A Boot in the Door: Pioneer Women Archaeologists of Arizona

Smoki Museum Pueblo 147 N. Arizona Avenue, Prescott, AZ, United States

The men who explored Arizona are legends in the history of the region and of anthropology, but what about the women who accompanied them or explored by themselves?  Did you know that Matilda Coxe Stevenson was a member of the first official government survey of Canyon de Chelly or that Emma Mindeleff surveyed ruins in […]

Free

Grant Informational Webinar

Online webinar AZ, United States

Interested in learning about our grants? Want to learn about what makes a competitive grant proposal? Confused about our new online process? Save the date for three online webinars and get your questions answered. Mini Grants - Mon, March 14th - 1:00-2:00pm Project Grants - Tues, April 26th - 2:00-3:00pm (*new date*) Mini Grants - Mon, May […]

Free

Arizona’s War Town: Flagstaff Navajo Ordnance Depot, and World War II

Church of the Nazarene 55 Rojo Dr, Sedona

Just weeks after Pearl Harbor, the War Department announced the construction of a massive ammunition depot ten miles west of Flagstaff at Bellemont on U.S. Highway 66. Flagstaff’s population exploded from five to twenty thousand. The Army rushed the $17 million project to completion in a spasm of boomtown upheaval. Several thousand Navajo and Hopi […]

Free

Latino Americans 500 Years of History – Yuma

St. Paul’s Cultural Center 645 S. 2nd Ave., Yuma, AZ, United States

Join Arizona Humanities this spring to explore Latino history and culture! Selections from the NEH-supported documentary film Latino Americans, created for PBS in 2013 will be shown in Flagstaff, Patagonia, Miami, and Yuma. Each host site is paired with a different film and theme to discuss with audiences. The award-winning series chronicles the history of […]

Free

Author Afternoon with Meredith Whiteley

White Tank Library 20304 W. White Tank Mountain Road, Waddell, AZ, United States

Authors Afternoon with Meredith Whiteley Friday, May 20th - 3:00 - 4:30pm FREE event!     White Tank Branch Library – Waddell 20304 W White Tank Mountain Rd Waddell, Arizona 85355 602-652-3000 Hear Meredith discuss her book, Miracle on the Salt River: Water, Family & Farming in the Arizona Desert! The drought that ushered in […]

Free

Telling It Like It Was: Interviews with Arizona Pioneer Women

Prescott Valley Public Library 7401 E Skoog Blvd, Prescott Valley, AZ, United States

During the Depression the Federal Writers Project conducted interviews with over 144 women who arrived in the 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
Recurring

26th Annual Zuni Festival

Museum of Northern Arizona 3101 North Fort Valley Road, Flagstaff, AZ, United States

The Museum of Northern Arizona (MNA) Heritage Insights programs will take place during the 26th Zuni, 83rd Hopi, and the 67th Navajo Festivals of Art and Culture. MNA’s goal for each festival is to illuminate, explore, and share humanities-based topics tribal members have determined are important to their community, in order to promote cross-cultural understanding […]

Archaeology’s Deep Time Perspective on Environment and Social Sustainability

Arizona Senior Academy 13715 E. Langtry Lane, Tucson, AZ, United States

The deep time perspective that archaeology and related disciplines provide about natural hazards, environmental change, and human adaptation is a valuable supplement to historical records and can help modern societies make decisions affecting social sustainability and human safety. Examples include scientific evidence that virtually all prehistoric farming cultures in Arizona and the Southwest eventually surpassed […]

Free

Native in a Strange Land: The Life of Mike Burns, Indian Scout

Prescott Public Library 215 E. Goodwin St., Prescott, AZ, United States

Mike Burns lived a long life in two worlds. Born in about 1862 into the Kwevkepaya (Yavapai) people, he was taken prisoner by U.S. soldiers after his family was massacred at a place called Skeleton Cave. He lived for years as something between a captive and a servant until joining the Indian Scouts, riding against […]

Free

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