The Center for the Study of the Southwest collaborates with numerous organizations that provide helpful resources to students and researchers.
The listings below can be sorted by state and by category for easy reference.
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State Humanities Councils
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A peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal of the anthropology, history, literatures, religions, and arts of Native Americans.
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Archaeological research facility and museum devoted to the study and interpretation of Native American cultures located in Southeastern Arizona in the Dragoon Mountains.
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Documents the historical experience of women in the Southwest, with special emphasis on Dallas and North Texas, as well as a regional focus that includes Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, and the Spanish Borderlands. Housed in the DeGolyer Library at Southern Methodist University.
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The official website of the State of Arizona.
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An independent, non-profit, state-wide volunteer organization that serves as a bond between professional archaeologists and avocational nonprofessional volunteers in order to foster interest and research in the archaeology of Arizona.
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Published by the Arizona Department of Transportation. Captures the spirit and beauty of Arizona through photography and narrative.
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Arizona's oldest cultural organization, founded by the territorial legislature on November 7, 1864 and charged with preserving Arizona history for the present and future.
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Arizona Humanities builds a just and civil society by creating opportunities to explore our shared human experiences through discussion, learning and reflection.
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Provides access to unique historical and contemporary resources: archives of historical records in Arizona, library extension assistance to public libraries, library for the visually and physically disabled, museums on state government history and people of the state, public records management program, research and law library.
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The oldest anthropological museum in the Southwest, its collection is recognized nationally as being among the most significant resources for the study of the American Southwestern and northern Mexican cultures from prehistory to the present. Located at the University of Arizona.
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A non-circulating research facility specializing in the archaeology and anthropology of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico. Collections are particularly rich in resources on southwestern indigenous cultures.
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A guide to Arizona's State Parks.
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A dynamic educational institution that engages visitors in the exciting Story of Texas through a variety of program and exhibit experiences.
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Located in Angleton, Texas in the heart of Stephen F. Austin's Colony. This is where Texas began its emergence as an independent nation. National award-winning Austin Colony exhibit chronicles the birth of that nation.
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The Calaboose Museum serves as a home for African American history and culture in San Marcos and Hays County. Through preservation, events, and education, the museum strives to serve as not only an African American history museum but a center of support for the San Marcos community.
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An academic support and outreach unit of the University of Texas at El Paso focusing on the natural history and the indigenous, colonial, pre-urban, and folk cultures of the border regions of southwestern United States and Mexico.
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A research center within the Department of Anthropology at ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï founded to promote archaeological and anthropological research, conduct archaeological investigations, assist in the cultural resource management of University sites, and provide student training and public education.
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At the Center for Greater Southwestern Studies, we strive to expand educational horizons within and beyond the University.
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Encourages and sponsors interdisciplinary studies, scholarship, research, and teaching that interpret the people, society, economy, environment, history and cultures of the Greater Southwest. Located at the University of Texas at Arlington.
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The Virginia Tech Center for Humanities, which has its administrative home in the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences, has a university-wide mandate. It addresses the urgent need for humanistic methods of discovery, learning, and engagement for a comprehensive, twenty-first century university that can prepare transformative graduates and sustain a dynamic faculty to shape a global society.
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Conducts and promotes research, academic programs, and public programming on themes related to Inter-American and Border Studies, including culture and language, the arts, economics, trade, society, history, ecosystems and environment, health, and education in the Americas and the border region. Located at the Univeristy of Texas at El Paso.
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Advancing Latin American academics at New Mexico State University.
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The University of New Mexico's Center for Southwest Research and Special Collections (CSWR) specializes in preserving historical manuscripts, books, photographs, architectural drawings, recordings, and other library materials relating to New Mexico, the Southwestern U.S., and Latin America. It also houses the UNM University Archives, as well as a collection of rare books on various topics from around the world.
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Located at the University of New Mexico, the Center for Southwest Research is devoted to the study of the region spanning the vast Mexican territories that became part of the United States by 1853. The University of New Mexico General Library's special collections department and UNM's resource center for the comparative and interdisciplinary study of New Mexico and the Southwest.
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Promotes collaborative learning between students of the college and faculty members, with special emphasis on the historical, cultural, social, economic, and political issues facing Texas and Mexico.
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A unique program at ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï that focuses on the preservation and study of Texas and Southwestern music history. With an emphasis on how Texas music reflects the rich history and tremendous cultural diversity of the Southwest, the Center offers graduate and undergraduate courses, along with a variety of research and publishing projects.
