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Guide to Indian Country
- June, 2001
Celebrate National
Aboriginal Day
Clelebrations across
the country
Blending the traditional
with the contemporary
Northern artists shine
at festival
An experience to share in
Saskatchewan
Métis culture
showcased at award-winning festival
Portrait of a jingle
dress dancer
Wild West meets tranquil getaway
Tourists take to the land
Blessed waters pilgrimage
held at Beaver Lake
Largest tipi in the world
guard against loss of culture
Majestic beast making
a
comeback in Wood Buffalo
Learning traditions
through the trails
Atlantic festival shows
art from coast to coast
Quebec destinations
celebrate identity
History of the West lives on
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WINDSPEAKER'S ABORIGINAL TOURISM SUPPLEMENT
Phone: (780) 455-2700 Fax
(780) 455-7639
Email: edwind@ammsa.com
History of the West lives on
By Joan Taillon
Windspeaker Staff Writer
CODY, Wyo.
There are lots of ways to immerse yourself in the heroic story
of the American West at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center.
With four museums and an art gallery, as well as guided excursions
available beyond the center's walls, there are always absorbing
and thought-provoking attractions for anyone interested in the
history of the West and in Plains Indian culture.
The Buffalo Bill Historical Center was opened in 1979 and now
draws 250,000 visitors a year to its Buffalo Bill Museum, Cody
Firearms Museum, Plains Indian Museum, Whitney Gallery of Western
Art and McCracken Research Library. Soon there will be one more,
the Draper Museum of Natural History, now under construction.
That's a lot of visitors for a town of 8,000 people, but as Cody
is situated just 52 miles from the east gate of Yellowstone Park
it is a well-situated tourist stop.
Just one of the reasons the center is so popular is found on
its current exhibition calendar: the Arapaho and Shoshone of
Wind River exhibit that runs until December 2001. That is the
inaugural exhibition in the Plains Indian Museum Special Exhibition
Gallery, which recently got a $4 million facelift.
"Right now the Plains Indian Museum is heads and above everything
else," said the centre's public relations manager, Thom
Huge.
"We stripped it out totally and reinstalled it. We do a
much better job of interpretation now, a much better job of story
telling."
Huge said it used to be just row after row of beaded moccasins
in cases, with little labels that might say 'Lakota, 1895.'
"Now you have a much better feel for where these artifacts
came from, why they were made, what significance they had, what
it meant to people's lives. And not only in past history, but
also in contemporary life."
The exhibition contains historical and contemporary museum objects,
photographs, videos and art from the Arapaho and Shoshone Wind
River reservation in central Wyoming. The reservation is the
third largest in the United States, 1.7 million acres.
The museum's very large collection also includes the cultural
histories, art and enduring traditions of the Crow, Cheyenne,
Kiowa, Comanche, Blackfeet, Sioux, Gros Ventre and Pawnee peoples.
Plus art done by Arapaho and Shoshone students at the Wyoming
Indian high school in Ethete.
The Wind River exhibit opened last November to coincide with
American Indian Heritage Month and it included numerous demonstrations
such as hide-painting, beadworking and basket-making, along with
traditional entertainment. This year's American Indian Heritage
Celebration will be held Nov. 3.
But there is a lot happening before then.
If you are interested in the evolution of firearms, the Cody
Firearms Museum has it all, starting with the "most comprehensive"
collection of American firearms in the world, to re-creations
of a colonial gun shop and small arms factory, to knowledgeable
staff who can answer your historically related questions.
The Buffalo Bill Museum interprets the life and times, history
and mythology surrounding Buffalo Bill, an icon of the American
West. It also tells the broader story of frontier life, taking
in everything from dude ranching to conservation.
If your interests lie in the areas of education and preservation
of Aboriginal language and culture, a seminar will be held Sept.
28 to 30 with the theme Circles of Knowledge: Plains Indian Education.
Topics may include childhood and rites of passage; traditional
teaching of arts and cultural knowledge; oral history; educational
roles of Elders; effects of missionaries, federal policies and
boarding schools; tribal colleges and museums; and language and
culture preservation programs.
There are numerous year-round educational programs to help visitors
understand both the permanent displays and special exhibitions.
The newest addition to the Buffalo Bill Historical Center will
be the Draper Museum of Natural history, which will focus on
the relationship between people and nature in the Greater Yellowstone
ecosystem and surrounding area when it opens next year. It will
feature "ideas-based exhibits, driven by timely issues and
timeless concepts related to our mission, rather than by a desire
to display specific objects," the center's literature states.
Additional information on all the center's offerings is on their
Web site: www.bbhc.org. You
can follow the links to find out what is going on in all areas.
Post-secondary education students should look into the possibility
of doing internships and externships at the center. Numerous
opportunities for learning are available in art, geology, Plains
Indian ethnology, communications, photography and much more.
Check the list of internships on the Web site.
Because it is not a place of dusty old artifacts, but a constantly
developing and improving facility, exhibitions move in and out
and hours of operation are flexible.
From April until the end of October, the center is open daily,
although the hours fluctuate. From November until the end of
March it is open six days a week and closed on Mondays.
For the most current information concerning dates and times of
activities and attractions before you travel, contact public
relations director Thom Huge by telephone: (307) 578-4014; by
fax: (307) 578-4066; or by e-mail: thomh@bbhc.org.
Ask about group tour rates.
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