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New textiles exhibitions opens at the Art Museums of Colonial Williamsburg


New textiles exhibitions opens at the Art Museums of Colonial Williamsburg
For anyone who has ever made their own weaving or quilt, loves the history and tradition that these historic objects represent or simply appreciates hand-made textiles, The Art of the Quilter and Navajo Weavings: Adapting Tradition are must-see exhibitions.
WILLIAMSBURG, VA
.- Visitors to the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum, one of the two expanded Art Museums of Colonial Williamsburg in Williamsburg, Virginia, will experience two new textile exhibitions: The Art of the Quilter opened on July 3 in the Foster and Muriel McCarl Gallery and Navajo Weavings: Adapting Tradition will open in the Mary B. and William Lehman Guyton Gallery in early August. These exhibitions are certain to be popular with museum goers as exhibitions displaying Colonial Williamsburg’s renowned quilt collection have always been favorites of Art Museums guests, and Navajo Weavings: Tradition and Trade, the first e ....

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What's in a Name: Chipeta Avenue


Old West novels are rich in action, romance and endearing characters, but the true-life story of Chipeta, the wife of Ute Chief Ouray, rivals any storyline written by the best of Western novelists.
One block separates Chipeta and Ouray avenues, both in the original town plat. While most of the original streets are named for 1800s-era settlers, senators or governors, Chipeta Avenue is the only street in the original plat to be named after a woman, let alone an “Indian Maiden.”
Historians agree that Chipeta (meaning “White Singing Bird”) was born a Kiowa Apache near current-day Conejos, in south-central Colorado. She was adopted and raised by the Uncompahgre (Tabeguache) Utes after the death of her parents in a savage attack. She later became a caretaker for Ute Chief Ouray’s son, after his first wife died. Chipeta and Ouray became close and married. When Ouray’s son was ....

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'Queen Of The Utes' Chipeta's Legacy In Colorado | Colorado Public Radio

Peak Past is a weekly segment written and voiced by Matt Cavanaugh Ph.D, a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army and Senior Fellow at the Modern War Institute at West Point. Cavanaugh is a resident of Manitou Springs where he lives with his wife and two young children. ....

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The Great Chiefs - True West Magazine


True West Magazine
Their Courage Shaped a Nation
“Resting here until day breaks and shadows fall and darkness disappears is Quanah Parker, the last chief of the Comanches” – Epitaph on Quanah Parker’s gravestone
 
On March 4, 1905, Comanche Chief Quanah Parker paraded down Pennsylvania Avenue in President Theodore Roosevelt’s inaugural parade. With him in the parade of 35,000 were five other Indian leaders: Geronimo, Little Plume, American Horse, Hollow Horn Bear and Buckskin Charlie, representing the Apache, Blackfeet, Oglala, Brulé and Ute people, respectively.
Despite criticism from politicians and the press that six Indian leaders who once fought against the United States would be in the parade, the befeathered leaders rode with dignity and pride, and were greeted along the parade route with applause. ....

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