Season 2
5. Discovered, Preserved, and Told - Episode 5 - Eric Leonard
Transcript
Eric Leonard: That's an extraordinary park that people do not go to casually and the work I did there was I focused really on social media before we called it that. The High Plains Group of Parks was established initially in 2007 and until pretty recently was three parks not four. Hair: brown, eyes: brown, born: Mexico. A young Hispanic couple came to him, and this kid was like "Yeah I've lived here a long time I've never really come cuz it's not like there were Mexicans here." And Chris was like "Oh!"
Phil Grossardt: You're listening to Footsteps: The Fort Larned Podcast, the official podcast of Fort Larned National Historic Site. Join us this season as we examine how and why the National Park Service preserves both cultural and natural resources and how the stories within are discovered, preserved, and told. Enjoy this episode as we talk with Eric Leonard, the superintendent of the High Plains Group in Colorado and New Mexico. The parks he manages include Amache National Historic Site, Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site, Capulin Volcano National Monument, and San Creek Massacre National Historic Site.
Ben Long: Yeah so welcome Eric, thanks for coming on and telling a little bit about yourself and a little bit about your story.
Eric: Really glad to be here. My story is my parents got married in 1967 and they got out and 25 years later they were not amused when I decided to reverse that process. And, it's the things you do when you're in your-- when you're 20. You're like, who am I? And I'd spend some time with my Leonard grandparents in Lincoln where they lived to the end of their lives and my grandmother kind of drilled into me that what mattered was my family was from Kansas. And so in 1993 I transferred to Fort Hays State University, I am a third generation graduate of that school, and it was as a first wild history major that I started working into what we now call public history. I was a volunteer by September of 1993 at Fort Hays State Historic Site and participated in the Candlelight Tour at Larned that fall. I began as a seasonal ranger in the summer of 1995 and back in those days applications were not on USAJobs, it was paper forms and you got to pick two parks. I picked only one and I was very fortunate.
Ben: That's awesome! So how many seasons did you work here at Fort Larned?
Eric: I got to work both seasonally in the summer and then intermittent in those days, so I was covering occasionally in the offseason for school programs and other things. The-- in February of 1999 I moved to Fort Smith, Arkansas and Fort Smith National Historic Site as a student employee and that was my first full-time job. And one of the through lines of my career is westward expansion sites and there-- these places all have something in common in that most of them were preserved between the mid 1950s and the mid 1960s. And why were we preserving that? Well, what was on radio movies and TV in the 1950s and 60s? In-- within a year Fort Larned opens by the Frizell family, Dodge City's Boot Hill is reconstructed, at Fort Smith Arkansas the-- a community group does a-- reconstructs the gallows and they restore, air quotes, the Judge Isaac Charles Parker's courtroom in using furniture from a building that was later that was never in that structure and that restoration lasted from 1957 until the late 1990s when it was emptied because of a tornado. And the Park Service put a new restoration that I got to be a part of now almost 25 years ago finished in 2000, at Fort Smith.
Kristin Keith: So, share with us one of your favorite memories or maybe your favorite event of your time here at Fort Larned.
Eric: Yeah, I'm a Gen Xer and so I try to be a modern person, right? The-- when Senator Dole secured funds before he retired from the Senate for the reconstruction of Fort Larned's Bakery the bake oven, I immediately went, "I want to do that" and my wife had to teach me how to bake bread. Even to this day, that's one of the more fun places I've done interpretation is in the bakery because when everything's going, that space engages all five senses. You walk in, and you're immediately assaulted by heat radiating, you smell things, you see things, it's really engaging and for the 150th anniversary back in 2009, 11 years after I left, at the time I was working as a field Park Ranger at Chickasaw National Recreation Area in Oklahoma, and so I took a weekend off and went back to my bakery and it snowed it was great, I was in short sleeves the whole time in the bakery.
Ben: Yeah, that's one thing when I take especially school kids through there that I always mention is probably would have been a sought-after job in the wintertime but might not be so fun in the middle of August.
