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Tag: Cherokee
Today’s post is written by Judy Luis-Watson, volunteer coordinator at Archives II in College Park, Maryland. During World War I (WWI), more than 12,000 American Indians served in the armed forces of the United States. In the army, their many roles included serving as gunners, snipers, patrol workers, messengers, scouts, medical personnel, radio operators, as [...]
Posted by Guest Blogger on May 17, 2012, under Archives II, Military Records.
Tags: 132nd Machine Gun Battalion, 142nd Infantry Regiment, 36th Division, AEF, American Indians, Arrow head, Brigadier General John S. Brown, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Choctaw, code talkers, Colonel A.W. Bloor, Comanche, Donna Opilla, Ed Post, France, Herman Viola, Indian Schools, Joseph A. Dixon, Joseph K. Dixon, Judy Luis-Watson, National Guards, Native Americans, Oklahoma, Osage, Patrick Osborn, RG 120, Senate Hearing 108.693, Tankton, Texas, volunteers, World War I, World War II Comments: 6
For today’s post we are thrilled to open our blog space to NARA’s Wikipedian-in-Residence, Dominic McDevitt-Parks. Everyone knows about Wikipedia (though there is certainly a lot of room for clarification of how it works in practice and why it is valuable for public history), so for this first post, I want to spotlight Wikisource, a [...]
Posted by Guest Blogger on July 25, 2011, under Digital Projects, Reference, Researchers, The Process.
Tags: Andrew Jackson, Ansel Adams, Cherokee, Civil War, Dominic McDevitt-Parks, Dorothea Lange, Electronic Access Project, Eli Hicks, Indian Removal Act, John Ross, Matthew Brady, NARA Archival Information Locator, Sequoyah, Trail of Tears, Tuskegee Syphilis Study, Vietnam, Wikipedia, Wikisource Comments: 2
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