Fort Union place
Summary: Destination of Native Americans being sent for education.
Completeness: 14/100 Grade F
- Editor summary— Write a 1–2 sentence summary that explains what this is and why it matters.
- Sourced claims (≥3)— Has 1/3 sourced claims. Extract more from existing chunks or ingest a new source.
- Multiple primary sources— Has 1 source(s). A second independent source dramatically raises credibility.
- Coordinates— Place needs a location — add lat/lng or research a modern equivalent.
- Operating / life dates— A bounding date (year is enough) sharpens the timeline and the map slider.
- Wikidata authority— Link a Wikidata QID to unlock automatic enrichment from authority records.
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- Alternate names— Add the entity’s nicknames, Spanish names, or earlier names — improves searchability.
Next steps to raise the score:
- Sourced claims (≥3): Has 1/3 sourced claims. Extract more from existing chunks or ingest a new source.
- Multiple primary sources: Has 1 source(s). A second independent source dramatically raises credibility.
- Published story: Generate a permanent story page via the admin Story API — drives SEO + reader retention.
📖 Tell Me the Story:
Claims (1)
added_to
cited from Front and center: Buffalo Soldiers legacy lands Fort Stanton and Fort Union on Reconstruction Era network (2025)
News article on Fort Stanton and Fort Union being added to the Department of Interior's Reconstruction Era National Historic Network. Features Oliver Horn, regional manager of Lincoln and Fort Stanton historic sites, and Bill Barley, chief of interpretation at Fort Union. Covers …
Mentioned by (3)
Sources (1)
Front and center: Buffalo Soldiers legacy lands Fort Stanton and Fort Union on Reconstruction Era network ↗
Pipes, Richard · 2025 · other · web · details