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The Center for the Humanities was established in the College of Liberal Arts at the University of New Hampshire in 1986 to support humanities research by faculty from across the university, representing such fields as anthropology, communication, fine arts, folklore, foreign languages, geography, history, literature, philosophy, religious studies, sociology, and women's and gender studies.
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Center for the Study of the Southwest | ºÚÁϳԹÏ
Engaging faculty and students in the richness and diversity of the Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico and giving focus to intercultural studies through examinations of the region's people, institutions, history, and physical and cultural ecology. Located at ºÚÁϳԹÏ.
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The Center of Southwest Studies shares the mission of Fort Lewis College to provide inclusive, experiential learning environments that foster innovation, growth, and community engagement. As a College museum, archives, and library dedicated to the diverse cultures, histories, and environments of the Southwest, we provide collections-based learning opportunities and internships for undergraduate students; preserve and provide access to our research collections; and, offer exhibits and educational programs for the College and the public.
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The CRHC at Ohio University aims to create lifelong audiences for the humanities in Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia, and to serve students, teachers, scholars, and the general public. In exploring human experiences in their region, they seek to understand literature and history, popular and material culture in local and regional communities, institutions, and organizations.
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Promotes research, publishing, teaching, and public programming in a variety of fields of inquiry related to the American Southwest. Located at Southern Methodist University.
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Preserves and promotes the heritage of the American West. Exhibits historical objects, photographs, works from contemporary painters and sculptors, and past masters such as Remington and Russell.
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Maintains a large, diverse, and comprehensive collection which includes rare books, historical and literary manuscripts, the archives of Texas A&M University, original and printed works of art, and historic artifacts. Its collection strengths include military history, science fiction, Western Americana, 19th century American prints and illustrators, Texana, natural history, ornithology, nautical archaeology, the history of the university, and selected literary authors in addition to other subject areas.
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Maintains a large, diverse, and comprehensive collection which includes rare books, historical and literary manuscripts, the archives of Texas A&M University, original and printed works of art, and historic artifacts. Its collection strengths include military history, science fiction, Western Americana, 19th century American prints and illustrators, Texana, natural history, ornithology, nautical archaeology, the history of the university, and selected literary authors in addition to other subject areas.
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Memorial site where the renowned author spent summers writing.
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On this site you will find a series of displays of the large volume of data the Flints amassed during research in dozens of archives concerning hundreds of people who participated in or were associated with the Coronado Expedition of 1539-1542 into what is now northwest Mexico and the American Southwest.
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Non-circulating collections that pertain to the history of Texas, San Antonio, and the Alamo. Part of the Alamo complex in San Antonio, Texas.
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A nonprofit research campus of the University and Community College System of Nevada with programs directed from three core divisions: atmospheric sciences, earth and ecosystem sciences, and hydrologic sciences.
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Facilitates research and sponsors programs on the historical development of the United States. Located at the University of Texas at Austin.
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Interactive website about the historic route between Santa Fe and Mexico City - for centuries the only artery for news, supplies, and travel to the far-flung Spanish colony of New Mexico.
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Presents changing exhibitions that express the region's diverse culture. Exhibits selections from its permanent collection of art from Europe, Mexico, and the United States.
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Our mission is to represent and strengthen the state and jurisdictional humanities councils
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A model Texas Hill Country working ranch that supports education, research, and service needs of ºÚÁϳԹÏ.
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Research repository containing primary and secondary source materials covering prehistoric Arizona to the present. Located at Arizona State University.
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A nonprofit, multidisciplinary organization for the preservation, development, presentation, and promotion of the art and culture of Chicano, Latino, and Indigenous peoples that presents and produces events, exhibitions and festivals featuring dance, media arts, Xicano music, literature, theater arts, and visual arts.
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Online discussion network on life and culture in Texas. Encourages scholarly discussion of the history and culture of Texas and makes available diverse bibliographical, research, and teaching aids.
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A multidisciplinary encyclopedia of Texas history, geography, and culture sponsored by the Texas State Historical Association and the General Libraries at UT Austin.
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One of the world's preeminent institutions for literacy and cultural research at the University of Texas at Austin.
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Supports multi-disciplinary research teams, provides expertise to solve complex environmental problems, and develops innovative environmental monitoring technology. Located at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
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Leading repository of Native American art. Offers exhibitions and educational programs about the heritage, living cultures, and arts of Native peoples, with an emphasis on the peoples of the Southwest.
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A non-profit, educational organization incorporated by the State of Texas that supports research, education, and public programs in the humanities.
