Copyright © 2002 CNO
TAHLEQUAH, OK - The Cherokee Heritage Center recently created 10 traveling exhibits that display issues pertinent to Cherokee history that will tour in fourteen libraries over the next year.
The subjects of the ten separate exhibits include Pre-Columbian, Government, Education, Belief, Daily Life, Removal, Warfare, Cherokee Contributions, Arts, and the Cherokee Today.
"These exhibits are ideal for school groups," said Marilyn Craig, marketing director for the Cherokee Heritage Center.
The displays will stay in a particular library for three weeks and then will rotate to another library until each library displayed all ten exhibits. Each library will also distribute accompanying reading lists. The libraries that will display these exhibits are the Stilwell Public Library, the John F. Henderson Public Library in Westville, the Tahlequah Public Library, the Hulbert Community Library, the Grove Public Library, the Delaware County Library in Jay, the Jim Lucas Checotah Public Library, the Eufaula Memorial Library, the Rieger Memorial Library in Haskell, The Muskogee Public Library, the Q.B. Boydstun Library in Ft. Gibson, the Warner Public Library, the Stanley Tubbs Memorial Library in Sallisaw, and the Muldrow Public Library.
The project is funded by a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. The Institute of Museum and Library Services is a federal grant-making agency serving the public by strengthening museums and libraries.
At the conclusion of the project, the completed traveling exhibits will be transferred to the Oklahoma Museum Association for rotation throughout Oklahoma's museum, library, and educational systems.
For more information, contact one of the above libraries or the Cherokee Heritage Center, phone: 888-999-6007.
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Related contact information:
The Cherokee Heritage Center
Mike Miller, Cherokee Nation
Larry Daugherty, Advertising Manager
Cherokee Nation, Oklahoma |