$100 General Admission
$50 Board Members
$1,000 Sponsors (8 seat table)
Join us for the Neihardt Foundation’s Annual Fundraising Event, featuring 2022 Word Sender recipient Paul Hedren, author and historian; and Tanya Bashu, Nebraska Youth Poet Laureate .
From his Amazon.com profile:
Paul Hedren retired from the National Park Service in 2007 after some thirty-seven years as a park historian and superintendent at such storied places as Fort Laramie, Wyoming, the Golden Spike Site in Utah, Fort Union in North Dakota, and the Niobrara Scenic River in Nebraska. He devotes his time now to writing.
Paul is the author of scores of scholarly and popular articles appearing in magazines and journals far and wide, plus twelve books, nearly all pertaining to the Great Sioux War of 1876-77. He particularly enjoys studying and interpreting that conflict’s subtleties and consequences, though he has also written about its great battles.
Paul has won numerous writing awards including a Spur from the Western Writers of America, the Vivian Paladin Award from the Montana Historical Society, and the Herbert Schell Award from the South Dakota State Historical Society. His 2011 book After Custer: Loss and Transformation in Sioux Country won a prestigious Wrangler Award from the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, and also the Sills Book Prize from the Custer Battlefield Historical & Museum Association (CBHMA). His 2016 book, Powder River: Disastrous Opening of the Great Sioux War, received the John M. Carroll Award from the Little Big Horn Associates and that year's Sills Book Prize from CBHMA.
Paul's twelfth book, Rosebud, June 17, 1876: Prelude to the Little Big Horn, a fresh history of that phenomenal fight occurring just eight days before the Custer battle, was released in April 2019. A thirteenth book, John Finerty Reports the Sioux War, will be released by the University of Oklahoma Press in July 2020.