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  1. Shirley Firth Larsson was the daughter of Stephen Firth (Métis) born November 20, 1922, at the Northwest Territories (NWT) and Fanny Rose Greenland (Métis) born January 21, 1922, also in NWT. [10] Following her athletic career, Firth went on to live in France where she raised a family and lectured on the Dene and Inuit cultures. [2]

  2. Sep 24, 2013 · Shirley Firth, CM, cross-country skier (born 31 December 1953 in Aklavik, NWT; died 30 April 2013 in Yellowknife, NWT) and Sharon Anne Firth, CM, ONWT, cross-country skier (born 31 December 1953 in Aklavik, NWT). Twin sisters Shirley and Sharon Firth, members of the Gwich’in First Nation , were among the first Indigenous athletes to represent ...

  3. Shirley Firth was a member of the Gwich’in First Nation, and with her twin sister, Sharon, became one of the first aboriginals to represent Canada at the Olympic Games. She competed in four Winter Olympics, four World Championships. was voted Canadian Women's Nordic Skier of the Year six times by Ski Racing Magazine , and was inducted into ...

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  5. In recognition of her contributions and accomplishments, Shirley Firth was awarded the Order of Canada in 1987, inducted into the Canadian Ski Hall of Fame in 1990, and received the Queen’s Golden Jubilee Medal in 2002. Later, she returned to her hometown of Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories. Shirley Firth’s extraordinary athletic ...

  6. The Firth sisters, Shirley and Sharon, were born in Aklavik North West Territories in the winter of 1953. Six years later their family was relocated by the federal government to the newly fabricated town of Inuvik several kilometers east. It was there in Inuvik that the Firth sisters entered adolescence, twin sisters in a family of 14.

  7. Mar 10, 2022 · Cross-country skier and the first Indigenous woman believed to have represented Canada at the Winter Olympics, Sharon Firth stands at the podium during a ceremony on April 22, 2015, when she and her twin sister, Shirley, were named to the Canada Sports Hall of Fame. Sharon Firth remains active in promoting sports in Canada; Shirley died in 2013.

  8. Sharon and Shirley Firth. Shirley and Sharon Firth are twin sisters that hail from the remote township of Aklavik in the Northwest Territories. The twins grew up within the rich culture of the Dene people, and they thrived within this cultural context. Work on the trap line was an important part of the childhood that the girls grew up in.

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