Native American Heritage Month 2025

November is National American Indian Heritage Month
The Library of Congress, National Archives and Records Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Gallery of Art, National Park Service, Smithsonian Institution and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum join in paying tribute to the rich ancestry and traditions of Native Americans.

Native American women warriors

Smithsonian Native American Heritage Month Events and Resources

In November, celebrate Native American Heritage Month with Smithsonian events, resources, exhibitions, and podcast episodes.

National Gallery of Art

Image credit:Smithsonian

Indigenous American Artists: Collection Connections

This guide introduces you to the variety of visual materials made by Indigenous American artists that you can find throughout the Prints & Photographs Division (P&P) collections. The entries represent nearly 220 artist prints and photographs by over 50 creators.

Library of Congress

Image credit: Edgar Heap of Birds, artist. Neuf for Modoc. Between 2001 and 2002. Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division.

A line of hula performers dance on stage with hands stretched out in front of them, all wearing matching white blouses, green skirts, yellow leis, and leafy crowns.

Native Language Reclamation in the U.S.

At the 2025 Smithsonian Folklife Festival, the Native Language Reclamation in the U.S. program featured four groups representing different languages, regions, and ways of life and learning, including Hālau I Ka Leo Ola O Nā Mamo (pictured) from Hawai‘i. Each group offered engaging activities—games, crafts, cooking, dance—that connect them to their cultures and motivate them to learn their languages.

Smithsonian

Image credit: Photo by Kat Wade, courtesy of Helumoa

Print portrait of Wendy Red Star's Native American great-great grandmother repeated four times against a backdrop of star quilt patterns.

Indigenous Peoples of the Americas: A Guide to Resources at the Library of Congress

This online research guide developed by the digital subgroup of the Native American Collections Working Group links to resources at the Library of Congress that relate to Native communities in the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Canada, Mexico, South America, and the Caribbean.

Image Credit: Portrait from photograph by Fred E. Miller taken on the Apsáalooke (Crow/Absaroke) Reservation in Montana circa 1898-1910. (Source: National Museum of the American Indian, February 2022)

Portrait of veteran Dan Akee.

Native American Veterans

American Indians have eagerly served a government which did not always keep its word to their ancestors. They have volunteered to serve in conflicts from World War II to Iraq. Few encountered any overt prejudice while in uniform, but for all American Indian veterans, the honor of defending their country overrode all other considerations.

Library of Congress

Image credit: (Dan Akee (2004), Veteran's History Project)

Mural of Native Americans traveling over a landscape beneath a rainbow.

National Endowment for the Humanities Teacher's Guide

This Teacher's Guide will introduce you to the cultures and explore the histories of some groups within the over 5 million people who identify as American Indian in the United States, with resources designed for integration across humanities curricula and classrooms throughout the school year.

National Endowment for the Humanities

Image credit: Long Walk Home—Gallup Downtown Murals—by Richard K Yazzir, 2005

Brought to you by:

National Gallery of Art
Library of Congress
Smithsonian
National Archives
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
National Park Service
National Endowment for the Humanities