“B.F. Yeates is a legend in Texas and the United States as an educator, judge, horseman and builder of large programs for youth and adult horsemen,” said Doug Householder, Texas Cooperative Extension professor emeritus.
In the 1950s, there were no youth horse shows of any kind. Yeates and other like-minded AQHA pioneers decided to include youth classes, adding three new classes: showmanship, equitation and horsemanship. Yeates was in on writing the very first rules for those classes at the AQHA 1966 Convention in Las Vegas.
The committee also made the recommendation to form a junior association of AQHA. Yeates helped recruit youth members from each state to affirm a constitution and elect officers; he then served as the adviser. The educator’s work for 13 years on the committee shaped the organization into the AQHYA that exists today.
Long before videotapes were common, Yeates also helped pioneer clinics and short courses. He decided clinics and short courses were the best way to spread information about nutrition, horse care and horsemanship.
Yeates also nurtured the horse judging program. Having been a member of Texas Tech’s livestock judging team, he understood judging contests. Yeates sat down and figured out the cuts and classes. Then he began educating youth and adults on how to judge horses and how to give oral reasons and grade cards. Horse judging began to spread from youth to college teams and from there to high school FFA chapters and judging certifications in breed and even associations.
Yeates served on AQHA’s Ranch Horse Versatility Advisory Committee in the 1990s and judged the first Versatility Ranch Horse contest. He became an AQHA judge in 1957, serving 43 years. Yeates still judges AQHA Versatility Ranch Horse classes as well as breed and event shows.
Yeates was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame in 2006.
Biography updated as of March 2006.