We work collaboratively to develop public-facing projects and resources that transform historical understandings of Indigenous peoples.
We support capacity-building and facilitate engagement with sources and scholarship at the intersection of History and Native American and Indigenous Studies.
ATW Research + Consulting LLC

Featured Work
Our archival research workshops empower the next generation of Indigenous and allied researchers.
ATW stands for After the Whirlwind
In the late 18th century, Haudenosaunee people referred to the Revolutionary War as the whirlwind. Our work at ATW is informed by sustained study of strategies that Indigenous peoples and tribal nations used to maintain communities and negotiate new relationships during this period of extraordinary upheaval.
We work with museums, historical societies, and non-profits to develop exhibits, programs, and other public-facing scholarship.
We offer professional development workshops and capacity-building programs that help transform understandings of Indigenous history.
Recent and Upcoming Events
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Land, Liberty, and Loss
“Land, Liberty, and Loss” featuring Dr. Mt. Pleasant, Public Humanities NY Lecture
9.28.2022 7:00-8:00PM EDT
Remote EventAbout this event:
Humanities New York will conclude its Land, Liberty, & Loss series with Alyssa Mt. Pleasant in conversation with HNY’s Joe Murphy. Dr. Mt. Pleasant is a researcher and writer working at the intersection of early American history in Native American and Indigenous Studies, and more specifically, Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) history during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Our conversation will draw on over twenty years of research she has conducted related to Haudenosaunee people during and after the Revolutionary War.
Register here.
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Archives and Knowledge Keepers: Native American and Indigenous Studies and the Art of History, Indigenous Studies Symposium
5.4.2023 Schedule TBA
Boston UniversityAbout this event:
“Archives and Knowledge Keepers: Native American and Indigenous Studies and the Art of History.” Organized by BU’s American & New England Studies Program, with support from the Departments of English and History, the symposium will showcase scholars whose work engages Indigenous modes of knowledge production and might incorporate textual archives but also artifacts, oral traditions, and non-alphabetic material texts. Philip J. Deloria, Leverett Saltonstall Professor of History at Harvard University, will read the presentations in advance and deliver a formal response at the conclusion of the event.
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Book a Future Presentation or Workshop
Contact us to book a presentation or workshop soon!