Cultural Items Handed Back - 2022!

Exeter: Clothing, Feathers, Bow & Regalia Respectfully Handed-Back to Siksika Nation! (1.6.2025)

Blogger’s Note: Being able to visit museums and see the history of the world at our fingertips is surely one of the most glaring examples of White privilege. On the one-hand, items are preserved and easy to see for educational reasons, on the other, the presence of these items in the UK is a product of theft – but more than this – theft usually associated with the murder and mayhem typified by the spread of British imperialism across the globe – over the last four-hundred years. These items do not just “arrive here” – as if by magic – as they are usually “collected” as acts of war, seen as “war booty”. Whilst the bodies of the indigenous people are piled high by the modern war technology of the British – their pre-modern property is quickly disentangled from the deed limbs that entwined it, and shipped overseas so that it ends up in places like Exeter. We learn about the deadly nature of British imperialism by looking at the artifacts that were stolen from the foreign people we killed when invading their land – and stealing their freedom. ACW (1.6.2025)

Home > News > News > Crowfoot Regalia to be handed over to Siksika Nation delegation

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Chief Ouray Crowfoot and a delegation from the Siksika Nation in Canada will take possession of sacred regalia in a handover event in Exeter on 19 May 2022.

The regalia and other belongings which has been housed in the Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery in Exeter since 1878, include a buckskin shirt, pair of leggings, a knife with feather bundle, two beaded bags and a horsewhip. These objects once belonged to Chief Crowfoot, an important late nineteenth-century Blackfoot leader.

Following a blessing at the museum, the regalia will be packed and returned to Canada, where it will be redisplayed in the Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park, a museum focussing on Siksika cultural heritage and the preservation of their way of life. The geographic area is of great spiritual significance to the Siksika Nation and Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park is built on the site of the signing of the Blackfoot Treaty, also known as Treaty 7, in September 1877. It is also the place where Crowfoot died.

Exeter City Councillors voted unanimously to return the regalia in April 2020 but Covid travel restrictions have meant that it is only now possible to complete the repatriation.

Jon-Paul Hedge, Exeter City Council’s Director with responsibilities including the museum, said, “After agreeing this momentous step more than two years ago, we are now pleased to return Crowfoot’s regalia to the Siksika Nation. We hope it marks the start of an ongoing relationship between Exeter and the Siksika people.”

Chief Crowfoot said, “Bringing these items back home to Siksika is a historic event. Many items left Siksika and other Nations and were scattered across the globe. Now the tides are turning and these items are finding their way back home. Crowfoot’s entire essence is in and around Blackfoot territory and this is where his belongings should be housed.

“We are building strong relationships with curators at several museums as well as private collectors in an effort to bring items such as the ones coming home back to their rightful place. There are many more Blackfoot items still in need of being claimed and repatriated back to their rightful homeland. To me, it is not as important how these items left Siksika, but what is important is how we bring them back home.”

The Siksika Nation will lend Chief Crowfoot’s belongings to Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park for display and the education of all peoples around their significance as part of world history, together with their journey to the UK and their return to the Chief’s traditional homelands.

More information about the return of the regalia can be found in our FAQs.