Park City Native Dating

This Columbus day, celebrate the person who really discovered America — aka, pretty much everyone except Christopher Columbus.

By now, it's well known that Indigenous people populated America well before Columbus arrived, and he wasn't even the first European to land here.

So instead of throwing up a dumb Columbus meme on Facebook, use your free time to see what Indigenous groups lived in your area using the Native Land map.

Park City Native DatingDating

SEE ALSO: You should do your holiday shopping now. Yes, now.

Find 2 listings related to Native American Indian Jewelry in Park City on YP.com. See reviews, photos, directions, phone numbers and more for Native American Indian Jewelry locations in Park City, UT. Park City Utah's best FREE dating site! 100% Free Online Dating for Park City Utah Singles at Mingle2.com. Our free personal ads are full of single women and men in Park City Utah looking for serious relationships, a little online flirtation, or new friends to go out with. 100% free Park City (Utah) dating site for local single men and women! Join one of the best American online singles service and meet lonely people to date and chat in Park City(United States). Single Spiritual Men in Park City, UT. Beehive State of Utah. Select from thousands of Utah personals on this free Utah online dating site. Whether you're searching for casual Park City dating or serious Park City relationships, Match.com has millions of smart, sexy and attractive singles meant just for you. Find 256 listings related to Native American Art in Park City on YP.com. See reviews, photos, directions, phone numbers and more for Native American Art locations in Park City, UT.

The map is available online and via the Native Land app (for both iOS and Android). Just type in your address, and you'll be able to see what indigenous group(s) once lived there or nearby. It's even possible members of that community still live in that area, though of course many native people were displaced, thanks to, uh, centuries of shitty federal policy.

The map was created by Victor G. Temprano, a Canadian who was 'born in traditional Katzie territory and raised in the Okanagan' and who began work on the project in 2015. It currently covers the USA, Canada, much of Mexico, Australia, South Africa, and expanding amounts of territory in South America.

'I feel that Western maps of Indigenous nations are very often inherently colonial, in that they delegate power according to imposed borders that don’t really exist in many nations throughout history,' Temprano explains on the site. 'They were rarely created in good faith, and are often used in wrong ways.'

Park City Native Dating

Temprano told Mashable that the map initially served as a 'kind of resource pointed at settlers and non-indigenous people to, in a not-too-confrontational way, start thinking about indigenous history.'

Since then, Temprano says it's become a broader resource, used by native folks and teachers in the classroom seeking to spark conversations about colonialism.

SEE ALSO: 9 books to read if you're mad as hell at the patriarchy

Park City Native Dating Guide

Native Land is constantly being updated with user feedback and isn't vetted as an academic resource. The map — which is funded by Temprano's map start-up, Mapster — recently hired a research assistant to help edit currently mapped territories, add new territories and include relevant historical background. They hope to obtain additional funding and are looking for Indigenous folks to serve on a Board of Directors.

Still, Temprano cautions that even an expanded team can't do all the Herculean research required to convey the complexity of indigenous history. Borders weren't always neatly drawn. Groups moved into and out of areas. Not all historical data available is accurate data.

Park city native dating

It's the questions the map raises that matter most. Native Lands is supposed to kick off a conversation about colonialism — past, present, and ongoing.

Park City Native Dating Sites

'The purpose of the map isn't supposed to be a historical curiosity,' Temprano told Mashable.

So type in your address — then search a little more.

WATCH: How to *hypothetically* take down a racist statue

Jim Weaver laughs when he describes what a big spender he was back in the day. “I could go on a date in Park City with a dollar! Fourteen cents for the show ticket, so that’s twenty-eight cents, plus a candy bar. Coming home, we’d stop for a milkshake or something.”

Weaver is a survivor, the oldest native-born Parkite still living in Old Town (95-year-old Carl Workman, lives just outside the city limits in Snyderville Basin). In Weaver’s 87 years, he’s lived through the Depression, wars, the decline and closure of the mines, and the town’s evolution into a world-renowned ski destination—all while losing neither his sense of humor nor his sense of place.

“It was a good place to grow up,” he smiles. “Gosh, you’d be gone early morning ’til early evening, and you knew people were watching out for you. If we were causing trouble, our mothers would get phone calls.”

Weaver’s dad was a miner. His Irish-born mother ran two boarding houses for Irish miners. Despite their hardscrabble lives, they still found time to help others. Even as his dad was slowly dying from silicosis contracted underground, he was out shoveling walkways for the widows of fellow miners, fixing up their houses, and delivering food.

“It’s the way I was taught. Dad helped people and he passed it on.” Young Weaver paid it forward by teaming up with his friends to help his neighbors (many of whom were widows) by fixing plumbing, shoveling roofs and driveways, and running errands.

Park City Native Dating Site

When his friends from the mining days left, Weaver stayed. He has children in Salt Lake City and his lifelong “church family” from St. Mary’s Catholic Church. And while some locals begrudge the steady flow of newcomers pouring into town to enjoy the ski life, he does not. “Some of the best friends I’ve ever had are new people,” he says. As for the changing face of his hometown, “We have every amenity you’d want, and we still have small-town living.”