Back to All Events

The River That Made Seattle - Humanities WA Speakers Bureau Event

  • Museum of Northwest Art 121 1st Street La Conner, WA, 98257 United States (map)

This presentation is part of Humanities Washington’s Speakers Bureau program, in which cultural experts discuss history, politics, music, philosophy and everything in between at venues around the state.

Open to all ages and free to the public.

This event will be taking place in-person at the Museum in the 2nd floor galleries.
Masks will be required in the upstairs galleries and for this seated event.

Please RSVP using the form below.

Contact education@museumofnwart.org with any questions.


Once teeming with bountiful salmon and fertile plains, Seattle’s Duwamish River drew both Native peoples and settlers to its shores over centuries for trading, transport, and sustenance. Unfortunately, the very utility of the river was its undoing, as decades of dumping led to the river being declared a Superfund cleanup site.

Much of Washington’s history has been told through the perspective of its colonizers, obscuring and mythologizing the changes to these lands that have long been occupied by Native peoples. Through the story of the river, author BJ Cummings explores previously unrecorded Native and immigrant histories, and exposes settler falsehoods about the founding of the state. The river’s story is a call to action to align future decisions with values of collaboration, respect, and justice.


About the Speaker

BJ Cummings (she/her) founded the Duwamish River Cleanup Coalition and manages community engagement for the University of Washington’s Superfund Research Program. She is the author of  The River That Made Seattle: A Natural and Human History of the Duwamish, and she was awarded the River Network’s national River Hero award for her work leading community-based clean up and restoration of the Duwamish River.

Cummings lives in Seattle.


Please RSVP using the form below.

Previous
Previous
May 7

Open Studio Saturday - Skagit Water Weeks

Next
Next
May 11

Spring Early Enrichment - Session 8 (Skagit Water Weeks)