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         Kansas Boarding Schools:     more detail
  1. Boarding School Seasons: American Indian Families, 1900-1940 (North American Indian Prose Award) by Brenda J. Child, 2000-02-01
  2. Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience 1875-1928 by David Wallace Adams, 1997-12
  3. Voices from Haskell: Indian Students Between Two Worlds, 1884-1928 by Myriam Vuckovic, 2008-10-27
  4. Education for Extinction ,American Indians &the Boarding-School Experience, 1875-1928 1997 publication by DavidWallaceAdams, 1997-01-01
  5. Education for Extinction : American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1928 by David W. Adams, 1997

61. Carlisle Indian Industrial School
Lawrence University Press of kansas. 1995. Includes very good accounts ofthe personnel associated with the boarding schools of the period.
http://home.epix.net/~landis/secondary.html
SECONDARY SOURCES
Adams, David Wallace. EDUCATION FOR EXTINCTION: AMERICAN INDIANS AND THE BOARDING SCHOOL EXPERIENCE 1875-1928. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. 1995. Recently released in paperback, Adams treats the history thoroughly, with respect and honesty, yet avoids the trap of over-sentimentalizing the assimliation story. Includes very good accounts of the personnel associated with the boarding schools of the period. Lays out the events that led to the final demise of Carlisle. This book is a good basic Indian Education primer with strong emphasis on Carlisle. Archuleta, Margaret L., Brenda J. Child, and K. Tsianina Lomawaima AWAY FROM HOME: AMERICAN INDIAN BOARDING SCHOOL EXPERIENCES, 1879-2000. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum,2000. Ball, Eve. INDEH: AN APACHE ODYSSEY. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 1988. This collection includes interviews with Asa Daklugie with his stories of the Chiricahua Apaches who were imprisoned at Ft. Marion after Geronimo's capture, and whose children were sent to the Carlisle Indian School. Among those were the friends and relatives of Daklugie Frank Mangus, Chapo, Kanseah, Zhunni, and Ramona Chihuahua, who became his wife. Among the 186 Native American children buried in Indian Cemetery at Carlisle, 54 are Apache children. Many of these were the Chiricahua who spent their last days at the Indian School.
Bell, Genevieve. TELLING STORIES OUT OF SCHOOL: REMEMBERING THE CARLISLE INDIAN INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL, 1879-1918.

62. International School Denver - English Second Language Students That Study In Ame
Immersion programs in Denver and kansas City. Homestays and biweekly field trips.Category Arts Education North America United States...... activities; Small, relaxed, friendly atmosphere; boarding with American ACCELERATEDSCHOOLS 2160 S. Cook St 10713 Barkley, Overland Park, kansas, 66212 Phone 913
http://www.schoolsinternational.net/
www.schoolsinternational.net
Home About Us E-mail Us Search Bookmark this page E-Newsletter Signup Accelerated Schools Reading Improvement ... Peterson Meaning Phrases Schools International - Students make fast gains on standardized tests. Student Life
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Accelerated Schools
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Students
By Carl H. Peterson International students
are warmly welcomed into
the Accelerated Schools community
and are encouraged to apply. English Second Language students that study in America make great improvement learning English. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS MAKE MAJOR GAINS Schools International - Students make fast gains on standardized tests.

63. OKLAHOMA Native American Newspaper Oklahoma American Indian News
New York based filmmaker Stacy Fox will be in Lawrence, kansas October 923 to workon her documentary I knew a little about the Indian boarding schools, and I
http://www.okit.com/arts/2001/octnov/haskell.html
Archives I Letters to the Editor I Company I Contact Us I Events Classifieds Filmmaker to Focus on the Haskell Institute Wilhelm Murg New York based filmmaker Stacy Fox will be in Lawrence, Kansas October 9-23 to work on her documentary film focusing on the Haskell Institute when it was a government boarding school for Native American children. Fox will be filming Haskell alumni recounting their memories as well as stories passed down from previous generations. Fox has a background in music and she has worked in film before, but this is her first documentary. “I’ve done experimental short films,” Fox said. “My degrees are all in music, as a percussionist. I’m also a composer, so I do a lot of work with modern dance choreographers out of New York City.” Fox virtually stumbled into the project. “I was in Lawrence helping a friend on another film,” Fox said. “While I was there she took me on a walk through the Wetlands, near Lawrence. I did a little research and found out that originally the land had been Haskell Land.”

64. OKLAHOMA Native American Newspaper Oklahoma American Indian News
Alternative to the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway, the kansas Department of asHaskell Institute, one of the offreservation boarding schools founded by
http://www.okit.com/news/2002/mar april/haskellroadway.html
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Former boarding school at odds with Department of Transportation
Historical Burials of children at issue
By Ruth Steinberger (Lawrence, KS) The Kansas Department of Transportation, acting with support from local municipalities including Douglas County and City of Lawrence, Kansas, have applied to the Army Corps of Engineers for an Environmental Impact Statement to allow construction to get underway on a four lane highway that may go through wetlands that are part of the Haskell Indian Nations University (HINU). The Army Corps of Engineers issued a letter to 26 tribes inviting comment for a 45-day period and to over 500 other tribes notifying them that this process was underway.

