The John Evans Report & Recommendations

"A century and a half later, as an educational community that has inherited Evans’s positive legacies along with his deadly decisions, we have the opportunity to face this history honestly. It is impossible now to celebrate the founder with the amnesia we have shown in the past, but we can see him—and perhaps ourselves—more accurately situated in the complexity of history."

-- John Evans Study Committee, Nov. 2014 (95)

Tee Pee

University Of Denver John Evans Study Committee Report

In 2013, a group of 11 DU faculty members organized the University of Denver John Evans Study Committee and conducted an independent inquiry regarding Evans' role in the Sand Creek Massacre. In 2014, the committee released its report. This study is essential in understanding the University of Denver's history.

Read the Report Here

Reports Explaining Recommendations for Healing and Reconciliation

Native American Stoles

January 29, 2016

“With a few notable exceptions, Native American population and culture have been ignored by higher education. Native American student enrollment, employment of faculty and staff, as well as curriculum and an understanding of cultural practices, is under-represented or ignored within academia... This has also been the case at the University of Denver, but is of particular significance due to the University’s history.” –Strategic Recommendations of the University of Denver Task Force on Native American Inclusivity

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Drum

November 1, 2014

"With the completion of this report, the University of Denver is presented with an opportunity to reflect on our institutional origins, history, and legacy. We have an opportunity to provide a model of transparency, accountability, and transformation for institutions that have directly profited or indirectly benefited from the displacement of the indigenous communities whose lands and histories they occupy. -- Recommendations of the University of Denver John Evans Committee

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Recommendations for Healing and Reconciliation from 2014 & 2016

"It is through narrative, through storytelling, through being a part of history, through really trying to tell the truth and demystify the past, to counter this American mythology about Indigenous peoples."

Ramona Beltran, Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Social Work