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Dedicated to the preservation and perpetuation of Pueblo Indian culture, history and art from Pre-Columbian to current time.
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The Indigenous Cultures Institute is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the research and preservation of the culture including arts, traditions, ceremonies, and languages of Native Americans who have millions of descendants still living in Texas and the U.S.
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Collects and processes oral history interviews with persons who have been eyewitnesses to or participants in events of historical significance, especially in Texas and related regions. Located at Baylor University.
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An educational center located at the University of Texas at San Antonio dedicated to enhancing the understanding of the history and diverse cultures of Texas through exhibits, programs, and publications that encourage acceptance and appreciation of our differences as well as our common humanity.
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The major scholarly journal in the field of literature and environment studies published by the Center for Environmental Arts and Humanities at The University of Nevada, Reno.
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One of the foremost university art museums in the country and the leading art museum serving the city of Austin and Central Texas.
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Contains materials from artists working in the first half of the 20th century that reflect the cultural history of the Southwest. Located at Southern Methodist University.
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Focuses on southern history, broadly interpreted. Published quarterly by the Southern Historical Association, Department of History, University of Georgia.
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A refereed journal of scholarly articles, essays, and reviews informing any aspect of the Greater Southwest (including northern Mexico) published quarterly by the Southwest Center at the University of Arizona.
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Historic land located just west of downtown Las Vegas. Historically known as "Big Springs," the area is one of the richest and most unique cultural and biological resources in Southern Nevada.
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The Lawrence T. Jones III Texas Photographs digital collection contains a wide range of early Texas photography. The digitized images are from the Lawrence T. Jones III Texas Photography Collection, which contains approximately 4,200 photographs, ca. 1846-1945, and is held by SMU's DeGolyer Library.
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The complete production archives for the classic television miniseries, Lonesome Dove, are among the holdings at the Southwestern Writers Collection at ºÚÁϳԹÏ.
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Exhibits changing collections and selections from its permanent collections, predominantly consisting of contemporary works by artists working in the Southwest.
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Collects and exhibits artifacts of the aboriginal people of Nevada including the Anasazi, Pueblo, and Paiute Indians.
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Established to preserve and make available for research the papers and memorabilia of President Lyndon Baines Johnson. In addition, the library actively collects the papers of Johnson's contemporaries and conducts an oral history program designed to supplement the written record.
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Collects, preserves, researches, interprets and exhibits objects and thematic concepts that illustrate the natural history of Southern Nevada and bordering regions. Exhibitions emphasize Native Cultures of the Southwest and Central Americas.
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A non-profit nature center owned by ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï dedicated to the protection and preservation of the San Marcos springs.
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Dedicated to fostering and celebrating the humanities and humanities research among the community of scholars at Texas A&M University and in the world beyond the academy.
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Presents and promotes traditional and contemporary Mexican, Latino, and Latin American art and culture. Collection consists of works by emerging and established artists.
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The Mid-Atlantic Regional Center for the Humanities (MARCH) is a lively co-working center for experiential learning and professional development located in the Cooper Street Historic District at Rutgers-Camden. Across the Mid-Atlantic region, they promote collaboration and innovation in public humanities.
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Exhibits work from the Jerry Bywaters Special Collections at Southern Methodist University. Works reflect the cultural history of the Southwest.
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Premier repository of native art and material culture. Collection tells the stories of the people of the Southwest from pre-history through contemporary art.
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Internationally recognized as the home of the world's largest collection of folk art from around the globe.
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Home to more than 20,000 works of art, with an emphasis on artists working in the Southwest.
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Originally established as a repository for Native American artifacts and natural history specimens from the Colorado Plateau, the museum has evolved into a regional center of learning with collections, exhibits, educational programs, publications, and research projects that serve more than 100,000 people each year.
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Collections in the arts, humanities and sciences consisting of natural and cultural material from Texas, the Southwest, and other regions related by natural history, heritage, and climate. Exhibits selections from the museum's art collections and a variety of traveling exhibitions.
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Collects and exhibits artifacts of the Big Bend region. Reflects the history and culture of the Native Americans, Spanish, Mexicans, and Anglo-Americans who inhabited the area. Located at Sul Ross University.
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Collections focus on art and archeology of the American Southwest. Exhibits include ethnographic materials relating to Southwestern cultures and regional works by artists from New Mexico and Texas.
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A peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary academic journal of book/music/archive reviews, interviews, poetry, short fiction, and visual art that offers a space for the continued exploration of Hispanics’ indigenous identities.
