Join the Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary and Verde Valley Archaeology Center Executive Director, Kenneth Zoll on Wednesday, January 6 at 7:30 p.m. for his lecture on The Billingsley Hopi Dancers.
In 1921 the Hopi were told that “church people” petitioned Congress to stop their “pagan” dancing. A platform was erected on the U.S. Capitol steps where both Houses of Congress assembled with their families to see the Hopi dancers. Following the performance, Congress passed a Resolution giving the Hopi permission to carry on their dancing “for all time.” The dancers continued to perform culminating in performances at Carnegie Hall in 1955. The Verde Valley Archaeology Center and Hopi Tribe jointly received a grant to preserve a rare 1957 film of the dancers. This presentation discusses the background of this history and shows the film.
This event is free and open to the public, made possible by the Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary. Donations are welcome. For more information on this and other events at Pueblo Grande Museum visit pueblogrande.com.
Speaker Bio: Kenneth Zoll is the Executive Director of the Verde Valley Archaeology Center in Camp Verde. He is also a site steward with the Arizona State Historic Preservation Office, and a volunteer docent at cultural heritage sites in the Coconino National Forest. He has conducted extensive fieldwork in cultural astronomy of the Southwest and is a certified instructor in cultural astronomy with the Arizona Archaeological Society. Zoll is the author of several popular books on cultural astronomy and rock art in Central Arizona, as well as several cultural astronomy articles in professional publications.