• Letters from the Fort Snelling Internment Camp Program at Goodhue County History

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    Name: Letters from the Fort Snelling Internment Camp Program at Goodhue County History
    Date: June 16, 2012
    Time: 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM CDT
    Event Description:
    “Why Treaties Matter: Self-Government in the Dakota and Ojibwe Nations” is a new traveling exhibition that will explore the Native nations in Minnesota and their history of treaty making with the United States. The exhibit will remain on display in Red Wing until July 6.  

    On June 12, Dr. Clifford Canku will have a program on “Letters from the Fort Snelling Internment Camp” at 7 PM. Canku, an assistant professor in the Dakota Studies program at North Dakota State University, is leading a team of people translating letters written by Native American prisoners of war during the 1862 Dakota Conflict into English for publication.
     
    A collaboration of the Minnesota Indian Affairs Council, the Minnesota Humanities Center and the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of the American Indian, this project is funded in part with money from the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund that was created with a vote of the people of Minnesota on November 4, 2008 and The Patrick and Aimee Butler Family Foundation. 
    Location:

    Goodhue County History Center
    1166 Oak Street
    Red Wing

    Date/Time Information:
    June 16
    7 PM
    Fees/Admission:
    “Because of generous gifts from ADM, The Philip S. Duff Foundation, the Red Wing Human Rights Commission, and the Minnesota Humanities Center, the History Center will be able to offer free admission on the weekends during the run of this exhibit,” noted Char Henn, Director/CEO. “This is an important topic and we are grateful that we will have this opportunity to bring more people to see the exhibit while it is here.”

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