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Bolo Ties: Not Just For Westerns

Actors Roy Rogers and Dale Evans are shown in this photo, as Roy sports a bolo tie honoring his horse, Trigger.
KEVORK DJANSEZIAN
/
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Actors Roy Rogers and Dale Evans are shown in this photo, as Roy sports a bolo tie honoring his horse, Trigger.

An Arizona museum is giving that state's official neck wear a display all of its own for the next several months. The Heard Museum has opened its newest exhibit: Native American Bolo Ties: Vintage and Contemporary. It will run through next September.

Before you laugh, Arizona isn't the only state that recognizes bolo ties as its official neck wear. So do New Mexico and Texas, but the Heard Museum proudly notes Arizona was the first to do it in 1971. There's even a Bola Tie Society of Arizona, whose members insist the tie's correct name is actually spelled b-o-l-a, not b-o-l-o, although people disagree, according to the Washington Post. Members have been meeting monthly since 1966.

The Heard, in Phoenix, is showing dozens of bolo ties from its own collection, but there'll be more on display because of a gift from collector Norman Sandfield, who's donating many to the museum. The Heard says Sandfield's "collection consists of more than 1,000 bolo ties, scarf slides and ephemera, many of which will be on display."

The bolo tie is generally considered Western wear, and museum visitors can see how it became popular in the 1950s with television stars like Roy Rogers. But they'll also be treated to the works of Native American jewelers from the mid-20th century to the present.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Patrons examine the bolo ties exhibit at the Heard Museum in Phoenix.
Ross D. Franklin / ASSOCIATED PRESS
/
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Patrons examine the bolo ties exhibit at the Heard Museum in Phoenix.

Korva Coleman is a newscaster for NPR.