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George Horse Capture : ウィキペディア英語版 | George Horse Capture
George Paul Horse Capture (October 20, 1937 - April 16, 2013) (Gros Ventre) was an anthropologist, activist and writer in the United States who was one of the first Native Americans to be a museum curator. He was the first curator of the Plains Indian Museum in Cody, Wyoming, and worked for a decade at the National Museum of the American Indian, during planning for its new building on the Mall in Washington, DC. He was an enrolled member of the A'aninin (Gros Ventre) tribe. == Early life and education == George Horse Capture was born into the A’aninin (Gros Ventre) in a log cabin in Fort Belknap, which is located in north-central Montana, near Harlem. He is an enrolled member of the tribe. As a child, he lived with his maternal grandmother and cousins on the reservation. When it came time for high school, he moved to Butte, Montana, where he joined his mother. After graduating, he joined the U.S. Navy, serving as a shipfitter for four years. After leaving the Navy, Horse Capture worked for five years as a welder's helper, becoming a Steel Inspector for the California Department of Water Resources; he was "the only minority person at that time for the State of California."〔 He participated in the Native American occupation of Alcatraz Island beginning in 1969. It gathered national attention for American Indian activism and issues. He enrolled at University of California, Berkeley, where he earned a Bachelor's degree in anthropology.
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