Fletcher Street Urban Riding Club


The Fletcher Street Urban Riding Club is a 501 non-profit organization devoted to inner-city horsemanship in north Philadelphia.
Part of a century-long tradition of black urban cowboys and horsemanship in Philadelphia, local horsemen maintain and care for horses and teach neighborhood youth to do so. They encourage academic excellence and provide positive ways for local youth to spend their leisure time outdoors.
The nonprofit organization has struggled to find funding and secure and maintain their place of operations. In 2015, it acquired federal nonprofit status and the title deeds for a 7,500-square-foot vacant lot, and revived fundraising efforts. The lot was donated to the organization by Good Bet Trading, a local real estate company owned by Philadelphia native Adam Ehrlich.
The horses used in the program were initially purchased at a livestock auction in New Holland, Pennsylvania, giving a second chance to animals that would likely otherwise have been killed.
The Fletcher Street club stables are in the Strawberry Mansion neighborhood of north Philadelphia, on the edge of Fairmount Park. Informal stables exist throughout North and West Philadelphia and in Cobbs Creek Park, on private and abandoned city land. The horses are ridden throughout the city's streets and parks, and regular races are held on an open strip of Fairmount Park called the Speedway. Experienced horsemen and youth in the area care for the horses, and the Fletcher Street club horses receive additional care from a prominent area veterinarian. In 2017, it changed its location to the donated property.
The experienced horsemen often ride these horses past the recreational field on 15th street known as 'The Oval'. It is here that the horses catch the attention of many Temple University Diamond Band members.
One organized group is the Black Cowboys Association, which Philadelphia Weekly called "a Philadelphia institution that offers kids in the city's toughest neighborhoods the chance to claim a path out of the 'hood on horseback." Another formal horsemanship program for local teenagers is Work to Ride, based at Chamounix Equestrian Stables in Fairmount Park.

History

The club has been around for over 100 years, but the current the organization was founded in 2004 by Ellis Ferrell. In the late 2000s, the city government razed some of the stables and the club house, ostensibly to redevelop the land. At the time, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals publicly investigated allegations by city officials that the horses were being mistreated. The allegations proved baseless. However, with the land razed and redevelopment progressing, many horses had to be moved. In the subsequent decade, a few dozen horses have remained.
In 2009, the club planned to bring more formal mentoring and tutoring elements into its programs, although tight budgets made this difficult. On Halloween of that year, the program held a benefit event at the First District Plaza in Philadelphia, a collaboration between local fishermen, local churches, the urban cowboys themselves, and the local business association, Strawberry Mansion SMART Business Association.
As of 2016, the club is led by Ellis Ferrill and supported by other local horsemen and community members. For years, the Fletcher Street Urban Riding Club has been a registered nonprofit in Pennsylvania. Friends of Fletcher Street, a supporting organization, was also under the fiscal sponsorship of MAP Holistic Community Development, a nonprofit 501 organization.
As of 2015, the Club was a recognized federal nonprofit organization with 501 tax-exempt status, enabling it to accept tax-deductible donations, including its first title deed to a small piece of land.

In popular media and literature

The Fletcher Street Urban Riding Club has been mentioned in NPR's This American Life and in regional equestrian magazines. It has also attracted photographers and filmmakers, local and global, amateur and professional. Martha Camarillo published a book of photographs, "Fletcher Street."
City residents, surprised to see horses passing through the city, regularly snap and post images on personal webpages. G. Neri's 2011 young adult novel Ghetto Cowboy is based in Fletcher Street and urban horsemanship culture. The novel is also being adapted into a film called Concrete Cowboys.
The song "Feel the Love" by Rudimental featured the Fletcher Street horses, men, and boys in its music video, which has been viewed more than 72 million times.
In the second issue of the "Wasteland" storyline of the Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defense, the character Nichols Nichols, who grew up in Philadelphia, is surprisingly knowledgeable about horses. When asked how, he identifies the Fletcher Street Urban Riding Club, remarking, "City didn't care what happened to little brothers, but Fletcher Street, they looked out for us."
In early 2018, Google featured the club in a video advertising its Pixel 2 smartphone.

Other urban horsemanship programs

Black urban horsemanship programs exist in major cities throughout the United States. These include Horses in the Hood in Los Angeles and the Federation of Black Cowboys in Queens in New York City, the subject of a 2003 film produced by Zachary Mortensen.
Internationally, the best-known related program is based in Dublin, Ireland. These urban cowboys, known as Pony Kids, have access to 3,000 horses. The horses attract and engage youth in a difficult low-income neighborhood. They face many of the same challenges as their American counterparts. British newspaper The Independent described "Dublin's suburban horse culture" as "a fascinating example of what happens when the poor appropriate the pleasures of the rich." An anthropological study of the Dublin program examined the community development program in the context of anti-poverty efforts. A television series documented the story of five pony kids selected to ride and tour the fancier equine world.