News

SALAMANCA, N.Y. – A long-missing peace pipe tomahawk President George Washington gave to a Seneca leader in the late 18th century has been returned to the tribe in western New York. Washington ...
a Tuscarora and director of the Seneca-Iroquois National Museum in Salamanca. "Buffalo hasn't really celebrated Haudenosaunee culture very much. It's not at the forefront; you don't see it like ...
Indigenous Planning, a new course in the School of Architecture and Planning, ended its first semester with a visit to the Seneca-Iroquois National Museum guided ... environmental design from UB, is a ...
The Seneca Iroquois National Museum in Salamanca ... one of the most prominent leaders of the Eastern Shoshone Tribe. The Fort hosts Eastern Shoshone Indian Days, the reservation’s largest ...
Some New York schools have recently dropped or announced they will change those mascots, including Nyack, Peru and John Jay High School in Cross River, which all used Indians as their nickname.
The profile of a Native American man, a braid trailing down and feather jutting up, is tiled into a high school hallway, dyed into the weight room carpet and laid into the turf of the football ...
New York’s governor plans to visit the Seneca Nation on Tuesday to formally apologize for the state’s role in running an upstate boarding school that separated Native American students from their ...