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Return the National Parks to the Tribes


Return the National Parks to the Tribes
David Treuer
Image above: Glacier National Park, in Montana, as seen from the Blackfeet Reservation, near Duck Lake.
This article was published online on April 12, 2021.
I. The End Result of Dirty Business
In 1851, members of a California state militia called the Mariposa Battalion became the first white men to lay eyes on Yosemite Valley. The group was largely made up of miners. They had been scouring the western slopes of the Sierra when they happened upon the granite valley that Native peoples had long referred to as “the place of a gaping mouth.” Lafayette Bunnell, a physician attached to the militia, found himself awestruck. “None but those who have visited this most wonderful valley, can even imagine the feelings with which I looked upon the view,” he later wrote. “A peculiar exalted sensation seemed to fill my whole being, and I found my eyes in tears.” Many of those who have followed i ....

Nez Perce , United States , Bears Ears , Mud Volcano , Sand Creek , Duck Lake , New Zealand General , New Zealand , Two Medicine Lake , Apostle Islands , Red River , Fort Berthold Reservation , North Dakota , Mogollon Mountains , New Mexico , Olympic National Park , Fort Laramie , Rocky Mountains , Yellowstone Park , New York , Teton Range , Yosemite Valley , Kaibab Indian Reservation , Black Hills , Valley City , Big Hole River ,

Boise protest put spotlight on Lincoln's complicated history


Lincoln is known as the Great Emancipator. He ended slavery, but did he stand for racial justice?
Author: Erin Sheridan (The Idaho Press)
Published: 12:07 PM MDT April 9, 2021
Updated: 12:07 PM MDT April 9, 2021
BOISE, Idaho
Editor s Note: This article was originally published by the Idaho Press.
Many Idahoans were shocked to learn in early February that activists had desecrated Boise’s “Seated Lincoln” statue with red paint. Lincoln is a beloved historical figure to many who consider him the father of Idaho for creating the Territory of Idaho in 1863.
Shock was the point of the peaceful protest. The red paint meant to signify blood was made of nontoxic, biodegradable chalk that washes away easily. The protest, which also included hand-lettered signage, came on the first day of Black History Month and was meant to highlight Lincoln’s complicated history with race. ....

United States , Bear River , University Of Idaho , Julia Davis Park , Boise State University , New Jersey , Sand Creek , Essex County , San Francisco , John Chivington , Samantha Hager , David Leroy , Tom Davis , Gutzon Borglum , Angelique Eaglewoman , Lauren Mclean , Raymond Krohn , Stephen Douglas , Mount Rushmore , Associated Press , Mitchell Hamline School Of Law , Idaho Black History Museum , Union Army , Great Emancipator , Black History Month , Essex County Courthouse ,

On the Santa Fe Trail: 1821-2021 - True West Magazine


On the Santa Fe Trail: 1821-2021
The bicentennial of the National Historic Trail is a great reason to hit the road and rediscover why it is the West’s original “Mother Road.”
When you get right down to it, almost every trail ever blazed was for profit. Despite all the glory associated with them, the lure of money was behind the Chisholm Trail (first for trade goods, then for selling longhorns in Kansas)and the California and Klondike trails (to find goldfields) and the like. The Santa Fe Trail, on the other hand, never even thought about fame it was all about money. ....

United States , New Mexico , Spanish Peaks , Las Animas , Santa Fe Plaza , Cottonwood Crossing , New Franklin , Dodge City , Kansas City , Dust Bowl , Boise City , Dragoon Creek , Fort Leavenworth , Coahuila De Zaragoza , Garden City , Purgatoire River , Cimarron River , Point Of Rocks , La Junta , Great Plains , Great Bend , Blue Mound , Missouri River , Lost Spring , Trinidad And Tobago , Kit Carson ,

A review of Colorado place names reveals a notorious, checkered past


To get to the Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site near Eads, where 230 Native Americans were murdered, you might drive through a town named for their murderer.
In between Eads and the turnoff, you’ll go through the unincorporated town of Chivington. It’s named for Civil War-era Col. John Chivington, who led the attack by the 1st and 3rd Colorado cavalries on Arapaho and Cheyenne living at Sand Creek that resulted in the slaughter. Half of those killed were women and children.
While Chivington may be an extreme case, dozens of sites around Colorado have taken on names that are now getting a new look as calls for equality grow louder amidst Black Lives Matter protests. ....

United States , Kit Carson , Kit Carson County , Trinidad And Tobago , University Of Denver , Squaw Mountain , New Mexico , Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site , Mount Evans , Columbus Park , Pike National Forest , Denver City , Clear Creek County , Fort Carson , Sand Creek , Colorado Springs , Weld County , Pikes Peak , Clear Creek , Squaw Creek , Kit Carson Mountain , Lon Remine , Jared Polis , Christopher Columbus , Andrew Johnson , Robert Alan Goldberg ,