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The only museum in the world dedicated to honoring women of the American West. Nationally known for its exhibits, research library, rare photography collection, and the honorees in its Hall of Fame.
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Supports the cross-cultural appreciation and understanding of Hispanic culture by preserving and showcasing historic and contemporary Hispanic arts, humanities, and achievements over the past 400 years.
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Non-profit corporation that identifies, preserves, and enhances Hispanic arts and humanities. Develops and offers educational programs for students of all ages.
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The National Humanities Alliance (NHA) is a nationwide coalition of organizations advocating for the humanities on campuses, in communities, and on Capitol Hill. Founded in 1981, NHA is supported by over 200 member organizations, including: colleges, universities, libraries, museums, cultural organizations, state humanities councils, and scholarly, professional, and higher education associations. It is the only organization that brings together the U.S. humanities community as a whole.
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Map and links to national parks and monuments in Arizona, including Canyon De Chelly National Monument, Casa Grande Ruins National Monument, Navajo National Monument, and Hohokam Pima National Monument.
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Map and links to national parks and monuments in New Mexico, including Chaco Culture National Historical Park, Petroglyph National Monument, and Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument.
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Map and links to national parks in Nevada, including Death Valley National Park and the Pony Express National Historic Trail.
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Map and links to national parks in Texas, including San Antonio Missions National Historical Park, Big Bend National Park, and Fort Davis National Historic Site
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Specialized research library focusing on materials from and about Latin America, and on materials relating to Spanish-speaking peoples in the United States - a unit of the General Libraries at the University of Texas at Austin.
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Celebrates the living history of Nevada in an ever-changing world. Provides grants for community-based humanities projects. Sponsors and supports public programs and events.
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Nevada Humanities produces and supports humanities-based educational and cultural programs that articulate the Nevada experience, feature local culture and heritage, and facilitate the investigation of ideas that matter to the people of Nevada and their communities.
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Non-profit museum professional organization. Web site provides visitors to Nevada with more information about the diverse history that Nevada's museums have to offer. Interactive map locates Nevada museums.
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State agency that preserves and promotes cultural resources, activities and education.
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An educational institution whose purpose is to advance the understanding of the history, pre-history, and natural history of Nevada, emphasizing southern Nevada and its relationship with surrounding areas.
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A state agency whose purpose is to advance the understanding of the history, pre-history, and natural history of Nevada, emphasizing southern Nevada and its relationship with surrounding areas. It collects, researches, interprets, exhibits, and preserves Nevada's heritage.
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A guide to Nevada's State Parks.
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Houses over 60 pieces of railroad equipment from Nevada's past and is considered one of the finest regional railroad museums in the country.
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State agency that oversees the Museum of New Mexico system, New Mexico Museum of Space History in Alamogordo, New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science in Albuquerque, New Mexico Farm & Ranch Heritage Museum in Las Cruces, National Hispanic Cultural Center, State Library, New Mexico Arts and Historic Preservation Division.
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Private, non-profit organization dedicated to bringing the humanities to public audiences throughout New Mexico. Seeks and funds quality humanities programs for presentation to public audiences and supports worthy projects and organizations that deal with topics ranging from local history and culture to international affairs.
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One of the oldest and most distinguished regional journals in the Western United States publishing scholarly research on New Mexico and the greater Southwest including northern Mexico.
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The New Mexico Humanities Council seeks to support public programs in New Mexico communities which inspire inclusive conversations that strengthen their civil society and celebrate diverse human experiences.
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A guide to New Mexico's State Monuments.
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A guide to New Mexico's state parks and historical sites including information about educational and recreational activities.
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Non-circulating published research materials including books, periodicals, maps and newspapers relating to the culture, environment, history, people and resources of New Mexico. Collection also includes materials focusing on the Southwest and the Borderlands.
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Based on a traveling exhibition sponsored by The National Endowment for the Humanities, The Southwestern Writers Collection, and ºÚÁϳԹÏ.
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Austin home of William Sidney Porter, who became famous as a short-story writer under the pen name O. Henry. This Queen Anne-style cottage has since been restored and now contains artifacts and memorabilia from Porter's life in Austin.
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Originally constructed in the early 17th century as Spain's seat of government for what is today the American Southwest. Chronicles the history of Santa Fe, as well as New Mexico and the region.
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The largest history museum in Texas; located on the campus of West Texas A&M University. Exhibitions dedicated to petroleum, Southern Plains lifeways, paleontology, transportation, and the art of the Southwest before 1945, including the Santa Fe, Taos, and Texas schools.
