History:
The Snake River Stampede in
Nampa, Idaho is one of the top 10 regular professional rodeos
out of the approximately 800 rodeos in the Professional Rodeo
Cowboys Association. This is a long way from its humble beginnings
of just after the turn of the century.
The Stampede is a direct descendent of the Nampa Harvest Festival
which was first staged in Nampa in 1911. During that first year,
the "old time harvest festival" featured crop and stock
exhibits, prizes for the best products of Nampa farms, orchards
and gardens, sports and contests, special attractions, and free
amusements. The event was held in late September.
After two successful years of the Harvest Festival, the committee
decided to add a bucking contest to the festivities in 1913.
The first bucking contest was held in a large, roped-off area
on the block where the Nampa Post Office is now located. There
were no stands so the spectators stood outside the rope.
The bucking contests, which
were held in conjunction with the harvest festival, gained popularity
and continued into the 1920's. Year by year, other events were
added to the Wild West contest such as calf roping and bulldogging.
By the year 1923, they were calling "the buck show" the
backbone of the Harvest Festival. The event still did not have
a name of its own. Ed Moody herded the bucking stock over
from his ranch, north and east of Horseshoe Bend, about 50 miles
to Nampa. He continued to furnish stock for the Rodeo and Buck
Show until 1937.
The year 1937 marked many changes
for the rodeo in Nampa and was the push that was needed to turn
the rodeo into a national event. The rodeo separated from the
Harvest Festival and moved its dates to July. They joined the
Rodeo Cowboys Association and from that day forward, the Stampede
has been a professional rodeo. A new name was chosen. After considering
such names as Ski-Hi Rodeo and Thunder Mountain Round Up, rodeo
director Ike Corlett named it the Snake River Stampede. Lights
were installed on the rodeo grounds and it was changed from an
afternoon to a nightime show. Professional rodeo stock contractor,
Leo Cramer of Montana, was engaged to put on the rodeo. He brought
his stock to Nampa by train.
President Franklin Roosevelt,
at his home in Hyde Park, New York, pressed a golden telegraph
key which opened the spectacular new rodeo. This telegraph key
was studded with the first 22 nuggets of gold found in Alaska
and had been used by presidents since 1909 for such events as
starting the operations at the Panama Canal and setting off the
power generation machinery at Boulder Dam. Roosevelt pressed
the key at 11 p.m., which was 8 p.m. Nampa time and the newly
organized Snake River Stampede was under way.
In 1950, a new state-of-the-art horseshoe-shaped stadium, seating
approximately 10,000, was built and a top western star was brought
in to entertain at half time during the rodeo. Gene Autry was
the first star of the Snake River Stampede and he filled the
stands every night. Many more who were unable to get in, for
lack of room, stood outside in the park to listen to him sing.
Others who followed him included Roy Rogers & Dale Evans,
Rex Allen, and the Sons of the Pioneers.
During the 1970's and 1980's,
following the demise of Hollywood singing cowboys and television
western starts, famed country-western singers came to the Stampede.
Included among those were Reba McEntire, Glen Campbell and Barbara
Mandrell. The Stampede was the first show in which McEntire,
a former rodeo barrel racer, was a headline entertainer.
It was during the 1980's that
the Stampede exchanged the western singing stars for more rodeo
events. The stars were dropped from the schedule of events and
team roping and ladies barrel racing, plus the Wrangler ® bull-fighting
event were added to the lineup.
In the 1990's, a popular kid's event, mutton busting, was also
included in the night's schedule. The Miss Rodeo Idaho contest
is also now held in conjunction with the Stampede week.
After years of planning, the
world-famous Snake River Stampede moved into a new home in 1997.
The familiar old green arena, which was built in 1950, was retired
after the last performance of the 1996 Stampede and the rodeo
moved to its new home indoors at the Idaho Center located just
off exit 38 on I-84. The modern, air-conditioned facility offers
a seating capacity for up to 10,000 spectators in an oval rodeo
configuration, giving every seat a great, close-up view of the
rodeo action
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1955 SRS Champions:
Pete Crump
Gerald Roberts
Dean Oliver
Casey Tibbs
Jim Shoulders |
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