History & Culture · Western New York
Gerry's rodeo turns a small fire-company idea into a town memory
Gerry's famous rodeo is local color with a real origin story: a fire-company fundraiser, volunteer work, and a summer tradition that still fills Route 60.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Gerry has a story that sounds too big for a small Chautauqua County town until you hear how it started. The Gerry Firemen’s Rodeo is billed by the county visitors bureau as the oldest consecutive rodeo east of the Mississippi, and the event supports the town’s volunteer fire department. The modern version has rodeo events, the beef dinner, midway booths, and four days of performances along Route 60.
The origin story gives it the charm. In 1945, Jack Cox, a former working cowboy, moved to Gerry and suggested a rodeo to raise money for the newly formed fire department. Volunteers turned four acres of swampland into an arena and parking lot in time for the first stock to arrive.
That is why the story sticks. Gerry’s rodeo is not just entertainment imported into a quiet town. It is a community project that became a map marker. When Route 60 fills up in summer, you are seeing a fire-company fundraiser that grew a long memory and gave the town a cheerful claim people actually remember. It is Gerry explaining itself with dust, dinner, and volunteers.