Fort SnellingMain MenuDakota History 1862-1863: The US-Dakota War, and the Innocent ImprisonedEducation + InterpretationInteractive MapCamp CensusBibliographyAll Sources used for the creation of this site.Genevieve Romain2780a176af9b081b887fccf1a2c9d8f66cc710a8Dustin Sjong7d8b720b8272f145f79d27a161206c480703e582Matthew D. Frater61f08a66ba71d0a84fb2368cda74dc64d2daa275Sarah Forschlerf112b97c780ede601526729005e344121cd2da0cAaron J. Person7682fe26670fdd393b11095bed5c9c2f5813574f
Historical Incarceration and Educational Rhetoric - Bridging the gap between history, perspective, and the Carceral Fort Snelling
1media/Fort+Snelling+Internment+Camp+painting+-+medium.jpgmedia/Fort+Snelling+Internment+Camp+painting+-+medium.jpg2015-12-08T14:42:25-08:00Dustin Sjong7d8b720b8272f145f79d27a161206c480703e582718914Homeimage_header2015-12-09T07:59:34-08:00Matthew D. Frater61f08a66ba71d0a84fb2368cda74dc64d2daa275In order to understand the way that Fort Snelling is taught, we must first understand its' history. Through the interpretation on site as well as the rhetoric used in public classrooms, the story as told is inadequate. Follow 'The History' in order to experience the detailed stories surrounding the incarceration on the site, or 'The Curriculum' to go directly to how that history is taught in a public school setting.
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1media/medicine bottle.jpgmedia/medicine bottle.jpg2015-12-01T23:39:42-08:00Dustin Sjong7d8b720b8272f145f79d27a161206c480703e582The History15image_header2015-12-08T19:43:43-08:00Matthew D. Frater61f08a66ba71d0a84fb2368cda74dc64d2daa275