How well do you know the historic Alcatraz occupation?

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Questions and Answers

What is the significance of the Alcatraz Logbook?

The Alcatraz Logbook contains thousands of entries written by Indigenous people who occupied the island in the name of civil rights and showcases the risk taken by those who signed it.

What is the connection between Alcatraz and the fight for Indigenous civil rights?

Alcatraz was occupied by Indigenous people from 1969 to 1971 as a protest for their civil rights, and the logbook contains signatures and observations left behind by more than 3,000 people, including then-unknown activists who would go on to become national figures in the fight for Indigenous civil rights.

How does the Alcatraz Logbook connect with the present?

The Alcatraz Logbook is an artifact of an earlier era of protest that speaks powerfully to our own, showcasing the risk taken by those who signed it and how it connects to the effects on art and culture that ripple into the present.

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Study Notes

  • The Autry Museum of the American West has uploaded a high-resolution scan of the Alcatraz Logbook to its website.
  • The logbook contains thousands of entries written by the men, women, and children who occupied Alcatraz in the name of Indigenous civil rights.
  • The occupation lasted from 1969 to 1971 and generated headlines around the world.
  • The logbook features entries from Apaches, Navajos, Utes, Kiowas, Chippewas, and Sioux Indians.
  • The Autry Museum has displayed the logbook in the past but had never reproduced it in a way that might make it broadly available.
  • The logbook contains signatures and observations left behind by more than 3,000 people, including then-unknown activists who would go on to become national figures in the fight for Indigenous civil rights.
  • The logbook showcases how many people took the risk to come to San Francisco to be present and take the additional risk of signing it.
  • Alcatraz was a barren, rocky outcropping in the San Francisco Bay that once functioned as a notorious island penitentiary.
  • The Alcatraz Logbook is an object out of the past that seems to connect fully with the present and is an artifact of an earlier era of protest that speaks powerfully to our own.
  • Alcatraz's effects on art and culture ripple into the present.

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