Indigenous Independence: America at 250 - July 11

Indigenous independence

 
Be a witness to history! As the United States celebrates its 250th birthday, travel back in time by seeing the documents that were “in the room where it happened.” Indigenous Independence: America at 250 highlights the rare books, manuscripts, and art from the Gilcrease collection that present the American Revolution as more than a sudden break with Great Britain. Instead, they illustrate the long history of struggle between American colonists and Native nations, bearing witness to the fact that the American Revolution was a battle over lands and independence for both Native peoples and American colonists. 

Walk the gallery of the Helmerich Center for American Research to see copies of important treaties between Indigenous nations and Great Britain, peace medals that marked pivotal diplomatic events, and historic maps that reference the Native peoples and places that defined these moments. 

For three special, time-ticketed events, you will also have the opportunity to see Gilcrease’s certified copy of the Declaration of Independence signed by Silas Deane and Benjamin Franklin, in addition to original documents carried by Paul Revere in 1775 and penned by George Washington and Thomas Jefferson regarding the new nation’s diplomatic relations with Native America.   

For more information please contact Leslie Taylor, Guest Services Representative, leslie-taylor@utulsa.edu or 918-631-6403 

*In addition to the document viewing dates, visitors are welcome to view “Indigenous Independence" when the Helmerich Center opens its doors to the public from June 15 through Aug. 7 (excluding holidays) on Friday mornings from 9am-12pm and Monday afternoons from 1pm-4pm. 

Indigenous Independence: America at 250 - July 11 | Gilcrease Museum | Gilcrease Museum