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Tempe / Arizona / United States
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Centerport / New York / United States
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Arroyo Grande / California / United States
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Mississippi State / Mississippi / United States
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Oak Creek / Colorado / United States
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Dragoon / Arizona / United States
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Mission Established in 1937, the Amerind foundation and Museum seeks to foster and promote knowledge and understanding of the Native Peoples of the Americas through research, education, and conservation. History of the Amerind Foundation The Amerind Foundation was founded in 1937 by William Shirley Fulton ( 1880-1964 ) as a private, nonprofit archaeological research institution. A native of Connecticut, Fulton became interested in archaeology as a young man. Several trips to Arizona between 1906 and 1917 permanently captured his attention in the Southwest. Throughout the 1920s Fulton regularly traveled west from his New England home, heading into the southwestern mountains, as well as the canyons and mesa country to explore for archaeological sites. On one of his visits he heard of Texas Canyon with its rugged vistas and rumors of prehistoric agricultural villages. Fulton purchased the property of his FF Ranch ( later the Amerind Foundation ) in 1930. After building a home amid the boulder formations of Texas Canyon in 1931, Fulton soon found his annual trips to the Southwest to be of ever longer duration. Possibly as early as 1929, Fulton began to excavate archaeological sites on his ranch property. What began as an avocation became increasingly sophisticated as he published his first scholarly articles in 1934, and 1938, based on his field work, entitled Archaeological Notes on Texas Canyon, Arizona. With the incorporation of the Amerind Foundation in 1937, Fulton was fully committed to supporting research into North Americas prehistoric past.