Chapters of
NARFE.
You can learn more about Clark Crouch at his web site.
http://poetry.crouchnet.com/
Contact:
e-mail Clark
Crouch
-
509-946-1558
Under copyright
protection. The poem on this web page may not be
excerpted, copied, or reproduced, used or performed in
any form (graphic, electronic or mechanical) without the
express written permission of the author.
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