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Post crediting Blackfeet Tribe leader for Washington logo is true
If Your Time is short
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Former Blackfeet tribal chairman Walter Wetzel is credited as the driving force behind the creation of the team’s current logo, and the quote attributed to him is genuine.
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Since the team’s announcement, members of Wetzel’s family have said they’re sad to see the logo go but acknowledged the name change is "long overdue."
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While they don’t all agree, numerous Native American tribes, organizations and advocacy groups have called on the team to change its name and imagery.
After decades of resistance, the NFL’s Washington franchise announced it will retire its longtime name and logo.
The team announced the decision after it conducted an internal review amid mounting pressure from sponsors and protests that its name is racist and offensive to Native Americans.
But posts on Facebook attempt to present a different perspective, noting that the logo was designed by a former leader of the Blackfeet Nation tribe who once said it "made us all proud to have an Indian on a big-time team."
The post, which displays the logo next to a photo of what appears to be an American Indian, says:
"Walter ‘Blackie’ Wetzel, a Blackfeet leader, designed the Redskins logo in 1972, inspired by Chief Two Guns White Calf. ‘It made us all so proud to have an Indian on a big-time team. It’s only a small group of radicals who oppose those names. Indians are proud of Indians.’ -Walter ‘Blackie’ Wetzel, 2002, Washington Post."
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The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)
This is mostly accurate. Walter Wetzel, a former Blackfeet tribal chairman, is credited as the driving force behind the creation of the team’s current logo, and the quote attributed to him is genuine. But he himself did not "design" the logo.
This history doesn’t change the fact that numerous American Indian tribes and advocacy groups, including ones Wetzel was affiliated with, have called for the team to change its name and imagery for years.
Members of Wetzel’s family told media outlets that they’re sad to see the logo go, but agreed the name needs to be changed.
The team was initially based in Boston and was called the Braves before former owner George Preston Marshall gave it the latest name in 1933. The team relocated to Washington, D.C. in 1937 and received the first of its trademarks for the name in 1967.
In 1972, Native American leaders representing multiple organizations requested that the team change its name, calling it a derogatory racial epithet.
Wetzel, who had served as the Blackfeet tribal chairman and president of the National Congress of American Indians, asked team executives that same year to drop the "R" logo that was used at the time in favor of a profile of an Indian warrior.
Wetzel spoke with the Washington Post in 2002, shortly before he died, and said he had told the team he’d like to see an Indian on their helmets instead of the big R.
Within weeks, the team had a new logo based on a composite of Native American photographs, including one of early 20th-century Blackfeet chief, Two Guns White Calf.
"It made us all so proud to have an Indian on a big-time team," Wetzel told the paper, "It's only a small group of radicals who oppose those names. Indians are proud of Indians."
Almost five decades later, Wetzel’s family expressed mixed reactions to the team’s announcement.
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His grandson, Bill Wetzel, told the Great Falls, Mont., Tribune (which is based about two hours from the Blackfeet Indian Reservation) that his grandfather was a good, honest man, and it bothered him that his grandfather’s name had been associated with a racial slur, but that times had changed.
Jacob Wetzel, his great-grandson, told the paper that while the name change is "long overdue," he was still sad to see the family legacy go.
The NCAI, which describes itself as the country’s oldest, largest and most representative American Indian and Alaska Native advocacy organization, has pushed for the team to drop the name and imagery for years.
The organization commended the team for its decision.
"We thank the generations of tribal nations, leaders, and activists who worked for decades to make this day possible. We commend the Washington NFL team for eliminating a brand that disrespected, demeaned, and stereotyped all Native people, and we call on all other sports teams and corporate brands to retire all caricatures of Native Americans that they use as their mascots," the group said in a statement.
"We are not mascots — we are Native people, citizens of more than 500 tribal nations who have stood strong for millennia and overcome countless challenges to reach this pivotal moment in time when we can help transform America into the just, equitable, and compassionate country our children deserve," it said.
But not all tribal members agree with the name change. Some say that the logo has been a point of pride, while others say teams like Washington that use Native American mascots are guilty of cultural appropriation and exploitation.
Posts on Facebook say Walter Wetzel, a former Blackfeet Nation tribal leader, "designed the Redskins logo" and said it made Native Americans proud.
Wetzel persuaded team executives in 1972 to change its logo to a profile of an Indian warrior, though he himself did not design it. He did once say in a Washington Post interview that it "made us all proud to have an Indian on a big-time team."
Meanwhile, numerous tribes and Native American organizations say the team’s name and imagery is offensive and have fought for years to have it changed.
We rate this Mostly True.
Our Sources
Facebook post, July 3, 2020
New York Times, Redskins to Drop Name, Yielding to Pressure From Sponsors and Activists, July 13, 2020
Washington Post, A timeline of the Redskins name change debate, July 13, 2020
Washington Post, American Indians Among Admirers Of Redskins Name, Jan. 26, 2002
National Congress of American Indians, NCAI Statement on the Washington Football Team’s Retirement of Racist Mascot, July 13, 2020
Great Falls Tribune, Montana tribal members react to Washington NFL team name, logo change, July 13, 2020
Great Falls Tribune, 'Times change': Grandson of 'Redskins' logo designer comments on name change, July 14, 2020
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