Iroquois Indian Museum Explained

Iroquois Indian Museum
Established:1980
Location:324 Caverns Rd, Howes Cave, New York, United States

The Iroquois Indian Museum opened in 1981 in the historic homeland of the Mohawk Indians, one of the original Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy.

About

The Iroquois Indian Museum, which opened in its Howes Cave location in 1992, is built in the form of a traditional longhouse, important to Iroquois culture. These were used by extended families for their residences. Some longhouses were reserved for tribal councils and community meetings or ceremonies.[1] Once based in New York, most members of the Iroquois tribes now live on First Nations reserves in Quebec and Ontario, Canada; others live in New York, Wisconsin and Oklahoma.[1]

The museum was built at a cost of $1.3 million. It holds the largest collection of Iroquois art in the United States, and is designed to teach and interpret the culture of the Six Tribes of the Iroquois.[1]

Also located in the museum is the Iroquois Performing Arts Amphitheater, used for music and dance works based on traditional practices related to the Iroquois culture. Ancestors were in their territory for 10,000 years.[2] [3] The museum's exhibits also embrace modern culture, such as one in 2008 that featured Native American baseball players.[4]

Partners

The Iroquois Indian Museum has partnered with a number of other museums throughout the United States including:[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New Museum Shows Lives of Iroquois. 2008-06-02. 1992-06-03. Harold Faber. The New York Times.
  2. Web site: If You Go to Howe Caverns. 2008-06-02. 1999-05-02. The Buffalo News.
  3. Web site: A Nation Long Before Columbus. 2008-06-02. 2007-10-06. Mark Simonson. The Daily Star.
  4. Web site: Online Traveler: Where Baseball's Enshrined . 2008-06-02 . 2008-05-11 . Roger Petterson . The Philadelphia Inquirer . https://web.archive.org/web/20080516082355/http://www.philly.com/inquirer/travel/20080511_Online_Traveler__Where_baseball_s_enshrined.html . 2008-05-16 . dead .
  5. Web site: Iroquois Indian Museum. 2008-06-02.