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We partner with organizations statewide to host humanities events all year.

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  • February 2020

  • Tue 11

    China Mary: History and Legend

    February 11, 2020 @ 2:30 pm - 4:00 pm
    IMG_0038

    A 1960 episode of The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, the first Western television series, immortalized China Mary as a strong, powerful and ruthless Asian female figure in American popular imagination. The legend of her as an infamous Dragon Lady who ruled Tombstone’s Chinatown with an iron fist cannot be substantiated by historical research. […]

  • Tue 11

    On the Road Since 1925: The Colorful History of Arizona Highways Magazine

    February 11, 2020 @ 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
    Scottsdale Mustang Library 10101 N 90th St, Scottsdale, AZ, United States

    The first issue of Arizona Highways magazine was published in April, 1925. In this presentation, former publisher Win Holden will share the fascinating story of how a brochure produced by the Arizona Highway Department evolved into one of the most respected and revered publications in the world. With annual economic impact of over $65 million, […]

  • Tue 11

    The Gila: River of History

    February 11, 2020 @ 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm

    Six hundred miles long from its source in the mountains of southwestern New Mexico to its confluence with the Colorado River above Yuma, the Gila has been an important avenue for the movement of birds, animals, plants, and peoples across the desert for millennia. Many cultures have sprung up on its banks, and millions of […]

  • Wed 12

    Chiles & Chocolate: Sweet and Spicy Foods in the American West

    February 12, 2020 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
    Humanities-Scholar-Letter

    Come have a taste of the rich and savory history of these food favorites, explore how early peoples used them, and how they have evolved and spread to all corners of the world. Food is a portal into culture and can convey a range of cultural meaning including occasion, social status, ethnicity, and wealth depending […]

  • Thu 13

    By the Time They Came to Phoenix: African American Women Activists

    February 13, 2020 @ 9:00 am - 10:00 am
    Phoenix Country Day School 3901 E. Stanford Dr., Phoenix, AZ, United States

    Hear the stories behind a group of African American women who migrated to Arizona and have made a difference in the lives of Arizonans. These women are Community Mothers. They have cared for and nurtured other people’s children, and they have been activists providing guidance, mentoring, and leadership for the many woes that attach themselves […]

  • Thu 13

    Tucson’s Black Community and School Segregation

    February 13, 2020 @ 10:00 am - 11:00 am

    In 1909 the Territory of Arizona amended its compulsory school attendance bill to give cities and counties the ability to segregate their schools. Inspired by the change in the law, the Tucson school board conducted a rapid search of available buildings, settling on an abandoned mortuary. Shocked by this unsettling turn of events, Tucson’s Black […]

  • Thu 13

    Pearl Hart, the Lady Bandit- Victim or Vixen… or Both?

    February 13, 2020 @ 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm

    Separating fact from fiction is no easy task with flamboyant stage coach robber Pearl Hart. A mountain of conflicting stories abound, thanks in no small part, to Pearl herself. Enamored of the Wild West, she embellished her own tale to accommodate the interest of newspapers and public fascination. This presentation follows Pearl from her modest […]

  • Thu 13

    From “Chief” to Code Talker: Four Profiles of the Navajo Code Talkers

    February 13, 2020 @ 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm

    During WWII a group of young Navajo men enlisted in the Marines without knowing that they would be called on to develop a secret code against the Japanese military. This select group of Code Talkers devised a Navajo language code that was accurate, quick, never broken, and saved many American lives. This talk profiles 4 […]

  • Thu 13

    Barbed Wire, Windmills and Railroads – The Technology that Really Won the West.

    February 13, 2020 @ 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
    Mountain View Club House 38759 South Mountainview Boulevard, Tucson, AZ, United States

    In Arizona and throughout the West, three innovations helped make farming and living possible: Windmills brought groundwater to the surface, barbed wire sectioned the vast landscape into parcels, and railroads moved men, women, families and materials from back east. In the old West, there were over 8 million windmills, a man caught cutting down a […]

  • Fri 14

    “Hyenas in Petticoats”–How Women Struggled Against Every Dirty Trick in the Books to Win the Vote!

    February 14, 2020 @ 1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
    Church of the Nazarene 55 Rojo Dr, Sedona

    As we celebrate the 100th birthday of the 19th Amendment in 2020, it’s time to look back at the enormous effort it took for women to be granted full citizenship and the vote. History has downplayed suffrage, as if it were just a footnote in American history, when in fact, it was the nation’s largest […]

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