Eric: With the door open and the windows open and even a tiny bit of a cross breeze, it's not terrible and people lingered, which was fun.
Ben: Yeah, now so what other parks have you worked at then?
Eric: Well, I was a student employee until 2002 at Fort Smith National Historic Site and while I was there, I was working on a master's degree essentially with public history emphasis. And so, my master's thesis was a public history of the gallows and capital punishment at Fort Smith which is one-- that was in the introduction for me, I went there sort of primed to I want to do post-Civil War military history what I learned real fast is there wasn't a lot of documentation. It wasn't particularly that interesting whereas the gallows: that's the only National Park that really engages in a capital punishment story and that has immediate relevance to modern audiences. And the symbology again through Western movies: True Grit and Hang Em' High-- the new exhibits in 2000 so they're not new anymore, the first thing visitors see as they walk in to that visitors center are the movie posters for those movies. Because this is probably not the case with younger visitors anymore, but visitors of a certain age they know those movies, they know them and that's what brought them often to the place. And then I was at a short time at Arkansas Post National Memorial and on the other corner of Arkansas just off of Louisiana and Mississippi and then four and a half years at Big Bend National Park in far west Texas. A park of 800,000 acres and I moved there with an infant; we had our second child while we were there and that's a pretty remote place in the in the 48 contiguous states. Our OB was 4 and a half hours away and so that has some consequences around grocery planning and just other things and it-- that's an extraordinary park that people do not go to casually. And the work I did there was I focused really on social media before we called it that and digital interpretation. I managed that park's website it's print publications like the park newspaper and trail guides and other things. And you get to do things in a park of that size that you don't get to do in a park like Fort Larned and that's part of the reason why we work for the National Park Service is it-- it is rooted in place but there's now as of yesterday 432.
Ben: Yeah, I saw that!
Eric: In you almost 15 years, well 15 years ago now, I applied for my first management position was at Andersonville National Historic Site in South Georgia. And so there's an emerging theme I have a lot of experience with sites of violence, sites of controversy and there's sort of a an escalation in some respects to that. And I was at Andersonville during the Civil War 150th anniversary, one of the things I realized when I got there was the newest scholarship was older than I was. And so we put a lot of energy as a park staff doing something we couldn't do but the management jargon here is we force multiplied, we used a research friends group research grant program that had existed and we heavily marketed it to-- for four years to grad students working around the edges of prisoner of war topics. Mostly in the Civil War, but in other time periods as well and 15 years later the state of scholarship around military prisons of the American Civil War is in a totally different place than it was, and that's something I played a tiny role in and I'm really proud of. Almost a decade ago, in late-- about this time of year in 2014 I interviewed and was offered the position of superintendent at Minute Man Missile National Historic Site and so that-- I went from the deadliest place on American soil where 13,000 United States soldiers died at the hands of the Confederacy in 14 months, to stewarding a park that talks about weapons of mass destruction that erase cities off of face of the earth. And that's a-- one of the most exciting, one of the most complex cultural resources the National Park Service administered, because in 1994 when the Air Force walked away, they left anything that wasn't hazardous or wasn't top secret. And so there's all kinds of stuff and that museum collection has like literally scotch-shaped balls and paper clips that were used to pass time in an underground control center and tells the stories. This is a-- sometimes when we talk about living history we define it too small. At Minuteman Missile National Historic Site, half of my interpretive staff and all of my volunteers were Air Force veterans who'd worked during the Cold War, many of them if not in that particular launch control facility, in ones just like it, and they brought in authenticity and personal experiences that are a precious and irreplaceable resource because they're not getting any younger. And so we also-- we did an oral history project there that was pretty exciting and the gold ring we were able to get in that oral history project was an interview with former Vice President of the United States Dick Cheney and that interview is extraordinary because not only was he Secretary of Defense for George H.W. Bush and Vice President for George W. Bush, he was White House Chief of Staff for General Ford he knew nuclear command and control very intimately. And as a-- in between college experiences in 1960/61 when he went back to Wyoming he worked for a contractor that was laying communications cable connecting nuclear missile silos to each other and to their control centers. So this man who had a nuclear football follow him for eight years, helped build the system and we wouldn't have known that without that oral history interview. So never doubt the capacity of your resource to remind you don't know everything about it.
