Medicine Hat News

Treaty 7 chiefs to lead Stampede parade

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CALGARY The Calgary Stampede will have not one but seven parade marshals this year.

Chiefs of the Treaty 7 First Nations in southern Alberta have been chosen to ride at the head of the parade on July 7.

They include three chiefs from the Blackfoot Confederac­y, three from the Stoney Nakoda Nations and the chief of the Tsuut’ina Nation.

Some 1,800 First Nations people took part in the first Calgary Stampede 105 years ago, president and chairman David Sibbald said Wednesday.

“We have had a strong relationsh­ip since the beginning of this great festival and we would like to build on that relationsh­ip going forward, making our connection even stronger,” he said.

Chief Darcy Dixon with the Bearspaw First Nation west of Calgary said the organizer of the first Stampede made a point of making sure indigenous people were able to participat­e.

“It wasn’t until 1912 that we had a person by the name of Guy Weadick who actually went to bat for the nations to talk to the politician­s, so that the Indian agents would allow us to travel freely into our own country from the reservatio­ns we were put on,” he said.

Lee Crowchild, chief of the Tsuu’tina Nation just outside Calgary city limits, was beaming after Sibbald announced who the marshals would be.

“I’ve been involved with the Stampede since I was knee-high to a grasshoppe­r in many different forms and this is actually kind of cool,” he said.

The 10-day western-themed festival kicks off with a parade through downtown Calgary and features rodeo events, chuckwagon races, concerts, midway games and carnival rides.

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