Chilocco Indian School, which opened in 1884, served the educational needs of American Indian students from all over the United States for nearly one hundred years. Its story is one of students and faculty working together to produce what was considered by many of its students one of the finest non-reservation federal Indian boarding schools in the nation. Its story is also a reflection of federal intervention, not always positive, in the education of Indian youth. Three works about Chilocco have been written to date. Larry Bradfield wrote a masters thesis that was a mainly administrative account from 1884 to 1955. Kimberly Tsianina Lomawaima wrote her doctoral dissertation, later published as a book, on the period from 1920 to 1940, based ...
The following research concerns the relationship between U.S-implemented boarding schools and Indian...
My interest in American Indian boarding school survivors’ stories evolved from recording my father, ...
Review of: Boarding School Seasons: American Indian Families, 1900-1940. Child, Brenda J
This project is a microhistory of the Chemawa Indian School in Oregon, the second federal Indian boa...
Review of: They Called It Prairie Light: The Story of Chilocco Indian School. Lomawaima, K. Tsianina
University of New Hampshire, May, 2009 In 1879, two very different types of boarding schools opened ...
Ten weary travelers from Florida-eight Apalachicola Indian boys, an agent, and a servant-paused in t...
This thesis looks at the experiences of Chahta students at Choctaw Academy and Spencer Academy in ...
Carlisle Indian School was a federal boarding school in Pennsylvania which operated between 1879-191...
Conventional wisdom among scholars of Indian history holds that the boarding school experience for m...
abstract: In 1890, the State of Nevada built the Stewart Indian School on a parcel of land three mil...
A central element of late nineteenth-century Indian policy was the use of schools as instruments of ...
The appearance in recent years of several books on Indian boarding schools attests to historians\u27...
Buildings for the Chilocco School. [2686] Industrial school for Indians in Indian Territory
Indigenous communities continue to be pressured to conform to Anglo-American culture. Through the us...
The following research concerns the relationship between U.S-implemented boarding schools and Indian...
My interest in American Indian boarding school survivors’ stories evolved from recording my father, ...
Review of: Boarding School Seasons: American Indian Families, 1900-1940. Child, Brenda J
This project is a microhistory of the Chemawa Indian School in Oregon, the second federal Indian boa...
Review of: They Called It Prairie Light: The Story of Chilocco Indian School. Lomawaima, K. Tsianina
University of New Hampshire, May, 2009 In 1879, two very different types of boarding schools opened ...
Ten weary travelers from Florida-eight Apalachicola Indian boys, an agent, and a servant-paused in t...
This thesis looks at the experiences of Chahta students at Choctaw Academy and Spencer Academy in ...
Carlisle Indian School was a federal boarding school in Pennsylvania which operated between 1879-191...
Conventional wisdom among scholars of Indian history holds that the boarding school experience for m...
abstract: In 1890, the State of Nevada built the Stewart Indian School on a parcel of land three mil...
A central element of late nineteenth-century Indian policy was the use of schools as instruments of ...
The appearance in recent years of several books on Indian boarding schools attests to historians\u27...
Buildings for the Chilocco School. [2686] Industrial school for Indians in Indian Territory
Indigenous communities continue to be pressured to conform to Anglo-American culture. Through the us...
The following research concerns the relationship between U.S-implemented boarding schools and Indian...
My interest in American Indian boarding school survivors’ stories evolved from recording my father, ...
Review of: Boarding School Seasons: American Indian Families, 1900-1940. Child, Brenda J