Ben: That's really cool. And then if I'm not mistaken, you went from there to your position now, right?
Eric: No, there was a pandemic detour back to West Texas where I was Superintendent of the Guadalupe Mountains National Park in far west Texas. Guadalupe Mountains and Big Bend are-- they're like unicorns it shouldn't actually exist, because when Texas entered the Union it held its public land, it did not give it to the Federal Government and so Federal National Parks on a large landscape conservation scale, those are a choice in Texas and Texans in the 1930s and again in the 1960s fought to preserve those places for everyone, for all Americans. And Guadalupe Mountains is the largest and oldest wilderness area in the state of Texas and 86,000 acres, it contains eight of the 10 highest points in the state of Texas and the smallest of the named peaks in Guadalupe Mountains is 5 feet higher than the highest point in Big Bend National Park and I get to say that because I've worked in both places.
Ben: That's awesome.
Eric: And then about a year and a half ago, I had the opportunity to in a sense come home, come back to the Arkansas River. This is scorekeeping that only I care about, I've worked at all of the National Park units along the Arkansas River corridor except for one: and that's Brown vs. Board of Education in Little Rock, Arkansas. I've worked at all the rest -- all of them. There aren't that many, but I think it's cool and it's exciting to be here, this is history that's personally very meaningful to me and these stories connect dot-- really important dots.
Ben: Absolutely. Now you-- we made brief mention of the 432nd National Park being added yesterday. Another I guess new one, although we're getting we're getting there, is Camp Amache, which is under your purview. What has it been like to oversee a site that is so new, and you're trying to get programs going there, and things like that?
Eric: Yeah I came in midstream. It's important to note parks are born by communities even National-- especially National Parks and there's a long journey in Grenada, Colorado that starts with the historic operation of the camp 80 years ago 1942 to 1945. And then in 1975 and '76 a statewide Colorado initiative for America's bicentennial was the very first pilgrimage by Japanese Americans to the Amache site and so this coming year will mark the 50th anniversary of pilgrimages to Amache. The- in the 1990s John Hopper, a high school teacher now the principal at of the school in Grenada, started assigning his students research about this history that was right next to them. And those-- we now have 30 years of high school students that have touched that story and made it part of theirs in addition to the Japanese American stakeholder communities that lobbied for years for this to happen. And that's been fun to join midstream because we-- by the time I arrived, the park had been authorized by Congress and the President of the United States but pro tip here: the National Park Service and the Federal Government cannot manage anything it does not own. And in-- around the time I arrived a site manager that I supervise arrived at Amache and in his presence renting space in the Amache Preservation Society, that high school organization, in the museum they manage, was boots on the ground that got land acquisition moving forward. The community donated the property to the National Park Service to establish the park and that formal establishment occurred this past February. What's next? So what we have now is about a 600 acre compound. There was a square mile was where the military and administrative facilities were where the residential compound was for 8,000 people and its associated cemetery is the other thing that's preserved today. The camp itself was 10,000 acres that surrounded the community. This prime Arkansas River bottomlands, farmlands, and the bulk, if not all, of the population of the Grenada Relocation Center or more popularly Camp Amache or Amache were Japanese American farmers from the Central Valley around Merced, California. There were populations from LA and San Francisco too, but the farming population's really important and part of what they were doing was farming on the on the larger property of the camp. What we have today is a road system that was designed in 1942 and started failing in the sum-- the first rains in the summer, and then foundations for the associated structures at the site. That high school organization, the Amache Preservation Society and other partners, reconstructed a barrack and they restored a recreation hall that's back on its original foundation about 40% of the fabric of that building is original. They've also reconstructed a guard tower and then partially restored and reconstructed the signature water tower at the camp that stands 72 feet tall and so if what you're looking at you can see it from about five miles away as you're driving US-50.
