America’s National Parks Podcast
Society & Culture:Places & Travel
During the Indian conflicts on the western plains after the Civil War, Native Americans gave Black regiments of the U.S. Army the name Buffalo Soldiers, after their short, curly hair, which to them, looked like a bison. The soldiers took a liking to the name, and it stuck.
The Buffalo Soldiers contributed to the U.S. in many ways over the course of nearly 90 years, but one of their most important was as the first caretakers of our national parks. Between 1891 and 1913, the Army was tasked with the protection of Yosemite and Sequoia National Parks. Buffalo soldiers fought wildfires and poachers, ended illegal grazing of livestock on federal lands, and constructing roads, trails and other infrastructure. In 1903, Captain Charles Young led a company of Buffalo Soldiers in Sequoia and what is now Sequoia and King's Canyon National Parks, becoming the first African American park superintendent.
Acadia National Park and the Year Maine Burned
The Gateway to Arizona
Alcatraz and the Civil War
The Curse of the Petrified Forest
Drunken Subterranian Terrorism
Dred and Harriet Scott
Legends of Denali
Lady Liberty
Delicate Arch, and the Strange 1950s Schemes to Reinforce It
Muir, Roosevelt, and Yosemite: A Camping Trip That Changed the World
California Condors
An Island Prison
The Voyageurs
Pirates and Parks
37 Days in Yellowstone
The Grand Dame of the Everglades
Grand, Gloomy, and Peculiar
From the Redwood Forest, to the Gulf Stream Waters
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