Wednesday,
May 19
GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK
Grand Canyon, Arizona
Nowhere on earth does Mother Nature present
the face of millennia as she does in the Grand Canyon.
Several million years of natural history reveal themselves
in the layered rocks of the Colorado Rivers great
chasm. The river is always a force of change in the canyon,
but humanity has left our subtle marks from the archaic
native people who once inhabited the area, to Major John
Wesley Powell who explored it, to architect Mary Jane
Coulter who designed the signature buildings on the south
rim. The Grand Canyon Greenway project is part of an enlightened
effort to shape human influence and preserve this American
treasure by creating a system of trails that will help
the canyon endure into the new millennium. Seventy-three
miles of trail will form a new system of transportation
choices inside the park that will provide a safe, educational,
healthy and environmentally sound alternative transportation
route for thousands of visitors.
LOWELL OBSERVATORY
Flagstaff, Arizona
The past and the future share
the same starlight as it speeds through millennia-gone-by
and streaks past the earth into a future we have not seen.
At 105 years old, Lowell Observatory has been and continues
to be committed to teaching humankind about our place
in the universe and making the discoveries that help us
move beyond our planet. Lowell Observatory is the largest
privately operated non-profit astronomical research observatory
in the world and is a National Historic Landmark. It was
here that the publics imagination about Mars was
sparked, where the first evidence for an expanding universe
was observed, where Pluto was discovered, where maps of
the moons surface for Apollo astronauts were refined,
and where the public is invited to learn alongside world
renowned astronomers and researchers. Objects and collections
which tell this story, and which are vital to the educational
work at Lowell are threatened by deterioration, and ongoing
care is needed for the Observatory.
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Saturday, May 22
MESA VERDE NATIONAL PARK
Mesa Verde, Colorado
Five thousand archaeological sites including
some six hundred cliff dwellings are found in this national
park. Established in 1906, it was the first park dedicated
primarily to preserving human artifacts rather than natural
environments. The Ancestral Puebloans lived on these grounds
for hundreds of years but built the most complex cliff dwellings
around 1200. Today twenty-four Native American tribes in
the southwest have an ancestral affiliation with the sites
at Mesa Verde. The cliff dwellings were re-discovered by
many people including explorers, geologists, photographers
and cattlemen, but did not gain widespread attention until
the late 1800s. Virginia McClurg, Lucy Peabody and
other women in Colorado and around the country led the effort
to protect the areas dwellings and artifacts within
a national park. Hundreds of sites are threatened by erosion
and hundreds more need their conditions assessed and stabilized.
The park has also been designated a World Heritage Site
by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization.
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GET INVOLVED
We stand at the convergence of a new century
and the next millennium -- a milestone in human history.
That is why the President and First Lady created the White
House Millennium Council -- to set themes, engage the federal
agencies and invite all Americans to participate in meaningful
activities through the year 2000.
The overall theme of the White House millennium
activities is "Honor the past -- Imagine the future." The
President and First Lady are inviting states, Communities,
non-profit organizations, federal agencies, and all citizens
to participate in activities that strengthen our democracy,
improve communities, and give lasting gifts to the future.
The President has invited governors, mayors and other elected
officials to involve citizens in marking the Millennium;
many cities and towns are creating "Year 2000" committees
to plan events.
For more information about the Save America's
Treasures Program and other Millennium Council initiatives,
please contact:
The White House Millennium Council
Ellen McCulloch-Lovell, Director
708 Jackson Place, NW
Washington, D.C. 20503
(202)456-2000
(202)456-2008 (fax)
millennium@whitehouse.gov
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Friday, May 21
SEGESSER HIDE PAINTINGS
AND
THE PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS
Sante Fe, New Mexico
The Segesser Hide Paintings are a colorful
eighteenth century record of two events in New Mexico history
painted on bison hides. One painting depicts an attack on
an Apache village while the other accounts the ambush of
the Villasur expedition, a group of Spaniards and Pueblo
Indians sent from Santa Fe to search for French intruders
in the Spanish empire. Most old New Mexico families can
claim a special connection to the Segesser paintings through
their ancestors, many of whom were involved in the battle
depicted in the second painting. The hide paintings are
currently on display in the Palace of the Governors, the
oldest public building in the United States and now a unit
of the Museum of New Mexico. Built in 1610, it was the seat
of nearly three centuries of government and witness to colorful
histories including Spanish, Pueblo, Mexican, and American.
Both of these unique links to our past are in need of stabilization
and conservation so that they may continue to tell their
stories to future generations.
SAN ESTEBAN DEL REY AND
ACOMA PUEBLO
Acoma, New Mexico
Situated on top of a mesa,
hundreds of feet above the surrounding valley, Old Acoma
or Sky City, is one of the oldest continuously occupied
cities in the United States. As a thriving pueblo today,
Acoma honors the many aspects of iys history in its living
culture. In 1629 the Spanish established the church of San
Esteban del Rey, and the Acoma people completed the church
building in 1641. Although Acomas participated in the Pueblo
Revolt of 1680, they chose not to destroy their church,
making San Esteban del Rey one of the few Spanish missions
to survive the uprising. The Pueblo of Acoma is working
with Cornerstone Community Partnerships to identify and
analyze causes of damage and deterioration of San Esteban,
a National Historic Landmark. Skills learned through this
program will also be applied to Acoma housing, enabling
Acomas to preserve their community for generations to come.
SOUTHWEST PIETA
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Unlike the star-crossed lovers depicted
in this sculpture, the city of Albuquerque and the community
of South Martinez Town have embraced fully this piece of
public art by sculptor Luis Jimenez. This brightly colored
fiberglass sculpture, originally funded by the City of Albuquerque
and the National Endowment for the Arts, vividly recalls
the Aztec and Mexican myths around the two volcanoes located
outside Mexico City. The Aztec story accompanied the native
Spanish and Mexican people who traveled the Road of
Life which later became the Spanish El Camino
Real. The combination of the Aztec myth, its romanticized
Mexican version, and Christian imagery reveal the mixture
of cultures which is the heritage of the region. Students
at the neighboring Longfellow Elementary School learn about
sculpture and the many sources of their heritage through
study of this work of art. Many partners including the community,
the city, and the national non-profit Save Outdoor Sculpture
of Heritage Preservation are committed to the display, safety,
and conservation of the piece which faces on-going threats
from the regions harsh elements and acid particulates.
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