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Image for event: Virtual How Nez Perce Tribe Regained Their Cultural Heritage

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Virtual How Nez Perce Tribe Regained Their Cultural Heritage

A Stories and Voices program

2025-11-16 14:30:00 2025-11-16 15:30:00 America/Los_Angeles Virtual How Nez Perce Tribe Regained Their Cultural Heritage Coming Home: How the Nez Perce Tribe Regained Their Cultural Heritage: A Humanities Washington Speakers Bureau presentation with Trevor Bond Virtual Pierce County Library - Virtual Room 3

Sunday, November 16
2:30pm - 3:30pm

Add to Calendar 2025-11-16 14:30:00 2025-11-16 15:30:00 America/Los_Angeles Virtual How Nez Perce Tribe Regained Their Cultural Heritage Coming Home: How the Nez Perce Tribe Regained Their Cultural Heritage: A Humanities Washington Speakers Bureau presentation with Trevor Bond Virtual Pierce County Library - Virtual Room 3

Coming Home: How the Nez Perce Tribe Regained Their Cultural Heritage: A Humanities Washington Speakers Bureau presentation with Trevor Bond

Join us and learn about the histories, contributions, and lived experiences of those around us as we uplift community voices and explore stories that act as mirrors of our own lives and windows into experiences different from our own.

Belongings deeply important to tribal communities are often housed in museums far away from those communities. In this talk, hear the remarkable story of how the Nez Perce Tribe and their allies purchased the largest and oldest collection of Nez Perce material culture—including dresses, shirts, and other regalia—from a museum over 2,000 miles away from their homeland.  

In this hopeful story of cultural resiliency and making amends for past injustices, explore issues surrounding collection and curation, and the changing relationships between museums and Native communities. It’s a story that transcends the efforts of one Northwest tribe to show how many indigenous communities are reuniting with their heritage. 

Speaker Bio
Trevor James Bond (he/him) is the director of the David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities and the associate dean for digital initiatives and special collections at the Washington State University Libraries. He is the author of Coming Home to Nez Perce Country: The Niimiipuu Campaign to Repatriate Their Exploited Heritage, a finalist for the 2022 Washington State Book Award for non-fiction.

Bond lives in Pullman.

This talk is presented in partnership with The Thomas S. Foley Institute for Public Policy and Public Service, which educates citizens across the state about democratic institutions and public affairs, and is based at Washington State University. For more information, visit The Foley Institute’s website.

AGE GROUP: | Older Adults | Adults (18+) |

EVENT TYPE: | Stories and Voices |

Virtual Pierce County Library

virtualpcls@pcls.us
Phone: 253-548-3300

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Mon, Nov 03 10:00AM to 6:00PM
Tue, Nov 04 10:00AM to 6:00PM
Wed, Nov 05 10:00AM to 6:00PM
Thu, Nov 06 10:00AM to 6:00PM
Fri, Nov 07 10:00AM to 6:00PM
Sat, Nov 08 11:00AM to 3:00PM
Sun, Nov 09 Closed

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