Working in the Salt Mine: Native American Salt Mining In Arizona – Payson

Church of the Holy Nativity 1414 Easy Street, Payson, AZ, United States

Salt has been a valuable trade item throughout human history. Native American salt procurement in the Southwest involved dangerous journeys across sacred landscapes associated with a deity called Salt Woman. This presentation describes the history of a famous salt mine in Camp Verde, Arizona, where prehistoric Sinagua tools used for mining salt were discovered in […]

Free

Drop-In Discovery Saturday – Phoenix

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

April 15 - Phoenix Herpetological Society Learn about some of the native Arizona wildlife in this hands on demonstration. The PHS will also discuss some non-native reptiles who have made their way here over the past few decades. Finally, they'll explore methods of staying safe and co-existing within our Sonoran Desert environment. Click here to […]

Annual Spoken Futures Showcase with Tucson Youth Poetry Slam – Tucson

University of Arizona – Student Union Gallagher Theater 1303 E University Blvd, Tucson, AZ, United States

Annual Spoken Futures Showcase with Tucson Youth Poetry Slam Saturday, April 15th ■  1:00 - 4:00 p.m. Tucson Youth Poetry Slam Championships and public performances including Denver Youth Poet Laureate Toluwanimi Oluwafunmilayo Obiwole University of Arizona – Student Union Gallagher Theater 1303 E University Blvd, Tucson, AZ 85719 Supported in part by Arizona Humanities  

Free

The Scottsboro Boys Community Panel – “Arts Inspiring Justice” – Phoenix

Phoenix Theatre 100 E McDowell Rd, Phoenix, AZ, United States

Phoenix Theatre and The Black Theatre Troupe join forces to present the shocking true story of nine African American youth jailed in Alabama in 1931 for a crime they did not commit. Featuring a mix of gospel, jazz, and vaudeville, this audacious musical explores the series of events that provoked a national outrage. Every performance […]

Free

The Ballad of Arizona: Our Five Hundred Years – Cottonwood

Deadhorse Ranch State Park - 675 Dead Horse Ranch Rd., Cottonwood, AZ, United States

Similar to NPR’s “A Prairie Home Companion” but with and Arizona twist, this program uses music, storytelling and live radio-style newscasts to present important but often neglected events in Arizona history. The “Hoosiers”-like story of a Miami, AZ High School basketball team comprised of the sons of Mexican-American mine workers who won the state championship […]

Free

The Legacy of World War II Cadet Nurses – Kingman

Mohave Community College Kingman Campus 1971 E Jagerson Ave, Kingman, AZ, United States

The U.S. Cadet Nurse Corps, an innovation for its time, addressed a healthcare crisis during World War II and improved nurse education across the United States. A number of Cadet Nurses have been interviewed and their oral histories contributed to various digital repositories, including the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. Participants will view video […]

Free

Sheep Ranchers and Herders of Arizona – Wickenburg

Desert Caballeros Western Museum 21 N. Frontier Street, Wickenburg, AZ, United States

An early viable economic activity of the 1800s in Arizona has been mostly forgotten. Basque, Canadians, Danes among others arrived in the mid to late 1800s to graze sheep on thousands of acres practicing transhumance. Many of these men worked for other established ranchers until ultimately they gained a herd of their own. In the […]

Free

Father Kino: Journey to Discovery – Clarkdale

Yavapai College, Clarkdale Campus 601 Black Hills Drive, Clarkdale, AZ, United States

Father Kino is one of two Arizonans recognized in the U. S. Capitol Hall of Heroes. The Padre was a mathematician, astronomer, geographer, map maker, explorer, rancher, and friend to the Indians of the Pimería Alta. Journeying on horseback or foot, multiple explorations of the Pimería Alta were made by the padre, resulting in the […]

Free

Himdak doo IIna: A Way of Life. How Societies Shape Culture – Safford

Safford City Hall Annex 808 S. 8th Avenue, Safford, United States

For tribal groups in Arizona, understanding the connections between physical, social, mental and spiritual identity of the people prior to birth through 102 years old is a way of life. Tribes in Arizona often illustrate their balance between patriarch and matriarch societies through symbolism. Illustrating with the Man in the maze and the Navajo basket […]

Free

A Story, A Story: African and African American Oral Tradition and Storytelling – Safford

Safford City Hall Annex 808 S. 8th Avenue, Safford, United States

When the African slave was brought to the Caribbean and North and South America, s/he brought her oral literature and performance style.  This presentation focuses on the transfer of those oral traditions from African culture to African American culture. Such traditions can be heard in trickster stories, but also observed in the narration of myths, […]

Free

Fill out the info below to sign up for our E-Newsletter.