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  • Home/
  • History (Page 2)

The Power of Language

April 1, 2020 / Martina Will, PhD / History / No Comments

How can one exert power through language? And how does language empower some and disempower others?

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Two Strikes Against Her and She Persisted: The Enduring Legacy of Dr. Justina Ford

March 1, 2020 / Martina Will, PhD / History, People / No Comments

Ford could speak between 8 and 11 languages and dialects and delivered over 7,000 babies, according to Sylvia Lambe, who serves on the advisory board of the Black American West Museum and Heritage Center.

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Normandy: With Kids

March 1, 2020 / Martina Will, PhD / History, Travel / No Comments

If you’ve never undertaken a long bike trip, the Goldstein family’s visit to Normandy, France suggests it can be an especially meaningful way to experience another country, provided your children are old enough to propel themselves.

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“Lift Every Voice and Sing”— A Second National Anthem?

February 1, 2020 / Martina Will, PhD / Arts/Culture, History, Racial Issues / 2 Comments

If you know the song “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” you’re most likely Black—and you also know it is often referred to as the Black National Anthem. If you’re White, you likely know none of the above.

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Dolores Huerta: “Sorry you missed 1968, but we’re back!”

January 1, 2020 / Martina Will, PhD / Arts/Culture, History, People / No Comments

For those who think nostalgically about the 1960s’ activism, Dolores Huerta says, “Sorry you missed 1968, but we’re back.” A crowd of 300 chants “Sí se puede!” (Yes you can!), the motto of the United Farm Workers (UFW), as she takes her seat at History Colorado.

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Advocates keep banging their heads on the TABOR wall

December 1, 2019 / Todd Engdahl / History, Politics, State Issues / 3 Comments

Over the last three decades governors, various legislators, education advocates, construction company executives, business leaders and civic activists have organized to ask Colorado voters to increase taxes to raise more money for the state’s cash-strapped schools, crumbling highways and other needs.

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Lowry Celebrates Its Past and Present

October 1, 2019 / Laurie Dunklee / Events, History / No Comments

Lowry Air Force Base closed 25 years ago, but the Lowry neighborhood redevelopment retains its history in 30 original buildings, as well as design elements that acknowledge the area’s storied past.

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Hometown Treasures

September 1, 2019 / Tracy Osborne / Arts/Culture, History / No Comments

Denver’s Blair-Caldwell African American Research Library and the Black American West Museum partnered with the National Museum of African American History and Culture to explore the stories of local African American families through their family heirlooms.

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Korey Wise Innocence Project

August 1, 2019 / Martina Will, PhD / Community Organization, History, National Issues, People / No Comments

“When They See Us” devotes a full episode to Korey Wise, referred to as “a walking miracle” by the other men whom the media dubbed the “Central Park Five.” Though the five boys-turned-men-in-prison continue to live with that moniker, all were exonerated in 2002.

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Destination Japan with Kids

August 1, 2019 / Sara Blanchard / Arts/Culture, History, Kids, Travel / No Comments

This summer, we decided to go beyond our usual visits to my Japanese mother’s relatives, and take the children (ages 10 and 8) on a bit of a history tour: Hiroshima; The Floating Shrine; Traditions by the Sea of Japan; and more.

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