U.S.-Dakota War to be
topic of public presentations News
Release / North Dakota State University / 28 February 2013 A series of four public
programs titled “The U.S.-Dakota War in North Dakota: A Sesquicentennial Discussion”
is scheduled to be presented across the state. The programs are
organized by the Center for Heritage Renewal at NDSU, with funding from the
North Dakota Humanities Council. Local organizations host the programs in
individual communities, which are scheduled for Fort Yates on Friday, March
22; Watford City on Saturday, March 23; Ellendale on Friday, April 5; and
Devils Lake on Saturday, April 6. All programs begin at 7 p.m. “This is a good time to
reconsider the events that occurred 150 years ago and shaped Indian-white
relations on the northern plains for generations to come,” said Tom Isern, NDSU University Distinguished Professor of History
and director of the Center for Heritage Renewal. “These programs not only
review historical facts about the U.S.-Dakota War, but also examine the
circumstances, actions and values of all sides in the conflict. And then we
ask, ‘what does this mean to us as people of North Dakota today?’ ” Richard Rothaus, CEO of Trefoil Cultural and Environmental and research
associate of the NDSU center, is the lead scholar for the program series.
Joining him as presenters are Tamara St. John, archivist for the Sisseton Wahpeton
Oyate, and Dennis Gill, a respected elder in the
Sisseton Wahpeton community. Dennis Cooley, NDSU professor of philosophy,
will moderate the programs, in which audience discussion is encouraged. The U.S.-Dakota War of
1862-64, which began with serious violence in Minnesota in 1862, moved into
Dakota Territory with the siege of Fort Abercrombie in 1862 and spilled onto
the Dakota plains in 1863-64. Actions at Whitestone Hill in 1863 and Killdeer
Mountain in 1864 are only the best-known events in a sustained and costly war
that involved both Dakota and Lakota peoples, as well as the citizens and armed
forces of the territory and nation. Hosts of the programs
and local contacts include: ·
Sitting Bull College – contact Mark
Holman at 701-854-8024 or markh@sbci.edu,
with program in Science and Technology Center room 120/101 ·
Pioneer Museum of McKenzie County –
contact Jan Dodge at 701-570-2493 or jdodge@co.mckenzie.nd.us,
with program in Watford City High School Media Center ·
Historic Ellendale Opera House –
contact Jeanette Robb-Ruenz, at 701-535-0442 or jrbruenz@drtel.net ·
Lake Region Heritage Center –
contact Kristin Wood at 701-662-3701 or lrhc@gondtc.com For general
information about the program series, contact Tom Isern
at isern@plainsfolk.com
or at 701-799-2942,
or visit heritagerenewal.org/dakotawar. |