Bellisario College of Communications

Traditional American Indian Powwow returns for first-ever February celebration

Popular, family friendly event scheduled Feb. 24-25, with a Grand Entry at noon each day

Azul Sanchezolmos (center), age 3, from the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming, dances with an adult at the Penn State Powwow. Azul is from the Northern Arapaho Tribe. Credit: Provided / Used with permissionAll Rights Reserved.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The 18th annual Penn State Traditional American Indian Powwow, a family friendly event that offers free admission, moves to February this year and will be conducted Feb. 24-25 at C3 Sports Complex, located at 200 Ellis Place in State College.

Activities at the Penn State Powwow run from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Feb. 24 and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Feb. 25. The Grand Entry of Dancers begins at noon and again at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday. It will be conducted only at noon on Sunday.

Nearly 5,000 people visited the powwow in 2023 and the event has earned a national reputation as an excellent example of honoring family values and maintaining Native American traditions. The University recognizes the powwow as a signature cultural event and the Happy Valley Adventure Bureau has recognized it as a premier family friendly event for the region.

This will be the first winter powwow held in State College, according to coordinator John Sanchez (Apache).

"Everyone, Native or non-Native, is welcome to visit, and admission is free," said Sanchez.

The powwow is a contemporary social gathering and celebration of community, featuring drum music and songs, dance and foods. It also features vendors from all over Indian Country who sell Native-made arts and goods, such as beadwork, quillwork, turquoise, wampum and silver.

Native foods such as American Indian frybread, Indian corn soup and buffalo from the Northern Tribal Nations will also be available for purchase, with cash sales only.

As part of its tradition, the powwow honors veterans at the start of the event. Patrick Brooks, from the Tuscarora Nation in Niagara Falls, New York, will serve as this year’s head veteran dancer. Brooks, a decorated U.S. Army Ranger, completed three tours of Iraq and Afghanistan. Any veteran, whether Native or not, is eligible to participate in the honoring and be part of the color guard.

Last year’s event attracted more than 250 dancers, and this year’s participants will come from Canada and all over the United States, including Arizona, Florida, Michigan, New Mexico, New York,  Oklahoma, South Dakota, Washington and the Wiikwemkoong Unceded Territory.

For more information, please visit powwow.psu.edu or contact John Sanchez, powwow coordinator, at apache@psu.edu.       

Last Updated February 8, 2024