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Over 7,000 items housed in the Navarro College Archives documenting the northern and southern experience of the Civil War as well as its leaders, common soldiers, and residents. Included are letters from major military, political, and civic leaders as well as diaries and letters of the common soldier.
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Works by new and established artists who represent the world of American Western Art housed at Navarro College.
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Prepares students for public history careers in historic preservation, heritage tourism, historic site interpretation, and museum and archives management. Offered by the Department of History at ºÚÁϳԹÏ.
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Acquires, preserves, and makes available for research records of organizations, personal papers, and other unpublished materials relating to New Mexico and the adjacent Spanish Borderlands.
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A collection of over 8,000 items documenting the Lower Rio Grande Valley during the early 1900s. It includes glass negatives, lantern slides, nitrate negatives, prints, and postcards, representing the life's work of commercial photographer Robert Runyon.
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The Rowe-Barr Collection of Texas Currency at the DeGolyer Library is the most comprehensive in the United States, representing thousands of notes, scrip, bonds, and other financial obligations, issued in Texas between the 1820s and 1890s.
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Located at a 1,500 year-old Hohokam village. Collects, preserves, interprets, and exhibits materials from the site of Pueblo Grande as well as archaeological and ethnographic material from the Greater Southwest.
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Exhibits, photographs, original letters, political cartoons, art, furniture, and personal memorabilia relating to important events in the life and times of Sam Rayburn.
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Contains material relating to the period of the Republic of Texas. Exhibits interpret Texas history from the early Indian civilizations through the end of the 19th century, including contributions to the development of the state made by Spanish, Mexican and French colonists. Located in San Jacinto Battleground State Historical Park, off SH 225.
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Texas General Land Office public awareness campaign to engage citizens in the preservation and conservation of the state's historic records, maps, surveys, and land titles.
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Dedicated to human and natural history. Explores the rich diversity of regional heritage through festivals, living history events, outdoor theater performances, changing exhibits, publications and research services.
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Research and educational unit of the Smithsonian Institution promoting the understanding and continuity of diverse, contemporary grassroots cultures in the United States and around the world.
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A clearinghouse for the exchange of ideas from many fields. Insights drawn from social and intellectual history, anthropology, geography, folklore, literature, photography, architecture, politics, ecology, ethno-botany, and the natural sciences alike contribute to our ever-broadening study of the Southwest region.
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The Southwest Center illuminates the character of the Southwest United States and Northwest Mexico region through innovative scholarship, publishing, teaching, and public outreach, and by serving as a forum for the free and open exchange of ideas from social sciences, humanities, physical sciences, and the arts.
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Acquires, preserves, and makes available for research records of organizations, personal papers, and other unpublished materials relating to New Mexico and the adjacent Spanish Borderlands.
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Collection of books, journals, manuscripts, photographs, audio/visual media, and one of the largest oral history collections in Texas. Located at Texas Tech University.
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A study of the historical expeditions that opened Arizona and the American West.
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A quarterly magazine of short stories, poetry, and articles covering contemporary affairs, history, folklore, fiction, poetry, literary criticism, art, music, and the theatre. Published at Southern Methodist University.
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The mission of the Southwest Studies program is to provide the finest liberal arts education, using a critical regional studies approach, centered on the Greater Southwest and the U.S.-Mexico borderlands.
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Southwestern American Literature
A biannual scholarly journal that includes literary criticism, fiction, poetry, and book reviews concerning the Greater Southwest. Published by the Center for the Study of the Southwest at ºÚÁϳԹÏ.
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Special collection of books and magazines covering a wide range of topics specific to the southwestern region of the United States.
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Explore the first 21 volumes of the Southwestern Historical Quarterly online - a searchable, full-text journal archive.
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The oldest scholarly journal in Texas, continuously published since 1897, brings the latest and most authoritative research in Texas history to a wide audience of history lovers and scholars.
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Distinguished and steadily-growing archive at ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï charged with preserving, exhibiting, and providing access to the papers and artifacts of principal writers, filmmakers, and musicians of the Southwest.
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Houses unique, rare, and specialized research material that documents the history, culture and physical environment of the city of Las Vegas, the southern Nevada region, the gaming industry, and the University of Nevada Las Vegas.
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Official website for the State of Nevada. Includes services and programs available, online search, and links to State agencies.
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Texas Archeological Research Laboratory | The University of Texas at Austin
A nationally recognized archeological research facility and the largest archeological repository in the state. Part of the University of Texas at Austin.
