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Whoop-Up Days

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Whoop-Up Days
Whoop-Up Days Logo
GenreExhibition, rodeo, festival
Dates5 days, starting on the Tuesday of the last full week of August.
2024: August 20–24
Location(s)Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
Founded1897; 127 years ago (1897) (Exhibition)
1904; 120 years ago (1904) (Rodeo)
Attendance77,263 (2023)
77,263 (record – 2023)[1]
Organized byLethbridge & District Exhibition
Websitewww.agrifoodhub.ca/events/whoop-up

Whoop-Up Days is an annual exhibition, rodeo, and festival held in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada organized by the Lethbridge & District Exhibition.

The 5-day event, held during the last full week of August, includes a parade through downtown, daily concerts, bull riding, a rodeo, an indoor and outdoor trade show, live-music, a midway, and citywide pancake breakfasts and barbecues.

In 2023, a record-breaking attendance at the event numbered 77,263. The previous record was set in 2007 when 69,964 visitors attended. Economic impact from the fair amounts to roughly $2.5 million spent by event operations, locals and visitors.[2]

History

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The first fair was held on 5 October 1897 at the agricultural grounds in Queen Victoria Park (renamed in 1955 to Gyro Park). It included stage presentations, travelling shows and horse racing.

In 1904, eight years before the Calgary Stampede, the first large-scale rodeo was staged as part of Whoop-Up Days.

In 1912, the festival was moved to its current location east of Henderson Park.

There were cancellations in 1917–18 & 1942–45. A virtual event was held in 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Location

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Whoop-Up Days takes place at Exhibition Park, which is on the eastern edge of the city next to Henderson Park. Permanent structures at the site include a 10,664 m2 (114,787 ft²) pavilion complex (main, north, west and south pavilions, and Saddle Room), Heritage Hall, Pioneer Park, a grandstand, and a racetrack.

Name

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The name “Whoop-Up Days” is derived from the nearby national historic site Fort Whoop-Up, which was a whisky trading outpost and hub of illicit activities in the mid-19th century before the arrival of the North-West Mounted Police in the area that is now Lethbridge.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Whoop-Up Days 2023 shatters attendance records, Lethbridge News Now, 30 August 2023, retrieved 24 August 2024
  2. ^ Swihart, Ric (3 April 2009). "Whoop-Up Days offers fair value: poll". Lethbridge Herald. pp. A3. Archived from the original on 28 January 2013. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
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