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The National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum was founded February 1, 2001, by Jim and Gloria Austin of Fort Worth, Texas. Their objective was to recognize the individual contributions of many groups from the Western Frontier. Included in these groups are people of Hispanic, Native American, European, Asian, and African descent.
Common unofficial flag variant with the coat of arms of Germany. The national flag of Germany (German: Flagge Deutschlands) is a tricolour consisting of three equal horizontal bands displaying the national colours of Germany: black, red, and gold (German: Schwarz-Rot-Gold). [1] The flag was first sighted in 1848 in the German Confederation.
Between 1933 and 1935, it was used as the mandotary party flag with the national black-white-red horizontal tricolour last used (up to 1918) by the German Empire. In 1935, the black-white-red horizontal tricolour was scrapped again, and the flag with the off-centre swastika and disc was instituted as the only national flag (and was to remain as ...
The Bockstein family had applied in 1937, through German Jewish Children’s Aid and the National Council of Jewish Women, to house a child who would be among the lucky refugees to depart Nazi ...
Fort Worth Museum of Science and History; K. Kimbell Art Museum; L. Lenora Rolla Heritage Center Museum; Log Cabin Village; M. ... National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of ...
In 2018, the museum accepted two historical markers removed from a Fort Worth city park. One of them remembered a violent East Texas Ku Klux Klansman who was implicated in an 1868 lynching ...
Exhibition marking the 20th anniversary of the Democratic Women's League of Germany. Youth hour at the Museum of German History during the exhibition “Germany from 1933–1945” in 1964. It interpreted German history as a class struggle consistent with Marx's historical materialism. It displayed texts and 100,000 objects, divided into seven ...
While some feared that a national museum would be viewed as an attempt to kindle a new nationalism, others argued that it was precisely because Germany's past was so complex and wrenching that Germans needed to understand their history. [3] The German Bundestag confirmed the institution in 1989. Helmut Kohl opened the permanent exhibition on ...