Ben: Wow.
Eric: Yeah. And so what's next for that park is we anticipate in in the next year moving into a long-- some kind of long range planning where we start to talk about what else we preserve, what you what else we build if anything at the site. If you're planning a visit right now there is no Visitor Center, there is no water, there are no toilets. And before you before you walk you have to crawl and we're at a point now where we're thinking about the infrastructure we want to build and being really mindful about what's sustainable in a 21st century environment. And so there's really interesting conversations going on there around using virtual or augmented realities to recreate a landscape that we should not rebuild because that would cost an extraordinary amount of money and then we'd have to maintain all those things. There's other ways to get there and so those conversations we anticipate starting in the next year.
Phil Grossardt: Nearly as old as the United States is the tradition of celebrating our independence from Great Britain. Though holidays were few and far between at Fort Larned in the 1860s, Independence Day was one such holiday. Join us this Independence Day weekend, July 4th through the 6th, as we bring Fort Larned to life with an Independence Day celebration akin to those celebrating it in 1868. With programs and demonstrations for the whole family, we can think of no better way to enjoy the holiday than by touching a bit of history. For more information call us at 620-285-6911 or email us at fols_internet@nps.gov. All too soon, we’re a part of history. Help preserve our past, today. The Fort Larned Old Guard is a non-profit organization designated to benefit programs and operations at Fort Larned National Historic Site. Over the years, The Fort Larned Old Guard has bought artifacts with direct provenance to Fort Larned, commissioned paintings dealing with Fort Larned’s story, and much more. If you enjoy what we do at Fort Larned, please consider donating to The Fort Larned Old Guard or becoming a member. Visit www.ftlarnedoldguard.com for more details on donating and membership.
Kristin: What's it like managing and trying to preserve so many sites especially when one is brand new? Like how do you divide your time or manage all your time?
Eric: I don't do anything by myself. That, or very little anyway. Our regional director recently said to myself and some colleagues, if we're thinking about the National Park Service, one of our challenges is we have an organization that's based on how we managed parks a hundred years ago. If you were building it from the ground up today it would look different. And the High Plains group of parks was established initially in 2007 and until pretty recently it was three parks not four. And that's-- going oldest to youngest, because this is fun, Capulin Volcano National Monument established in August 1916 making it about two weeks older than the National Park Service itself, Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site established in 1963, authorized in 1960, Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site authorized in 2000 established in 2007, and then Amache National Historic Site author authorized in '22 established in '24. And the geographic space is the Col-- southeast Colorado parks are about 75 minutes away from each other Capulin Volcano is a two-and-a-half-hour drive from Bent's Fort. From other places it's even longer. And so, we're blessed in the 21st century with digital tools to communicate. I had-- we had a staff meeting this morning where we were talking to Captain Volcano staff and it's about supporting the teams and not necessarily repeating function at four little places. Because at a certain point if you hire managers to do everything you run out of money for rangers and nothing, I do is successful without field staff at all four places. So, it's a balance and the-- each place needs something different. We-- one of the things that we've been working toward is the-- we had a retirement at Sand Creek Massacre, so in February a new site manager will be joining us and he's coming from outside of the National Park Service but with a really good federal preservation background and some experience working with tribes because that park by law prioritizes working with its associated tribes and that matters. And there's another interesting break in the group-- in this group of four in that two of them are 20th century parks two of them are 21st century parks and they vibrate differently. The Sand Creek Massacre the-- about two weeks ago was the 160th anniversary of the massacre and I was there that morning, and my job was to make sure that our tribal representatives got what they needed. There were visitors who were flummoxed by the place because no you don't have a big formal program and color guards and other things there. We listen to our tribal partners and let them direct the kind of work we do and the most important thing I can do at Sand Creek Massacre is show up, introduce the tribal representatives, and then get out of the way.
