Richard Henry Pratt and his Carlile Indian Industrial School set the standard for Indian assimilation in America and Canada.
Interviews with survivors and primary documents give accounts of violent cultural suppression under the guise of education, modeled after the notorious Carlisle Indian Industrial School.
A plaque marks the entrance to the cemetery on the former grounds of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School. Roque Planas/HuffPost CARLISLE, Pa. — On Sept. 7, 1895, a group of 11 children and ...
The Carlisle Indian Industrial School was the first off-reservation boarding school established for Native American children in the United States, ushering in a dark legacy of oppression and violence ...
Bone by bone, two archaeologists lifted the 130-year-old skeletal remains of a Native American girl from the shallow grave in a roadside cemetery. A hand bone, a rib, a chunk of vertebrae and ...
The subjoined composition by Richard Davis of the Cheyenne tribe was read at our last month's school exhibition: View Full Article in Timesmachine » Advertisement ...
Wovoka (also known as Jack Wilson) delivered his message orally, and it was transcribed by a member of the group who had attended Carlisle Indian School. Mooney renders the "Carlisle English" of ...