Press Release: April 17, 2008
AWARD WINNING FFA STUDENTS FROM PRYOR
CELEBRATE CROW CULTURE AT BAIR FAMILY MUSEUM
Tepee raising, demonstrations, and traditional dancing
11 a.m., Friday, May 2
Bair Family Museum
Martinsdale
High School Students with the Plenty Coups FFA chapter
from Pryor will demonstrate the rich traditions of their Crow heritage, Friday,
May 2, on the grounds of the Bair Family Museum, in Martinsdale. Eight Plenty Coups
High School students, all members of the Crow Tribe, will present a program of Crow
culture that has won them both state and national FFA American Indian Program awards
for the past three years. The event, which is open to the public, includes tepee
construction, traditional Crow style drum dancing, and a ‘hands on’ discussion of
Native American diet - including the opportunity for the audience to purchase Indian
tacos. Activities begin at 11 a.m.
Laura Moore, FFA advisor to the Plenty Coups FFA Chapter,
is also the agriculture teacher at Plenty Coups High School. She said her FFA students
do all the research and preparation for the demonstrations, including talking with
tribal elders and searching for information on the net to prepare a program for
audiences of all ages that promotes Indian culture associated with agriculture.
The resulting program, said Moore, has students giving power point lectures on Native
American culture, demonstrating traditional dance and music, and gaining a better
understanding and appreciation of their Crow heritage:
“These kids are proud of who they are and where they
are from. The work they do to compete in the FFA American Indian Program competition
has given them a new-found confidence and ability to value their Crow culture and
talk about it before very large audiences like the National FFA convention in Indianapolis,
as well as small groups such as students in schools around Montana.”
Moore said several schools around the state are bringing
students to the tepee raising at the Bair Museum on May 2, including those from
Lavina, Ryegate, Harlowton and White Sulphur Springs. She credits growing interest
in American Indian culture by area schools partly to Montana’s Indian Education for
All implementation, authorized by the 2005 Montana Legislature to provide
funding to develop in Montana students an understanding of American and Montana
Indian people and their histories, as well as fostering respect for their respective
cultures
The tepee construction ceremony is just one of many
special events taking place at or near the Bair Family Museum this summer. Other
activities include rodeos, a Woolgrowers campout, the second annual Wind Festival,
art shows, Shakespeare in the Park, and a book festival. The museum, located between
White Sulphur Springs and Harlowton, is open every summer, 10 am to 5 pm, Wednesday
through Sunday between May 1 and September 30, and 10 am to 5 pm, seven days a week
between Memorial Day and Labor Day. The Bair Family Museum is managed by the Upper
Musselshell Historic Society in Harlowton and financially supported by the Charles
M. Bair Family Trust Board of Advisors.
For more information, call (406) 572-3314, or visit
the website, info@bairfamilymuseum.org.