Champion is a village east of Highway 23, approximately 65 km North Northwest of Lethbridge. The history of Champion started in 1906, when Martin George Clever and his second wife Jennie quit their native Iowa to homestead in Southern Alberta, North of the Little Bow River. Clever’s offer of free lots on his property attracted businesses and created the instant hamlet of Cleverville. When the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) started planning its Kipp-Aldersyde line, the company tried to buy Clever’s remaining property through a third party. Clever was no dummy; he knew who wanted his land and demanded a better price. The CPR responded by buying another farm west of Cleverville and developing it in 1910 as the new railway townsite of Champion. Cleverville vanished as quickly as it appeared. Its buildings and people moved to Champion. All that remains is a stone cairn on a lonely highway that reads “Village of Cleverville – 1906 – 1910”.
Champion was named for Henry Thomson Champion (1847-1916), a Winnipeg banker and onetime chairman of the Winnipeg Stock Exchange. Born in Toronto, Champion came west during the Manitoba Insurrection of 1870 as a sergeant of the Wolsely expedition. He then remained in Winnipeg for the rest of his life. If he had no other Alberta connection, at least Champion lived on Winnipeg’s Edmonton Street.
As of 2024, AFHS volunteers have documented 748 interments at Champion Cemetery.
1 St South
Nearest Populated Centre: Champion,
Province: Alberta
Latitude, Longitude
50.23245, -113.14427
Map Location
Surname | Given Name | Born | Died | Age | Photo(s) | Cemetery | Obituary | Narrative | R Code |
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