By their fruits you will know them' Out our way, in the heart of what we all (including Native people) call "Indian Country"; ...
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith – a groundbreaking artist, activist, curator and educator – died Jan. 24 of pancreatic cancer, her New York City gallerist, Garth Greenan, has announced. She was 85.
Rounds, Thune, introduce bill to name Pierre federal building after Lakota matriarch and World War II veteran Marcella LeBeau ...
The mountain is sacred to the Havasupai people, and wearing her traditional attire is how she connects with her ancestral homeland near the Grand Canyon and shows it respect. Uqualla said the ...
Pipestone National Monument is one of the few places in the National Park system where Native Americans are actively ...
A 16th-century map could offer insights into the enigma surrounding the settlers of the Lost Colony of Roanoke. Established in 1587 on the island that now shares its name, near the current North ...
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, the pioneering artist who mapped the Native American experience in dynamic and complex artworks, ...
She reclaimed lost histories, investigated centuries-old symbols, and acidly critiqued complacency toward the plight of ...
In 1587, a group of English settlers established the Roanoke Colony on an island between what is now North Carolina and the ...
The fate of the settlers who founded the "Lost Colony of Roanoke" in what is now North Carolina remains unknown.
Appalachia is the fourth oldest surviving European place name in the United States, and according to legends, its history ...
The mystery of what happened to the Roanoke settlers has plagued researchers for hundreds of years, however, the John White ...