Arizona’s Civilian Conservation Corps and Our National Parks and Forests

Isabelle Hunt Pine Public Library Activity Room 6124 W. Randall Place, Pine, AZ, United States

In 1933, at the nadir of the Great Depression, the CCC was born. The program was designed to help unemployed and untrained young men learn new skills and earn money to support their families. CCCers fervently claim that the skill-building experiences forever changed their lives. These men built the roads, trails, picnic areas, ranger stations, […]

Free
Recurring

At Home: Veterans Read and Share Stories

Mesa Community College - Bldg EF, Room 1W 1833 West Southern Avenue, Mesa, AZ, United States

Female veterans are welcome to join this free four-session book group with dinner included. The group will read short stories and essays from classic and contemporary authors and talk about their own stories with other female veterans. Click Here to View Flyer Female veterans from all eras are invited to attend. Tuesdays: 6:30-8:00 PM February […]

Free

The Harlem Renaissance: Literary Movement

Estrella Mountain Community College Conference Center 3000 North Dysart Road, Avondale, AZ, United States

The Harlem Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned the 1920s and early 1930s and it was an unprecedented period of expression by African Americans in music, literature, art, dance, poetry, politics, and economics.  Never before had America seen such a rich explosion of black culture.  This interactive presentation, which includes storytelling, poetry, theatre, art, […]

Free

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Minister Malcolm X: Were Their Struggles the Same?

Estrella Mountain Community College Conference Center 3000 North Dysart Road, Avondale, AZ, United States

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Minister Malcolm X were both pivotal figures whose shoes have yet to be adequately filled by successors. Their voices were a clarion call to America to take note of the disparities faced by African Americans.  While their approaches to ameliorating these inequitable conditions were far from similar, they were […]

Free

Authors Night with Dan Budnik

Arizona Humanities 1242 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ, United States

Join Arizona Humanities & Art Intersection for a presentation, discussion, & book signing with acclaimed photojournalist Dan Budnik for his new book Marching to the Freedom Dream. Marching To The Freedom Dream illustrates three pivotal marches of the Civil Rights Movements: the 1958 Youth March for Integrated Schools, organized by Bayard Rustin, Dr. King, and Harry […]

Free

The Long Walk of the Navajo People, 1864-1868

Monte Vista Village Resort 8865 E. Baseline Rd., Mesa, AZ, United States

In 1864, the Navajo people were forced to walk over 450 miles to Fort Sumner in eastern New Mexico, an unfortunate event that is known in the Navajo language as Hweeldi. The story of this fatal march has been recorded and interpreted in historical literature by many non-Navajo authors and absent from that literature is […]

Free

Women of the Arizona State Prison

Roadhaven Resort 1000 S. Idaho Rd., Apache Junction, AZ, United States

Winnie Ruth Judd, Eva Dugan, Dr. Rose Boido, and Eva Wilbur Cruz shared one thing in common. All were incarcerated at the Arizona State Prison in Florence.  Some of their stories made national headlines. Who were they and how did they end up in the Florence prison? How did their crimes and trials impact Arizona? […]

Free

Emancipation and the Destruction of Slavery, 1861-1865

Burton Barr Central Library 1221 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ, United States

The American Civil War resulted in the destruction of slavery in the United States, yet it is not always evident how this came about. People argue over who - or what - freed the slaves, the impact of the Emancipation Proclamation, and how the war itself contributed to the destruction of slavery. Perhaps it may […]

Free

Arizona’s Civilian Conservation Corps and Our National Parks and Forests

Pueblo Grande Museum 4619 East Washington St., Phoenix, AZ, United States

In 1933, at the nadir of the Great Depression, the CCC was born. The program was designed to help unemployed and untrained young men learn new skills and earn money to support their families. CCCers fervently claim that the skill-building experiences forever changed their lives. These men built the roads, trails, picnic areas, ranger stations, […]

Free

Telling It like It Was: Interviews with Arizona Pioneer Women

Sun Valley Lodge 12415 N. 103rd Ave., Sun City, AZ, United States

During the Depression, the Federal Writers Project conducted interviews with over 144 women who arrived in the Arizona Territory between 1850 and 1890. The women spoke of their long and dangerous journeys and with their words paint pictures of the hardships and life-threatening situations of their frontier existence. Through hard work, dedication, tenacity, and humor, […]

Free

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