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Box 28

 Container

Contains 7 Results:

June 28, 1968 (7 items)

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 1
Scope and Contents From the Series: From June 28, to July 4, 1968, the Navajo Indians commemorated the centennial of the Long Walk, the return to their homeland from the notorious Bosque Redondo (Fort Sumner, New Mexico), where the United States Army had confined the tribe from 1864-1868. The Navajos who participated in the centennial traversed the original route by bus and stopped in towns and cities along the way for a series of celebration parades, concluding the trip at Window Rock, Arizona. John M. Kitchen trave11ed with the...
Dates: 1850-1990

June 29, 1968 (32 items)

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 2
Scope and Contents From the Series: From June 28, to July 4, 1968, the Navajo Indians commemorated the centennial of the Long Walk, the return to their homeland from the notorious Bosque Redondo (Fort Sumner, New Mexico), where the United States Army had confined the tribe from 1864-1868. The Navajos who participated in the centennial traversed the original route by bus and stopped in towns and cities along the way for a series of celebration parades, concluding the trip at Window Rock, Arizona. John M. Kitchen trave11ed with the...
Dates: 1850-1990

June 30, 1968 (44 items)

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 3
Scope and Contents From the Series: From June 28, to July 4, 1968, the Navajo Indians commemorated the centennial of the Long Walk, the return to their homeland from the notorious Bosque Redondo (Fort Sumner, New Mexico), where the United States Army had confined the tribe from 1864-1868. The Navajos who participated in the centennial traversed the original route by bus and stopped in towns and cities along the way for a series of celebration parades, concluding the trip at Window Rock, Arizona. John M. Kitchen trave11ed with the...
Dates: 1850-1990

July 1, 1968 (28 items)

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents From the Series: From June 28, to July 4, 1968, the Navajo Indians commemorated the centennial of the Long Walk, the return to their homeland from the notorious Bosque Redondo (Fort Sumner, New Mexico), where the United States Army had confined the tribe from 1864-1868. The Navajos who participated in the centennial traversed the original route by bus and stopped in towns and cities along the way for a series of celebration parades, concluding the trip at Window Rock, Arizona. John M. Kitchen trave11ed with the...
Dates: 1850-1990

July 2, 1968 (61 items)

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 5
Scope and Contents From the Series: From June 28, to July 4, 1968, the Navajo Indians commemorated the centennial of the Long Walk, the return to their homeland from the notorious Bosque Redondo (Fort Sumner, New Mexico), where the United States Army had confined the tribe from 1864-1868. The Navajos who participated in the centennial traversed the original route by bus and stopped in towns and cities along the way for a series of celebration parades, concluding the trip at Window Rock, Arizona. John M. Kitchen trave11ed with the...
Dates: 1850-1990

July 3, 1968 (16 items)

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 6
Scope and Contents From the Series: From June 28, to July 4, 1968, the Navajo Indians commemorated the centennial of the Long Walk, the return to their homeland from the notorious Bosque Redondo (Fort Sumner, New Mexico), where the United States Army had confined the tribe from 1864-1868. The Navajos who participated in the centennial traversed the original route by bus and stopped in towns and cities along the way for a series of celebration parades, concluding the trip at Window Rock, Arizona. John M. Kitchen trave11ed with the...
Dates: 1850-1990

July 4, 1968 (110 items)

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 7
Scope and Contents From the Series: From June 28, to July 4, 1968, the Navajo Indians commemorated the centennial of the Long Walk, the return to their homeland from the notorious Bosque Redondo (Fort Sumner, New Mexico), where the United States Army had confined the tribe from 1864-1868. The Navajos who participated in the centennial traversed the original route by bus and stopped in towns and cities along the way for a series of celebration parades, concluding the trip at Window Rock, Arizona. John M. Kitchen trave11ed with the...
Dates: 1850-1990