Guy Weadick: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Guy-weadick-florence-ladue.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Guy Weadick and [[Florence LaDue]] (his wife) circa 1912.]] |
[[Image:Guy-weadick-florence-ladue.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Guy Weadick and [[Florence LaDue]] (his wife) circa 1912.]] |
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'''Guy Weadick''' (1885–1953) was an American performer and promoter. Today, he is best known as the founder of the [[Calgary Stampede]] in [[Alberta]], [[Canada]]. |
'''Guy Weadick''' (1885–1953) was an American performer and promoter. Today, he is best known as the founder of the [[Calgary Stampede]] in [[Alberta]], [[Canada]]. |
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== Early years == |
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Weadick was born in 1885, in [[Rochester, New York]]. |
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He was a well-known Wild West performer, on and off the [[vaudeville]] circuit. |
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Weadick worked the vaudeville circuit all across North America and Europe, performing rope tricks in a fifteen-minute western act. He was popular in the United States and Europe. |
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His career led him to meet his eventual wife, [[Grace Bensell]], another famous trick rope rider, performing under the stage name of [[Florence LaDue]]. As a couple, they toured the vaudeville halls and circuses of Europe, before coming to Western Canada. |
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When not traveling, they lived together in [[Wyoming]]. |
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== Calgary Stampede == |
== Calgary Stampede == |
Revision as of 00:10, 28 May 2015
Guy Weadick (1885–1953) was an American performer and promoter. Today, he is best known as the founder of the Calgary Stampede in Alberta, Canada.
Calgary Stampede
In 1912, Weadick travelled to Calgary, where he met with H.C. McMullen, a livestock agent for the Canadian Pacific Railway. The two of them put together a program for a frontier show. They envisioned a cowboy championship along with a tribute the Old West. Weadick gained financing from the Big Four: George Lane, owner of the Bar U Ranch; two other wealthy ranchers, Patrick Burns and A. E. Cross; and A. J. McLean, provincial secretary. He staged the first Calgary Stampede September 2–7, 1912, when ranchers and farmers had finished the harvesting and would be free to attend.
Weadick arranged for 200 head of Mexican steers, 200 bucking steers, and wild horses to be brought in from the ranches around Calgary. In order to entice top quality competitors, $20,000 in championship money and world championship titles were offered. The prize money was about four times the closest competition, causing riders from across North America to arrive in the 1912 Stampede. In 1919, Weadick and Calgary Industrial Exhibition manager, E. L. Richardson, agreed to combine the rodeo events with the Calgary Industrial Exhibition and, in 1923, Weadick and Richardson co-founded the Calgary Exhibition and Stampede as an annual event.[1]
Later years
Following on the success of the Calgary Stampede, Guy Weadick continued promoting his own personal Old West shows (outside Calgary). He continued running the Stampede for 20 years after its initial creation. His next appearance at the Stampede was to appear in the parade in 1952. He died in 1953.
References
- ^ Dixon, Joan; Read, Tracey (2005). Celebrating the Calgary Exhibition and Stampede. Canmore, Alberta: Altitude Publishing Canada Ltd. p. 36. ISBN 1-55153-939-X.