Ben: Yeah, and that was one question that I was considering is as we look at preserving sites we have a site like Sand Creek or Capulin where obviously we're preserving the land and the features there but also preserving an idea, which I suppose you do at all parks, right? But then you have sites like Amache where you have a little bit of both and then Bent's Old Fort where you where you definitely have the historic, well there reconstructed historic structure, but just sort of preserving physical things as well as metaphysical things and the balance of that.
Eric: One of the tools I've done, I've used in the past is what's the constitutional question or story around each of these places? That's a sort of an unassailable hook and at Minute Man Missile National Historic Site it's baked into the preamble of the constitution: what are the choices a nation makes to defend itself to provide for the common defense? And here at Bent's Old Fort I've started to introduce the idea of the Commerce Clause as a central question governing how people utilize opportunity and economic activity in a pla-- in this cultural crossroads. And so that's one way of doing it.
Kristin: What connections have you found between your sites and Fort Larned?
Eric: Two of them, Amache and you Bent's Old Fort are on, well three of them, are on-- Capulin Volcano as well, but a little further down are all on the Santa Fe Trail. The other thing that unites all four places is this southern prairie landscape and environment, the short grass prairies in Kansas and Colorado and in northeastern New Mexico. And so that's the obvious thing. The the three Colorado sites have a really, in fact have a tight narrative, that starts in the 1830s and goes 110 years straight line from one to the other to the other. And that's something that we're going to start to leverage a little bit more because it-- I think a lot about what it's like to be a National Park in fly over country, because I've done it about half of my career and Fort Larned is one of those places. When people are planning National Park trips, these are not places that immediately come to mind for most people. So how do how do you package them in a way that's meaningful? And thinking about westward expansion and pop cult-- what do Americans know about their history? Often the most effective teacher isn't classrooms, it's Hollywood, it's our pop culture and all of these westward expansion parks between the 1930s the early 1970s, Hollywood makes no money on westerns anymore. And so that has implications around audience. Who are the people that people that are highly motivated to go have a sense they know what they think they know, but what about the people who do not see any relevance in these places? And I have an Andersonville story that kind of caps this. I-- in 2012 I hired a Park Guide, a local history teacher I feel, and I still have guilt over take-- pulling a really great history teacher out of public school system and turning him into a Park Ranger. His first weekend as an employee he gave a tour of the Andersonville National Cemetery to the members of one of his grad school history education classes. And they're in the back in section "H" which is the big burial section and one of the students goes "Hey that's a funny name." And it was Osceola Pochontas the grave is 10,676 the next morning I went into our research files and went "Do we have anything on that grave?" We did. I still to this day remember looking at that because it was a copy of this enlistment record from the National Archives. Hair: brown, eyes: brown, born: Mexico -- sailor. And we sat with that a while and then a couple months later, that same employee was in the cemetery on a weekend and a young Hispanic couple came to him and this kid was like "Yeah I've lived here a long time, I've never really come, cuz it's not like there were Mexicans here" and Chris was like... And for the next two years we saw that couple at every single program.
Ben: Wow, that's really cool. Yeah, being able to connect people that closely to the resource and being able to see just a tangible success like that that's really cool.
Eric: Yep. It's the most important thing we have the potential to do.
Ben: Absolutely. Anything we missed out anything you'd like to add Eric?
Eric: Well we hope to see you in southeast Colorado at some point. These-- this group of parks is connected to Fort Larned and they're a day trip.
Ben: Yeah, no and I mean definitely quickly connected like you said to Sand Creek, Bent's Fort, and Capulin being all on the Santa Fe Trail and even with Sand Creek, that's a big part of our story and a big part of what the military did here and in response to that. But yeah, I mean all parks are connected because once you pull on one thread of history it seems like the whole ball comes with it. So, definitely interesting seeing those puzzle pieces come together the more history you study. Thank you for coming on thank you for sharing your story your experiences in the Park Service and what you've been doing in the recent years. Thanks for coming on.
Eric: It's my pleasure.
Ben: Yeah and we hope to hear more from you in the future. You have a good one.
Eric: Thank you, you too.
