Moments that made us with iconic US history photographs organized in red and white stripes.

Current Exhibition

Moments That Made US

Our story was never inevitable. We shaped it at every turn.

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Experience the struggles, triumphs, and resilience of the people who shaped the United States, and the turning points that changed everything.

An array of more than fifty treasures never before gathered together in the West offers the chance to explore eight hundred years of American history.

See the things that saw it all: The spurs George Washington wore during the revolutionary winter at Valley Forge. The inkwell in which generals dipped their pens to sign the terms ending the Civil War. The bat Jackie Robinson swung as a Brooklyn Dodger and the first African American Major League Baseball player. The tape recorder that added to the mystery of President Richard Nixon’s many secrets during the Watergate investigation. 

Much of what you’ll encounter is gathered in Colorado for the very first time – bringing you a rare opportunity to get up close with the extraordinary stories and unique perspectives that made our country what it is today.

 

1 guests take a photo of the Great Migration display and drum set at the exhibition.
Painting of Washington Crossing the Delaware River
Portrait of Dorothea Lange with her two children leaning on her shoulders facing away from the camera.
Elizabeth Eckford walks unbothered in a dress and sunglasses despite the hostile screams and stares of fellow students in the background.
An older female guests reads a label in front of Jackie Robinson's historic baseball bat.
Buzz Aldrin in a space suit on the moon next to an American Flag
Jackie Robinson swinging with a bat
Union Soldier (Sgt. Henry F. Steward)  standing in uniform.
D-Day display at Moments that Made US exhibition
Joseph Eaton in uniform, stand in his open top military jeep and smiles at the camera.
Suffragist Inez Milholland handing pamphlets to a rowdy group of men.
A group of guests read and discuss the display describing the Ku Klux Klan in the exhibition.
 Dr Martin Luther King Jr speaks into a microphone with a crowd behind him.
Together, three New York fireman raise an American flag near the still smoking rubble of the World Trade Center .
A woman reads a book on display at Moments that Made US
Huei Tlamahuiçoltica page with image of Our Lady of Guadalupe printed on it.
A group of soldiers, part of the 45th Infantry: 36th Division Code Talkers stand in a group of 6 and look seriously at the camera.
Interior of Moments that made US exhibition
A large group of protesters march in the street. Three of them carry a banner reading "Boycott Lettuce"

We celebrate hope, unity, and democracy, and we recognize dark hours of war, division, and mourning. History doesn't "just happen." In a world of possibilities, how we got to now is full of twists and turns.

Gwendolyn Lockman, PhD, Senior Exhibition Developer & Historian