Confrontation with White invaders of Arapaho territory intensified rapidly after the discovery of gold near Denver in 1858. Many bands traditionally wintered in the sheltered Denver/Boulder area. A ...
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Remembering the Sand Creek MassacreA new Fort Wise Treaty required the Cheyenne and Arapaho to cede all their previously agreed territory except a small reservation. Six Cheyenne and four Arapaho chiefs signed. Many more refused.
The Arapaho language, native to the Great Plains, is at risk of disappearing. Fewer children are learning the linguistic traditions from their elders, putting an invaluable oral archive of traditional ...
As white explorers and settlers entered Western territory, they disrupted a centuries ... An assembly of 1,000 Sioux, Arapaho, and Northern Cheyenne — survivors of Sand Creek among them ...
More specifically, it examined the nature of Evans’ involvement in the Sand Creek Massacre of Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians, which occurred in 1864 while he was governor of what was then the Colorado ...
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County name likely to stay, but other new names are happeningARAPAHO, Okla. — It’s likely that nobody ... and a city named for George Armstrong Custer lie in the heart of territory that until 1892 was their tribal reservation and continues today under ...
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