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Promotes study, preservation and awareness of Texas archeology. Encourages scientific archeological exploration and research, the preservation and conservation of archeological materials and sites, and the interpretation and publication of the data attendant thereto.
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Texas Artists: Paintings, Sculpture, and Works on Paper is a joint digital collections project between Southern Methodist University’s Central University Libraries' Bywaters Special Collections and norwick Center for Digital Services; the Dallas Museum of Art; and the Dallas Public Library’s Texas/Dallas History & Archives Division and Fine Books Division.
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A biannual that monitors the literary production of books from or about Texas, providing rich reviews about the latest and contemporary publications in diverse fields and genres. Published by the Center for the Study of the Southwest at ºÚÁϳԹÏ.
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Nonprofit organization dedicated to the preservation and presentation of Texas folklore.
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Consists of land grant records and maps dating from the early 18th century relating to the passage of Texas public lands to private ownership. Contains records from the earliest Spanish missions, Spanish, Mexican, and Republic of Texas land grants, family registers of early Texas settlers, original field notes and surveys, and more 20,000 maps and sketches of districts, counties, and towns dating from the 1820s.
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Nationally recognized state agency for historic preservation. Consults with citizens and organizations to preserve Texas' architectural, archeological and cultural landmarks.
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A non-profit organization whose purpose is to stimulate interest in Texas letters and to recognize distinctive literary achievement.
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Fosters the study, understanding and collecting of historical maps and the history of cartography.
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Works and artifacts covering a variety of Texas music, from country and Western Swing to blues, polka, rock and roll, conjunto, and Tejano. Located at ºÚÁϳԹÏ.
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Serves as a network for oral historians in Texas and surrounding states; publishes a newsletter, a scholarly journal, and an annual membership directory. Hosted by Baylor University Institute for Oral History.
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Contains original, photoreproduced, and compiled maps covering the period from the early seventeenth through the late twentieth centuries.
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The oldest learned society in the state. Fosters the appreciation, understanding, and teaching of the rich and unique history of Texas through programs and activities that encourage and promote research, preservation, and publication of historical material affecting the state of Texas.
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State agency that provides a wide variety of informational, library, archival, and records management services.
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A guide to the state parks and historical sites of Texas, including information about campsites, accommodations, and recreational activities.
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The Texas: Photographs, Manuscripts, and Imprints digital collection contains hundreds of photographic images, real photographic postcards, books, historic documents, and maps of Texas held by SMU’s DeGolyer Library. Each item includes information about Texas and Texas history.
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The UC Davis Humanities Institute is a leading voice for the essential value of the arts and humanities in higher education. Their programs for teaching, research, and public engagement make the arts and humanities a central and meaningful part of life at the university and beyond.
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Photographs, manuscripts, audio recordings, video tapes, and other archival collections scanned into digital formats.
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Houses a wide-ranging collection of over 4,500 paintings, sculptures and works on paper (prints and drawings) dating from the sixth century B.C. to the present.
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Houses the following collections: Nevada and the Great Basin, Nevada Women's Archives, Great Basin Indian Collection, Women in the West, Book Arts Collection. Located at the University of Nevada, Reno.
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Preserves and provides access to materials that document the history of San Antonio and South Texas, the Southwestern United States, Spanish Colonial Mexico, and the Pacific Northwest. Part of the University of Texas at San Antonio.
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Houses a collection of minerals, ores, fossil specimens and photographs, in addition to mining related relics. There is a special emphasis on early Nevada mining history with samples from famous mineral districts. Located at the University of Nevada, Reno.
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Dedicated to the preservation of the rich history of the West Texas region. Located at Texas Tech University.
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The leading journal in Western American literary studies jointly published by the Western Literature Association and the University of Nebraska.
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A regional nonprofit folk arts organization dedicated to preserving, perpetuating, and presenting the folk arts of the West.
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Books and magazines for adults and children that pertain to the southwestern United States. Information on Southwestern arts, crafts, cooking, fauna, flora, geography, geology, ghost towns, history, pottery, petroglyphs, pueblos, poetry, photographs, and native peoples.
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A 225 acre complex of 19th-century structures and modern facilities in northern Fayette County preserved to foster an understanding of Texas history and culture through research, teaching, and public service.
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Offers an interpretive exhibit of the archeology, lifeways and rock art of the prehistoric Indian hunter-gatherer societies of the Lower Pecos region.
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Creative center and archives at ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï devoted to the photographic cultures of Mexico and the Southwestern United States.