Colorado
May 2022 History Colorado Highlights Include Large National Endowment for the Humanities Grants to Renew Our Podcast & Diversify Our Fort Garland Museum and Community Invited & New Exhibits & Events
Denver, Colo. (April 27, 2022) — Historical past Colorado’s highlights for Could 2022 embrace information of two huge Nationwide Endowment for the Humanities grants which can renew our celebrated podcast, Misplaced Highways, for a fourth season and reimagine the choices of our Fort Garland Museum and Cultural Heart.
The highlights additionally embrace a bevy of enthralling new displays and occasions. The month of Could celebrates Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month and the Historical past Colorado Heart is commemorating it via a historic Denver Chinatown strolling tour, our Rice and Resilience exhibit and a particular Asian American Pacific Islander Wellness Day.
Nationwide Endowment for the Humanities Grants Guarantee Season 4 of Misplaced Highways Podcast and Funding the Reimagining of our Fort Garland Museum and
Cultural Heart Choices
Grant One: Extending Historical past Colorado’s Podcast
A brand new $360,938 grant from the Nationwide Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) is enabling Historical past Colorado to resume its celebrated podcast Misplaced Highways: Dispatches from the Shadows of the Rocky Mountains for its fourth season debuting in January 2023. Season three started this previous January and can conclude in late Spring.
Additionally made doable by ongoing assist of the Sturm Household Basis, Misplaced Highways, delivers addictive in-depth historical past via extremely produced episodes in an entertaining documentary type. Every episode evokes listener marvel whereas inviting them to attract connections between western historical past and present occasions. Episodes span various cultures, geographies, and time durations within the historical past of Colorado and the West.
Season 4 will function Edward R. Murrow award-winning public radio host/senior producer Noel Black, assistant producer Maria José Maddox, and Historical past Colorado curators. The NEH funding will allow season 4 of Misplaced Highways to discover how notions of American id have typically been formed by extensively held mythologies of the West. Listeners will soak up an examination of the place these myths meet actuality.
“NEH has honored the continued excellence of Misplaced Highways and made this fascinating and immersive podcast expertise doable via sizable grants since season two,” defined Historical past Colorado Chief Artistic Officer/Director of Interpretation & Analysis Jason Hanson. “Season 4 will proceed to present listeners a deeper understanding of how the problems impacting their lives took form by vibrantly tapping into and including to Historical past Colorado’s huge oral historical past and audio assortment.” Episodes might be accessed by way of Spotify, Apple, or wherever podcasts are discovered, and by visiting historycolorado.org/
Grant Two: Increasing the Scope of the Fort Garland Museum and Cultural Heart
A brand new $40,000 Historic Locations Planning Grant from the Nationwide Endowment for the Humanities will fund a revised “Interpretive Plan” to develop the historic scope of the choices of the Fort Garland Museum and Cultural Heart (The Fort). The Fort is situated within the San Luis Valley of south-central Colorado at 29477 Colorado Freeway 159 in Fort Garland, Colorado.
The brand new plan will develop the main target of the Fort’s displays from focusing solely on the navy historical past of the positioning to the broader and extra inclusive tales of the Borderlands of southern Colorado. As an example, the Fort is not going to solely spotlight its location as a nineteenth-century United States Military put up, but in addition as a spot that was impacted by the Indigenous and Hispano communities who preceded its existence.
The brand new plan will allow the Fort to navigate the wealthy historical past of this Borderlands area and discover a myriad of humanities themes. These embrace: how the panorama and local weather impacted tradition; how the cultures of the area influenced traditions and resulted in numerous layers of id; and, how being a Borderlands area formed the political and social historical past of the world, together with the way in which engagement, activism and group reminiscence was integral to the resilience of those Borderlands peoples.
Asian American Pacific Islander Wellness Day: A House for Generational Therapeutic
Historical past Colorado Heart | Could 7, 2022 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
This half-day gathering will rejoice pleasure, reclamation, resilience and activism, via heritage-based practices that deal with the non secular, psychological and somatic scars of this group. It’s going to function audio system, artists, performers, healers, practitioners and distributors. Discover extra information and get tickets right here.
Colorado’s Asian Meals Tradition: Rice & Resilience
Historical past Colorado Heart | April 16, 2022 – June 30, 2022
Historical past Colorado, in collaboration with the Japanese Arts Community and Asian Pacific Islander (API) group, is happy to share with you a visible artwork and storytelling exhibition that celebrates Colorado’s Asian Meals Tradition. Artists and group members spotlight the significance of meals and meals legacy because it continues to be handed down via generations.
