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Part 1: American Indian Communities in Kentucky

June 8 @ 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm

The Frankfort Heritage Lecture Series presents:

PART I: AMERICAN INDIAN COMMUNITIES IN KENTUCKY  

Tressa Brown, Historic Preservation Coordinator 

Kentucky Native American Heritage Commission, 

Kentucky Heritage Council 

 

American Indian communities have been in Kentucky for more than 11,000 years. When Euro-Americans settled here, Shawnee, Cherokee, and Chickasaw, among others, already lived here. Myths and misconceptions about American Indian people permeate many sources of information. We all dispel some of the myths about native people that persist, discuss Kentucky’s native heritage, and briefly review its long history. 

 

Tressa Brown received her B.A. in Biology and Anthropology at Transylvania University and her M.A. in Anthropology and Museum Studies from Arizona State University. She is currently the coordinator for the Kentucky Native American Heritage Commission, the Kentucky African American Heritage Commission, and the Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission. She has worked for the past 25 years providing Native American educational programming for schools and the public. 

 

Her primary focus has been to identify the stereotypes and myths about Native Americans in general and Kentucky’s Native people in particular. Her position at KHC is to provide accurate information to educators and the public about Kentucky’s American Indian history, the diversity of Native cultures, as well as the issues affecting Native people in contemporary society. 

 

Venue

Paul Sawyier Public Library
319 Wapping St.
Frankfort, KY 40601 United States
+ Google Map
Phone
502-352-2665
Frankfort Public Art

Frankfort/Franklin County Tourist & Convention Commission
300 Saint Clair St., Suite 102
Frankfort, KY 40601

800-960-7200
502-875-8687