Phil Grossardt: As always Fort Larned National Historic Site is open 7 days a week from 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. and is just 6 miles west of Larned, so stop by for a visit. If you're interested in learning how you can help Fort Larned National Historic Site, give us a call at 620-285-6911 or email us at fols_internet@nps.gov and ask us about volunteer opportunities. Now back to the rest of the episode.
Ben: Welcome to the discussion portion of the episode where we break down the interview and how it applies to Fort Larned. I'm Ranger Ben one of the Park Rangers here at Fort Larned National Historic Site. I do a lot of work with our social media, obviously with the podcast as well, and enjoy living history a lot. I'm also joined by Kristin Keith.
Kristin: Thanks, Ben, for asking me to join you this year. I've been volunteering out here at Fort I think for around 10 years now, I enjoy doing living history working with school groups that come through with some education programs and tours. I'm involved in Fort Larned Old Guard, I'm currently serving as chair, and also part of the Santa Fe Trail Association, our local chapter, Wet/Dry Route Chapter and the Learned Historical Society.
Ben: Also joining me is Liz Rasmussen.
Liz Rasmussen: Thanks, Ben, for having me. I have been volunteering at the Fort for about a year and a half. I really enjoy living history and learning more about the history of Fort Larned, which is so local here in Kansas, it's kind of cool to have something local that has such a big impact on how Larned was established and how the fort was established.
Ben: Well, just like all the other interviews this season that was a really fun one. I really enjoyed talking with Eric as a fellow Park Service employee. Personally, I really enjoyed hearing his journey through the National Park Service and his perspective on what he's seen at the different parks that he's worked at and also the common themes that sort of run through them as well.
Kristin: And of all the guests that we have talked to, the vast array of parks that he has been a part of it spans over so much history and is not just central to the Civil War, it just so many different stories. It's really unique to hear him talk about everywhere he's been and then how he ties all those together, so that was really fun to listen to.
Liz: And each different location he was at he-- I'm pretty sure he had different job duties so that kind of ties into the different jobs you can do in the Park Service and that's interesting to hear about especially for people that want to join the Park Service and here's all of your options and the different things you can do.
Kristin: Right and which has helped him now with what he's doing now. I liked how he emphasized, , it's a team like every park we work together as a team and I think because he's had all those experiences it's helped him become the leader that he is. But I do appreciate that he knows it takes lots of people to make a park work.
Ben: Absolutely. And yeah, to Liz's point too there's-- I mean there's countless jobs in the Park Service And just like I kind of-- as I dove into Army history when I started my job here, there's all sorts of jobs in the Army too. You've-- I mean even back 160 years ago, especially today, you have all sorts of different people doing all sorts of different things and even though we're a small park here at the fort, not all of us are at the front desk or doing tours or doing living history, there's a lot of those that work here, and we heard from some of them last season, of just the different things that go on behind the scenes. Cuz when you take a look at it of like oh who cuts the grass, cuz you need the grass cut and who helps restore the buildings if they're starting to fall apart, cuz they fall apart every once in a while. And so once you're in the Park Service and especially with the vast experience that Eric has had, you do see the amount of people that it takes to keep a park running and then, like his experience coming out on the tail end of uh Amache becoming a National Park Service site, just how many people it takes to get a site like that up and running and like we heard earlier in the season with Dr. Scott with the early years of the fort and telling the history through archaeology and you bring in all these different people that aren't necessarily involved with the park in the long term, but they're involved in this short window of time of establishing it as a National Park establishing its story and establishing its purpose for generations to come.
Kristin: It definitely takes all kinds of people with lots of different types of interest and I loved, and it kind of caught me off guard, but I loved when he said when he was here, that when he chose to do interpretation, he wanted to be in the bakery. I mean you think everybody wants to do a firearm demo or shoot the cannon or be over in the barracks. But he chose to be in the bakery and I just thought well that's so cool that that was the niche that he found for himself, and not something that everybody would want to do. But it was obviously so important in the history of Fort Larned because you had to bake 400 or so loaves of bread a day so men could eat. And I also liked how he talked about when people walk into the bakery here, it just takes over your five different senses which is something you might not think about too if you walk into the barracks, but when you go into the bakery you do get all those different things. So that was very interesting to me.