Denver’s Chinatown Strolling Tour
Could 14, 2022 from 10 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
The historical past of Denver’s Chinatown is basically untold and identified by only a few. Wewatta Row provides the one strolling tour of Denver’s unique Asian enclave via its trademark Wazee Row Excursions. On this tour, individuals will stroll via the streets and go to the alleys of the unique quarters whereas discussing the deep historical past of the early Asian pioneers of Denver. Ranging from Union Station the tour will look at a one-of-a-kind panorama of the quarters constructed from pictures taken by William Henry Jackson, adopted by a proof of the notorious 1880 Anti-Chinese language riot on the location of the flashpoint and an intimate take a look at the central quarters themselves. The tour will finish on the location of a former group middle that shows unique architectural options distinctive to Denver’s Chinatown. The tour is led by Dennis Martinez, a devoted historian working to convey again Denver’s Chinatown. Get tickets right here.
Daring Ladies. Change Historical past. Lecture Sequence Presents Dr. Bonnie Clark
Historical past Colorado Heart and on Zoom | Could 18, 2022 from 7 p.m.-8 p.m.
As Could is Archaeology and Preservation Month, Historical past Colorado is exploring the ways in which archaeobiography can assist rediscover misplaced tales of girls previously. Be part of us as Dr. Bonnie Clark, an archaeologist, professor and writer, shines a lightweight into the complicated world of Amache Ochinee Prowers, a Victorian-Period Cheyenne Lady whose story counters myths in regards to the position of girls within the creation of the West and illuminates the ability of utilizing a number of strategies of storytelling to recenter marginalized teams within the historic report.The night is introduced in partnership with: Cathey McClain Finlon and Richard Finlon; Denver’s CBS 4; and, The Chambers Initiative. Get tickets right here.
New Exhibition: Queer Capitol Hill
Historical past Colorado Heart | Could 20, 2022 – June 2023
For many years, Denver’s Capitol Hill neighborhood has been a middle of queer life, love, and liberation. It’s been dwelling to bars and bookstores, espresso outlets and group facilities, and lots of different locations and areas the place LGBTQIA+ Coloradans gathered and arranged.
Historical past Colorado’s Queer Capitol Hill exhibit highlights seven locations on this space of Denver the place town’s queer historical past occurred from the Nineteen Fifties via the Seventies – all locations you may go to as we speak and is informed via the comic-style illustrations of artist historian B. Erin Cole. The exhibit is Cole’s sketchbook of the queer previous that also lingers in Capitol Hill as we speak. Cole is thought for drawing comics about cities, landscapes, historic interpretation, psychological well being, and extra. This exhibit is drawn from analysis Cole did for his or her dissertation on single-family zoning and neighborhood activism in post-World Struggle II Denver.
Cole explains the next relating to the exhibit:
“Once I stroll via my neighborhood, I see the traces of LGBTQIA+ historical past and other people all over the place. Strolling by homes and house buildings, I ponder who lived, liked, and socialized there previously. I take into consideration long-lost bars and group facilities as I transfer alongside Colfax and Broadway. Archives inform us some tales, a number of of which I’ve tried to seize on this historian’s sketchbook of an exhibit—however there are tons of silences and omissions in what we all know or don’t find out about queer Capitol Hill.”
New Occasions and Applications
To be taught extra about Historical past Colorado’s new occasions and applications go to our web site. Discover historic locations, occasions and other people via lectures, guided excursions and on-line or in-person courses. Upcoming occasions embrace: Folks Delight and Promise – the Story of the Dockum Sit-in; A Capitol Hill Structure Strolling Tour; A Lego Constructing Workshop; and, our Members-only Mom’s Day Brunch.
HISTORY COLORADO PRESS ROOM
About Historical past Colorado
Historical past Colorado is a division of the Colorado Division of Greater Schooling and a 501(c)3 non-profit that serves greater than 75,000 college students and 500,000 individuals in Colorado annually. It’s a 142-year-old establishment that operates Colorado’s oldest museum, ten extra museums and historic websites, a free public analysis middle, the Workplace of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, and the Historical past Colorado State Historic Fund (SHF), which is the nation’s largest preservation program of its sort. Greater than 70% of SHF grants are allotted in rural areas of the state.
