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Monday, April 3, 2023

Black Identity in the Ute Borderlands Wednesday, April 3 5pm PST

 

 

Online via Zoom

John Taylor & Black Identity in the Ute Borderlands

Louis Gregory McAllister, professor of Ethnic Studies at Northern Arizona University

Join History Colorado for this free event that explores the story of John Taylor, a freed black man who enlisted as a Buffalo Soldier following the Civil War and was sent west. Louis Gregory McAllister, professor of Ethnic Studies at Northern Arizona University, is discussing the history of how Taylor settled in southwestern Colorado, where he claimed to be “the first white man in the Pine River Valley." Taylor eventually married Kitty Cloud (Ute) and had four children before passing away in 1934 at the age of ninety-four.

This lecture is part of the build up to the opening of buffalo soldiers: reVision at Fort Garland Museum & Cultural Center on June 24, 2023. This new exhibit is being created in partnership with eight independent artists and unpacks themes of race, land, and the harm unleashed by westward expansion while providing an emotional testament to the difficult choices the all-Black Buffalo Soldiers regiments faced.

Louis Gregory McAllister holds a M.A in History from the Northern Arizona University and is a professor of Ethnic Studies at Northern Arizona University. McAllister's specializations include: Race relations in the United State Southwest Borderlands; African American History; American Indian-Black relations in American History; Racial formation in American History; and Integrating film, art, music and literature into the fields of History and Ethnic Studies.

This event is free and open to the public, but registration is required. To register, hit here