tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29769707.post7793641871230068282..comments2024-02-10T18:19:36.406-08:00Comments on Newspaper Rock: Sand Creek called "collision of cultures"Robhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01478763837213733775noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29769707.post-66014094960422466052013-07-16T02:55:41.251-07:002013-07-16T02:55:41.251-07:00For more on the subject, see:
http://www.westword...For more on the subject, see:<br /><br />http://www.westword.com/2013-07-04/news/history-colorado-tribal-consultation-sand-creek/<br /><br /><b>History Colorado and tribal representatives meet to discuss Sand Creek</b><br /><br />Seven months after the Northern Cheyenne tribe sent its last letter to History Colorado demanding that <i>Collision: The Sand Creek Massacre 1860s to Today</i> be closed, fourteen months after History Colorado opened its new building with that exhibit in place despite earlier protests, and nearly 149 years after the Sand Creek massacre itself, History Colorado officials met last month with tribal representatives for an official consultation on that exhibit—and much more. And as the meeting got under way at the History Colorado Center, <i>Collision</i> was finally closed to the public.<br /><br />The exhibit devoted to the November 29, 1864, massacre of 150 people in a peaceful camp on Sand Creek—most of them women, children and the elderly—was considered one of the core "Colorado Stories" components when the History Colorado Center opened in April 2012. But tribal members weren't the only ones who had trouble with <i>Collision</i>: Historians complained from the start about not just the content—including inaccuracies in dates and spellings—but also its dumbed-down, Disneyfied style.<br /><br />Although for months History Colorado resisted any attempts to close the display, this past April, History Colorado head Ed Nichols finally sent a letter to tribal representatives, agreeing to close the exhibit during a tribal consultation that would be facilitated by the Colorado Commission of Indian Affairs. Troy Eid, the former U.S. Attorney for Colorado, was chosen to mediate the meeting between History Colorado and official representatives of the Northern Cheyenne of Montana, the Northern Arapaho of Wyoming, and the Cheyenne and Arapahoe tribes of Oklahoma.Robhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01478763837213733775noreply@blogger.com