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National Park After Dark

21: Little Islands. The Dark History of America’s National Parks

National Park After Dark

Audioboom Studios

True Crime, Places & Travel, Wilderness, Society & Culture, Sports

4.84.6K Ratings

🗓️ 14 June 2021

⏱️ 54 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

To celebrate National Indigenous History Month, we take a step back in history as Danielle flips back the pages of time and brings us to a dark chapter in US history. National Parks, some of our favorite places in the world, were once home to thousands of Native Peoples. Today we are familiar with why National Parks were created – to protect land and resources from development, and "for the benefit and enjoyment of the people", but do we really know how they were created? The lands we benefit from and enjoy today came at the expense of others, others who lived and worshiped on those same lands for millennia. Lands that were stolen.

We love our National Parks and we know you do too but when you're out there, remember to enjoy the view but watch your back. Please take a moment to rate and subscribe from wherever you’re listening to NPAD! Become part of our Outsider family on Patreon to gain access to ad-free episode, bonus content and more. Follow our socials Instagram, Facebook , and Twitter. To share a Trail Tale, suggest a story, access merch and browse our book recommendations - head over to our website.

Sources: The Atlantic. NPS. Phys. Scientific American. Parks.ca. NCSL. Smithsonian. The Conversation. NPS. Outside. Wikipedia. Grand Canyon Guru.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Where the search for the latest consoles?

0:08.0

Or retro games?

0:12.0

Wherever your passion takes you,

0:14.0

Visa-Sake technology keeps your payments safe.

0:17.0

Visa, how you pay matters?

0:20.0

This land is your land, and this land is my land,

0:24.0

from California to the New York Island,

0:27.0

from the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters.

0:30.0

This land was made for you and me.

0:34.0

You can hear that, just as I can,

0:36.0

the tune embedded deep in our brains.

0:39.0

It's difficult to even say without actually singing,

0:43.0

and even more difficult to pin down when we all first learned it.

0:47.0

Sometime, many, many years ago in grade school,

0:50.0

that's how young most Americans were when they learned the basics.

0:54.0

America's diamond deserts, sparkling sands,

0:58.0

fields of wheat and golden valleys were ours.

1:01.0

Pristine, glorious pockets of Eden saved just for us to enjoy.

1:06.0

As we move forward in life,

1:08.0

we were given the impression that men in history,

1:11.0

such as Theodore Roosevelt, should be glorified.

1:14.0

Nick named the Conservation President.

...

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