Tour Overview
Created By: Dr. Elizabeth Rule - The Guide To Indigenous Lands Project
Guide to Indigenous DC is a walking tour map featuring sites of historical and contemporary importance to Native peoples across the Nation’s capital.
Guide to Indigenous DC is a tour map and mobile application featuring sites of importance to Native peoples across the Nation’s capital. The Guide emphasizes Indigenous peoples’ contributions to Washington, DC, highlights the historical and contemporary federal tribal policy developed in the city, and acknowledges the peoples whose homelands upon which the District of Columbia was built. The Guide showcases the empowering stories of how Washington, DC is a place of tribal history, gathering, and advocacy with a long, rich history.
The publicly-facing Guide contributes to tribal historic preservation efforts in Washington, DC, and serves as a resource to primary, secondary, and university-level educational institutions in the city and surrounding areas who can use the guide in conjunction with field trips and curriculum. Tribal leaders and organizations who travel to the capital for business will find value in this tool as an educational and culturally-relevant activity. The Guide also encourages millions of tourists who visit Washington, DC to remember the importance of Indigenous peoples to our shared national history and raises awareness of the role of Indigenous peoples to ongoing political processes and current events.
Developed by Principal Investigator Elizabeth Rule for the AT&T Center for Indigenous Politics and Policy at the George Washington University, and in partnership with the American Indian and Alaska Native Tourism Association, the Guide was created in close collaboration with scholars, historians, and members of the local Native community who have institutional knowledge of key events and locations.
Stops
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Stop 1: US Marine Corps War Memorial with Ira Hayes
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Stop 2: Analostan/Theodore Roosevelt Island
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Stop 3: Indigenous Peoples March
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Stop 4: Occupation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
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Stop 5: Department of the Interior Murals
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Stop 6: Mural of Piscataway History and Culture
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Stop 7: Artifacts on White House South Lawn & Ellipse
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Stop 8: Native Nations March
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Stop 9: Dumbarton Bridge
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Stop 10: Embassy of Tribal Nations
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Stop 11: Cowboy and Indian Alliance Camp
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Stop 12: Spirit of Haida Gwaii: The Black Canoe
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Stop 13: National Museum of the American Indian
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Stop 14: Native American Veterans Memorial
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Stop 15: Native Leader Statues at US Capitol
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Stop 16: Liberty and Freedom Lummi Totem Poles
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Stop 17: Tribal Delegates at Congressional Cemetery