Treaties between the United States and American Indian nations. This Panel Discussion from the symposium was titled great nations keep their word. This is about an hour and a half. Delorea from phil the university of michigan and i am on the board of trustees. I want to welcome you to this session today. This is the final session in the symposium. The session speaks in part or of the exhibit which you shall see shortly which follows historical chronology, some case study examples, some for maddock analysis including some things that might resonate with the panel that we just had. The final section of the exhibit and this final session in our panel seeks to sum up and pull together, sort of congeal the insights of the exhibit and the day we have had today. Part of what we are about is reclaiming history. That, the easy part, is about making invisible stories visible. This is the task in native American History and has been for so long. It is a fundamental rule of this great museum. Anot
MONTANA - Much of the state is seeing sunny and dry conditions, with breezy to gusty west to northwest winds. A Lake Wind Advisory for Fort Peck Lake will be
GILLETTE — Fond memories come to the surface when Terry and Janet Tharp think back to moments they experienced as children at what’s now called the Medicine Lodge Archaeological Site.
Fond memories come to the surface when Terry and Janet Tharp think back to moments they experienced as children at what’s now called the Medicine Lodge Archaeological Site.
By Angela Tudico | National Archives News WASHINGTON, November 28, 2023 The Treaty of Medicine Lodge Creek (1867) is currently on view at the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) as part of their Nation to Nation: Treaties Between the United States and American Indian Nations exhibit. Enlarge Treaty of Medicine Lodge Creek. (National Archives photo by Hilary