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24 September 2014
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Salford Sioux

Powwow with the Thunders

EXCLUSIVE
By the time Rita Parr left 大象传媒 Radio Manchester, her family had extended across the Atlantic. "When I came in here, I had five grandchildren. Now I've got 25!" she exclaimed, clutching photographs of her new native American relatives.

Rita Parr with photograph
Photos: Rita with her new family

Live on air, the Gorton grandmother had, for the first time, been shown photographs of family in Nebraska she never she knew she had. Within seconds, she was looking for signs of a family resemblance.

"Look at the nose - the eyes and the nose are the same," she said, pointing at her new great uncle, Daniel Charging Thunder.

Rita has always known she has a colourful family tree. Taking pride on her mantelpiece at home, alongside the school photos of her own grandchildren, is a striking portrait of a Sioux warrior in full headdress.

Inside Out: Charging Thunder >
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Taken in 1913, for the Manchester Evening Chronicle, it shows a Lakota chief from the Oglala tribe in South Dakota, who came to Salford as part of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show in 1903. His Sioux name was Charging Thunder. Rita knows him simply as "Grandad".

My Grandad

"Grandad was just my grandad and that was it in England," said Rita. "But I always knew he was famous. He was important in his own country. And he's still thought of as important now."

Charging Thunder
Grandad: Charging Thunder

Like many Lakota Indians, Charging Thunder was an exceptional horseman and performed thrilling stunts in Buffalo Bill's show in front of huge crowds, on the site of what is now the Lowry in Salford Quays.

But when the show rolled out of town, Charging Thunder stayed behind. He married Josephine, an American horse trainer who had just given birth to their first child, Bessie and together they settled in Darwen, before moving to Gorton.听

He changed his name to George Edward Williams and slowly assimilated into the Gorton community, working for many years at Belle Vue Circus, looking after the elephants, and as a doorman at a local picture house.

Indian tracker

Beware: Steve Coen in South Dakota
Tracker: Steve Coen in South Dakota

It's a story which has fascinated Salford's very own Indian tracker Steve Coen, who read that some native Americans had stayed on in Manchester back in the early 1900s and become more than friendly with the locals!

Through an appeal on this website, he managed to trace Rita and her cousin Gary Williams from Holmes Chapel - the only known descendants of Charging Thunder.

Now through a contact in South Dakota called Mike Her Many Horses (himself a second cousin of Rita and Gary's), Steve has tracked down the Charging Thunder family in neighbouring Nebraska.

"Grandad was just grandad to us, but I always knew he was important in his own country. And he's just as important to us now."
Rita on her grandfather, Lakota chief Charging Thunder

They are descendants of Daniel Charging Thunder - Charging Thunder's younger brother - who was too young to ride with Buffalo Bill's show when it left the US. They had no idea what had happened Daniel's elder brother or that they had family in England.

"They had heard a story in the family that their father had a brother who came to England, but that's all," said Steve. "So this fills in a gap for them."

Powwow

Emails are now being exchanged and plans are being made for both sides of the family to meet up. For Rita - who already has three grown-up children - Michelle, Heather and Jeremy - four adopted children and five grandchildren, it's an exciting prospect.

Charging Thunder in Gorton
Charging Thunder aka George in Gorton

"I'd like the whole family to go if possible - all 17 of us! But that's probably not going to be possible. My grandchildren are fascinated with all this, especially Amber, the eldest."

Steve Coen is now looking to commemorate the Salford-Sioux connection with an annual event. A newly elected Salford councillor himself, he is now working with the authority to organise a Salford powwow next year.

It's hoped that hundreds of native Americans will gather in Salford for the first powwow ever to be held outside North America.

last updated: 03/01/07
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