News Release

Students Visit Rainbow Bridge Thanks to Partnership

Park Ranger addresses group of children
National Park Service Ranger Edmonia Martinez and students from Lake Powell School in Bullfrog, Utah, and Bluff Elementary School in Bluff, Utah, enjoy stories about the history of Rainbow Bridge.

NPS Photo/Brent Davis

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News Release Date: November 13, 2017

Contact: Mary Plumb, 928-608-6202

Contact: Kelly J. Zwierzchowski, Lake Powell Resorts & Marinas, 928-645-1081

Ninety area students and teachers from the Lake Powell School in Bullfrog, Utah, and Bluff Elementary School in Bluff, Utah, were thrilled to visit Rainbow Bridge National Monument on November 9. The National Park Service’s Bridging the Gap Program and the generosity of Lake Powell Resorts and Marinas made the trip possible. 

According to Superintendent William Shott, “We are honored to connect so many children, many of them Native American, to Rainbow Bridge. Their visit would not have been possible without assistance from Lake Powell Resorts and Marinas. Our partnership makes it possible for hundreds of children with spiritual and cultural ties to Rainbow Bridge to visit the site, learn about it, and have an experience they will probably never forget.”

Rainbow Bridge is one of the largest natural stone bridges in the world, but is difficult to access by land. Most visitors reach the site by boat on Lake Powell. Lake Powell Resorts and Marinas provided a free, round-trip boat ride for the students and staff at the schools and supplied ninety sack lunches.

According to Captain Tony Anderson, General Manager of Marina Operations, “Lake Powell Resorts and Marinas is very proud of our partnerships in the local communities. Members of our management team first saw Rainbow Bridge on school field trips taken on Lake Powell Boat Tours. It brings us joy to be working with the National Park Service on these programs; programs that share our parks with younger generations. This will educate and instill pride of our parks, planting seeds that will grow future environmental stewardship for decades to come.” 

The trip was part of the National Park Service effort to connect local elementary school students with Rainbow Bridge, a landform of significant cultural, historical, and spiritual significance to many native peoples living in the area. Bridging the Gap provides a series of educational programs that incorporate hands-on science and understanding of the NPS mission into the 4th grade curriculum. This year the NPS Every Kid in the Park Program provided increased funding, so students from Cameron, Gap, Page and Navajo Mountain will be able to participate.  

Rainbow Bridge National Monument was established before the NPS in 1910. In April 2017, the NPS designated Rainbow Bridge a Traditional Cultural Property on the National Register of Historic Places, recognizing the site's historic and ongoing cultural significance to at least six American Indian tribes. The 290-foot-tall, sandstone Rainbow Bridge has been associated with ancient traditions of the Hopi, Kaibab Paiute, Navajo, San Juan Southern Paiute, Ute Mountain Ute, and Zuni people. Spanning 275 feet, with thickness varying from 33 to 42 feet, Rainbow Bridge is one of the largest known stone bridges in the world.



Last updated: November 14, 2017

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