Liz: Back to what Ranger Ben said, it takes a community to help advertise and really build up the different historic sites there-- especially like Fort Larned. Fort Larned's not really heard of very often where you know nothing big happened here, there's not very many big names, but we have a lot of people from the community that come out here and volunteer, and then they go out there and search for volunteers and kind of help connect people with Fort Larned and bring it up in conversations and people are like "Oh I didn't know that was out there." And they come out here and they love it, and then you know, word of mouth that gets more people hear of it. I like-- he talked about how it takes community, and it really does. You need a sense of community and everyone that works and does what they need to do on the National Historic Sites, they're like a community, they each have a job, they each help each other out if it's needed, it's just one big community.
Ben: Yeah and then with word of mouth you get-- especially in establishing a historic site you have your people that are there to establish the site and then you have those that are spreading the word about it too. And then Kristin back to your point of people going into the bakery and Eric's experience of just engaging all five senses and that reminded me of going back to couple episodes ago with LueCreasea, of connecting the visitor to the resource. I mean when you go into the bakery, most if not all of us have had bread at some point of our in our lives, and so you can have that relatable point of well I mean there's food there's no grocery store or anything like that out here. You got to be self- sustaining in that way and who are those people that are helping a place like that run? And I think that can-- that message can certainly apply to the Park Service too of well there's these certain jobs that need to be done who's going to be doing it? Because it's it just doesn't get done on its own.
Kristin: Sure. Going back in history a little bit, I really enjoyed listening to him and it helped me make the connection, but when he was talking about how the 1950s western TV shows really piqued interest in the frontier and then you see these National Historic Sites and Parks come up like Fort Larned or Boot Hill in Dodge City or whatever. But I thought you know yeah, I hadn't thought about that but thank you Hollywood for getting people interested again.
Liz: That is something that I noticed a lot of people gravitate towards nowadays is, oh that that famous person was there or that famous thing happened there and everyone wants to know more about it, wants to go check it out. Having that connection to somebody they've seen on TV or they know is famous, they like to come out and kind of make them feel like they're a part of them in some way.
Ben: Yeah and that was that was interesting to hear his perspective on, and I had-- again I hadn't really thought about what's popular at the time influencing these sites that we preserve, and so taking a deeper look at that, I mean you have sites all around the country like when we were talking with Celeste, there's some of those battlefields that were preserved right after the battle or very soon after. And so you have a lot of the original scars that were left from the battle but then you have a lot of the Revolutionary War sites that they just went back to farmland right after and it wasn't until years later that it was seen as important to preserve something like that. And that's why we're grateful here for the Ranch Era to be that buffer in between the fort's Military Era and when it was quote unquote popular to preserve western type sites like this. Well we hope you enjoyed listening to this episode as much as we enjoyed being a part of it We hope you join us next month for our next episode and we hope you join us for the rest of the season. Until next time, have a good one.
Phil Grossardt: We thank you for listening to this episode of Footsteps: The Fort Larned Podcast. Join us next month as we talk with Heather Brown, the Chief of Interpretation at Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve. If you enjoy listening, please give us a five-star rating and review on iTunes, share footsteps with your friends and family, and be sure to subscribe to keep up with the latest episodes. Make sure you also check us out on Facebook, Instagram, and X, and as always, enjoy the valuable resources contained on our website www.nps.gov/fols. Thank you for listening and until next time this is Footsteps: The Fort Larned Podcast.
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Hosts: Ben Long, Kristin Keith, and Liz Rasmussen Guest: Eric Leonard Enjoy this episode as we talk with Eric Leonard, the superintendent of the High Plains Group in Colorado and New Mexico. The parks he manages include Amache National Historic Site, Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site, Capulin Volcano National Monument, and San Creek Massacre National Historic Site.