The club has been around for over 100 years, but the current organization was founded in 2004 by Ellis Ferrell. In 2008, 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 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 (who also run a youth program), local churches, the urban cowboys themselves, and the local business association, Strawberry Mansion SMART Business Association. For decades, the club has been led by Ellis Ferrell and supported by other local horsemen and community members. In previous years, the Fletcher Street Urban Riding Club was a registered nonprofit in Pennsylvania The lot was donated to the organization by Good Bet Trading, a local real estate company owned by Philadelphia native Adam Ehrlich. In 2019, the club moved onto newly acquired land. However, the long-dormant triangle of city land used for decades by the club was threatened by the
Philadelphia Housing Authority, which acquired the land for $1 and broke ground on a housing project. In April 2021, following the release of the Netflix movie based on them, Ellis Ferrell and the Fletcher Street Riding Club launched a fundraiser, so that support could flow into the real-life programs that Ferrell, his family, and the group's friends have largely self-funded for decades, despite external pressure, direct city government interference, and acquisition of their longtime property for housing construction. ==In popular culture==