Historical past Colorado’s mission is to create a greater future for Colorado by inspiring marvel in our previous. We function the state’s reminiscence, preserving and sharing the locations, tales, and materials tradition of Colorado via instructional applications, historic preservation grants, amassing, outreach to Colorado communities, the Historical past Colorado Heart and Stephen H. Hart Analysis Heart in Denver, and 9 different museums and historic points of interest statewide. Historical past Colorado is one among solely six Smithsonian Associates in Colorado. Go to HistoryColorado.org, or name 303-HISTORY, for extra info.
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Colorado
'Thanksfest' giving back more than a meal to Colorado Springs families in need
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – This weekend was Thankfest, an event started by Vaughn Littrell, to give back to families in need. This year 250 families got all the ingredients they needed for Thanksgiving and more.
The families were chosen ahead of time through the CPCD Head Start Program. They help serve our community’s most vulnerable children and families.
The giveaway was a chance for families to come down and do some shopping for free. It was more than just getting food, families also received all the kitchen tools they would need to cook too.
It wasn’t just food either. Clothes and shoes were also available for those who needed them.
“Some of our families are in really, really bad situations. They need they need help. You know, and it’s this is a this is a tangible way that we can do something. We can’t do everything, but you can do something. We’re excited to be able to bless these families,” Vaughn Littrell told KRDO13.
Vaughn says he started the giveaway with just a few families. He says he knows what it is like to struggle, and wants the giveaway to keep growing so he can help more people.
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Colorado
I-70 closed near Vail, Silverthorne for safety concerns, weather hazards
Interstate 70 closed near Vail and Silverthorne on Sunday for “safety concerns” as snow battered the Colorado mountains, according to the Colorado Department of Transportation.
The eastbound interstate was closed between Exit 180 for East Vail and Exit 190 for Vail Pass Summit, about 1 mile west of Copper Mountain, as of 6 p.m. Sunday, CDOT officials said.
CDOT cameras in the area of the closure showed snow-covered roads and white-out conditions.
Westbound I-70 was also closed at 6 p.m. Sunday between Exit 216 for U.S. 6 near Loveland Pass and Exit 205 for Colorado 9 near Silverthorne, according to CDOT.
Multiple Waze users reported “weather hazards” in both closed sections of I-70.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
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Colorado
Shedeur Sanders shoves referee, ‘lucky’ to avoid ejection as frustrations boil over in Colorado loss
There was certainly a scenario Saturday night where Colorado would’ve needed to navigate the final 20 minutes of its upset loss to Kansas without star quarterback Shedeur Sanders.
Sanders, the son of Buffaloes coach Deion Sanders and a projected top pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, shoved referee Kevin Mar after taking a sack on third down with Colorado trailing by nine in the third quarter, and he was “lucky” that didn’t result in an ejection, Fox rules analyst Mike Pereira said on the broadcast.
“There’s no question that he does,” Pereira said when asked about Sanders shoving Mar. “Look, I get why he’s upset because people are almost climbing over him after he was down, but, you know, the officials can use their hands all they want to try to keep order. But you cannot come back as a player and push an official.
“In the chaos, the officials don’t see it, but he’s lucky that he wasn’t ejected from the game.”
After the sack, Sanders approached Mar from behind — who was surrounded by a cluster of players — and shoved the longtime official with his right arm.
By that point, three other referees had moved closer to the scuffle and attempted to separate the players and Sanders while protecting Mar.
Sanders, who finished 23 of 29 for 266 yards and three touchdowns during No. 16 Colorado’s 37-21 loss, wasn’t penalized on the play, but his frustrations had started to boil over.
The game featured plenty of physical hits, with Colorado’s College Football Playoff hopes at stake and Kansas attempting to claw its way toward becoming bowl eligible.
At one point in the first half, defensive end Dean Miller lowered his head and flung himself toward Sanders’ knees while he attempted a pass.
“I mean, I just don’t know how that’s legal overall,” Sanders told reporters after the game when asked about Miller’s hit. “I ain’t understand that, but, you know, it is what it is. There was a couple plays like that.”
The Buffaloes trailed 17-0 at one point but managed to trim its deficit to two points early in the third quarter, when Travis Hunter — also projected as a top pick in the upcoming NFL draft — and Sanders connected on a touchdown pass.
But Devin Neal accounted for the final two touchdowns, providing the Jayhawks with some cushion and ensuring Colorado was on its way to ending the night in a four-way tie atop the Big 12 standings.
Deion said after the game that Colorado had become “intoxicated with the success.”
“We started smelling ourselves a little bit,” Deion said, according to ESPN. “… We got intoxicated with the multitude of articles and the assumption that we’re this and the assumption that we’re that. And we did not play CU football. Therefore, we got our butts kicked. It is what it is.”
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