Weekley Brothers Davie Pro Rodeo History | Davie Florida Cowboy Town
Western Heritage

Weekley Brothers Davie Pro Rodeo History

The Weekley Brothers Davie Pro Rodeo belongs to a place that still takes its Western identity seriously. In Davie, Florida, rodeo is not a borrowed theme layered onto a town after the fact. It is part of the town’s public character, which is exactly why Davie still leans into the name Cowboy Town.

The modern rodeo carries that history forward, but the story starts earlier than the current brand. Davie’s first rodeo dates back to 1946. The Weekley and Parrish families began producing the rodeos in 1986. The Weekley Brothers Davie Pro Rodeo name came later, but it sits inside that longer local tradition.

On this page

Davie’s early rodeo roots

Davie’s rodeo history reaches back to the mid-twentieth century. Public materials from the current rodeo organization state that the first rodeo held in Davie was in 1946. That matters because it places the rodeo inside a real local timeline, not just a loose cowboy-story frame.

The town built a reputation around horses, Western lifestyle, and arena culture long before the current event branding took shape.

Real roots, not borrowed image

In Davie, rodeo is tied to local identity, not just event marketing.

The Weekley era

The modern production era began in 1986, when the Weekley and Parrish families started producing the rodeos. That is the important pivot point for the current event structure. Later, the Weekley Brothers Davie Pro Rodeo identity emerged from that production history and became the public-facing name associated with the event.

That cleaner timeline is stronger than the old version because it separates three different things: the first Davie rodeo, the beginning of the Weekley-family production era, and the later Weekley Brothers branding.

Why Cowboy Town still fits

Davie still actively presents itself as Cowboy Town, and the rodeo is one of the clearest public expressions of that identity. The event is not just a competition weekend. It reinforces the image Davie has worked to preserve around horses, ranch culture, and Western visibility in South Florida.

That alone gives this page a distinct lane among your rodeo-history pieces. It is a Florida rodeo story, and that matters because it breaks the assumption that Western culture only belongs to the interior West.

Why the rodeo still matters

The Weekley Brothers Davie Pro Rodeo remains active because it still connects competition, place, and community. Current materials emphasize PRCA ties, major attendance, and continuing event dates, which tells you this is not just a historical footnote. It is still functioning as a live expression of local horse culture.

It stayed public

Some heritage events fade into memory. Others stay alive because people keep showing up. Davie’s rodeo stayed visible, and that visibility is part of why the identity held.

It stayed connected to horses

Horses are still central to the event’s meaning. They are part of the competition, part of the town’s self-image, and part of the reason the rodeo still feels rooted instead of synthetic.

Built on real horse culture

Rodeo history matters most when it is tied to a place that still lives it in public.

Frequently Asked Questions

When was the first rodeo held in Davie?

The current rodeo organization states that the first rodeo ever held in Davie was in 1946.

When did the Weekley family begin producing the Davie rodeos?

The Weekley and Parrish families began producing the rodeos in 1986.

Is the Weekley Brothers Davie Pro Rodeo still active?

Yes. Current event materials list scheduled performances and continue to present it as a live PRCA rodeo event in Davie, Florida.

Why is Davie called Cowboy Town?

Davie has long tied its public identity to horses, Western culture, and rodeo tradition, and the rodeo is one of the clearest expressions of that identity.


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