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Footprints 2004:
Joe
P. Cardinal
Tom
Longboat
Monik
Sioui
Bill
Reid
Kateri
Tekakwitha
Jean
Goodwill
Dekanawidah
Alex
Decoteau
Will
Sampson
Victoria
Belcourt Callihoo
Jay
Silverheels
Clarence
Campeau
Jackson
Beardy
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Phone: (780) 455-2700 Fax
(780) 455-7639
Email: edwind@ammsa.com
[Footprints] Alex
Decoteau:
Difficult beginnings, life of achievement
Cheryl Petten
Each spring, students in Edmonton gather to take part in a
five-kilometre race named in honor of Alexander Wuttunee Decoteau.
To the children, Decoteau is a role model, an example of what
people can accomplish with their lives. And although Decoteau's
life was a short one, almost 90 years after his death he still
inspires others with his example.
Alex Decoteau was born on Nov.
19, 1887 on the Red Pheasant Reserve near North Battleford, Sask.
He was the second youngest of five children born to Mary and
Peter Decoteau. When he was just three years old, his father
was murdered and his mother, left with no means to support herself
and her family, asked that three of her children be placed in
the nearby Battleford industrial school.
Peter Decoteau had been employed by the Indian department for
many years up until his death, and the department agreed to Mrs.
Decoteau's request, and young Alex began his studies at the industrial
school.
Decoteau was a good student and an exceptional athlete. He excelled
at a number of sports, including boxing, cricket and soccer.
He also demonstrated his ability as a runner.
When he finished school, Decoteau moved to Edmonton where a job
awaited him in a machine shop owned by his brother-in-law. He
also continued to run, and soon made a name for himself as a
middle and long-distance runner.
He ran his first competitive race in Fort Saskatchewan, Alta.
in May 1909 and came in second. He had greater success in his
next race the following month, a five-mile race held during the
Edmonton Exhibition. But it would be his next race that would
make people sit up and take notice. It was the Mayberry Cup in
Lloydminster, located on the Saskatchewan/Alberta border, another
five-mile race. When he'd crossed the finish line that day in
July, Decoteau had set a new western Canadian record, finishing
in 27 minutes, 45.2 seconds.
In 1909, Decoteau left the machine shop for a career in policing.
He joined the city of Edmonton's police force, becoming Canada's
first Aboriginal police officer. And he continued to run and
to win.
In 1910, he entered the Alberta provincial championships held
in Lethbridge. Decoteau competed in four events-the half-mile,
one-mile, two-mile and five-mile races-and took first place in
each of them.
His list of racing accomplishments includes winning the Calgary
Herald's Christmas Day Road Race three times, the Hon. C.W. Cross
Challenge Cup in Edmonton five times, and the annual 10-mile
race in Fort Saskatchewan three times.
In 1912, Decoteau was given a leave from his policing duties
so he could represent Canada in the Olympic Games in Stockholm,
Sweden, competing in the 5,000-metre event. Decoteau finished
second in his qualifying heat and in the final was running in
third place after the fourth lap when he began getting leg cramps.
When the race was over, he had finished in eighth place.
Despite not winning a medal, Decoteau arrived home from the Olympics
to a hero's welcome, complete with a parade down Jasper Avenue,
right through the heart of downtown Edmonton.
After the Olympics, Decoteau returned to policing. He was promoted
to police sergeant and was given his own station. He also continued
to run, winning almost every race he entered.
Then, in 1916, Decoteau answered a call to another kind of duty.
He enlisted with the Canadian army in April 1916. He would use
his athletic abilities in aid of King and country, serving as
a runner in the trenches during the Second World War. The following
May, he shipped out overseas with the 49th Canadian Battalion,
arriving in France.
In a letter to his sister written in early September 1917, Decoteau
talked about his experiences in the war. He spoke fondly of all
the people from Edmonton he'd run into in France, and told her
about a bout of trench fever he was just beginning to recover
from. He asked her not to tell their mother he'd been ill. He
didn't see any reason to worry her needlessly.
By the end of October, Decoteau found himself in Belgium, and
in the thick of the battle on Passchendaele Ridge. British and
Australian troops had been battling at Passchendaele for months,
with little to show for their efforts other than mounting casualties.
The battle to take the ridge was an important one to the allies,
as the high ground would give them footing to launch attacks
on ports on the Belgian coast, under the control of German troops
and being used as bases for their submarines. The allied forces
launched their assaults from the only part of Belgium they still
held, around the town of Ypres. The Canadian troops would try
to take the ridge battle by battle, bit by bit.
The Canadian effort was eventually successful, but at a huge
cost. By the time the Canadians had secured the ridge on Nov.
10, 16,000 Canadian soldiers had been killed or wounded or were
missing. One of those 16,000 was 29-year-old Alex Decoteau, who
died in the morning hours of Oct. 30, killed by a sniper's bullet
during an attack on the German line.
The bodies of some of those who fell at Passchendaele were never
recovered but were instead claimed by the mud of the battlefield.
Those who were recovered lie in a number of cemeteries surrounding
the battle site, some identified, but many more buried as the
unknown dead.
Alex Decoteau was buried in the Passchendaele New British Cemetery
north of Passchendaele, alongside 649 other Canadian soldiers
killed.
In 1985, Decoteau's friends and family gathered in Edmonton to
hold a special ceremony to bring his spirit home. In attendance
were members of the Red Pheasant band council, First Nations
veterans, representatives from the Canadian Armed Forces and
a 10-member honor guard from the Edmonton Police Service. A drum
group performed a burial song, then a piper from the police department
played Amazing Grace.
Decoteau's many achievements continue to be recognized and remembered
to this day.
He has been inducted into the Edmonton City Police Hall of Fame,
the Alberta Sports Hall of Fame, the Saskatchewan Sports Hall
of Fame and the Saskatchewan First Nations Sport Hall of Fame.
He was also named one of the 100 Edmontonians of the Century
as part of that city's centennial celebrations being held this
year.
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