65. YOUNG BLACK LEADERS TO FOCUS ON MULTICULTURAL SOCIETY
and senior officer with the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation in kansas City, Mo Woodsschool is the largest of five historically black boarding schools in the
http://www.ur.ku.edu/News/97N/OctNews/Oct24/black.html
Oct. 24, 1997 Contact: Sharon Rankin, (785) 864-7856; story by Mary Jane Dunlap, (785) 864-8853 YOUNG BLACK LEADERS TO FOCUS ON MULTICULTURAL SOCIETY LAWRENCE More than 300 black students from Kansas and Missouri high schools will meet at the University of Kansas Oct. 30 to focus on "Preparing African-American Youth for a Multicultural Society," in the Kansas Union ballroom. Jacob U. Gordon, director of KU's Center for Multicultural Leadership, part of the Institute for Life Span Studies, will open the 12th Black Leadership Symposium at 9:45 a.m. Sylvia Robinson, Kansas Board of Regents member and senior officer with the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation in Kansas City, Mo., will join Charles H. Beady Jr., president of Piney Woods (Miss.) Country Life School in helping the students focus on a multicultural society. The Piney Woods school is the largest of five historically black boarding schools in the United States. Beady will speak at 11 a.m., and Robinson will address the students at noon, during lunch. Students selected to attend must have a 3.0 minimum grade-point average and be college bound or have demonstrated leadership potential, Gordon said. Among those attending are students enrolled in the KU African-American Male Leadership Academy, funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

66. Book Review The American Historical Review, 105.1 The
Midwest to the assimilationist process in the Flandreau Indian School in South Dakota,Haskell Institute in kansas, and other Indian boarding schools in the
http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/ahr/105.1/br_66.html
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Brenda J. Child

67. Cyndi's List - Schools
kansas One Room School House Project; Kent County School Records 190325 Indian HighSchool was one of several off-reservation boarding schools opened by the
http://www.cyndislist.com/schools.htm
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68. KS Animal Health Dept.- Kansas Pet Animal Act
have a license with the kansas Animal Health include (1). Elementary schools, secondaryschools or universities. Shelter or Pound License, boarding or Training
http://www.accesskansas.org/kahd/petact.html
Forms and Applications
Statutes
K.S.A. 47-1701 et.seq., is the Kansas Pet Animal Act.
The Kansas Animal Health Department is responsible for regulating, among other things, the Kansas Pet Animal Act (formerly known as the Kansas Animal Dealer Act). This Act was established by the 1988 legislature to regulate the animal breeding and selling industry in Kansas. The Act regulates pet shops, pounds and shelters, boarding and training facilities, research facilities, animal distributors, animal collectors and everyone who produces, sells or offers for sale three or more litters of puppies or kittens (or more than 29 animals) during the state fiscal year (July 1 through June 30). Included in the Act are state spaying/neutering requirements, a mandatory three day holding period for stray animals, record keeping requirements for animal control officers and other statutes pertaining to licensing requirements the inspection program. Sales of dogs, cat, puppies and kittens are based primarily on the number of litters sold, but the statute also addresses the total number of animals sold. Consequently, the sale of an adult animal counts toward the total number of animals that people may sell (i.e., toward the 29 animal limit for a hobby breeder). It also does not matter if the animals sold are purebred. People who sell or trade any puppies, dogs, cats or kittens must comply with the statute.

69. Boardingschools.html
Consequently, the Indian Office opened similar nonreservation boarding schools inGenoa, Nebraska; Chilocco, Indian Territory; Lawrence, kansas; and New Mexico
http://www.humboldt.edu/~go1/kellogg/boardingschools.html
Click here to access
the
Teacher's Guide Indian Boarding Schools:
Tools of Forced Assimilation, 1870 to 1934
    As a savage, we cannot tolerate him any more than as a half-civilized parasite, wanderer or vagabond. The only alternative left is to fit him by education for civilized life. The Indian, though a simple child of nature with mental facilities dwarfed and shriveled, while groping his way for generations in the darkness of barbarism, already sees the importance of education...
    Board of Indian Commissioners, 1880. (As quoted in Prucha, 1978:194.)
Beginning in the 1870s, many Indian reform organizations sincerely believed that the "time had come for the sword to give way to the spelling book." (Trennert, 1988:3.) Flush with the success of many military victories over Indian Peoples, such reformers were committed to creating a new system of Indian education - the Indian boarding school - which would bring "the gift of civilization"to "savages" who resolutely clung to their cultural and religious traditions. The Indian boarding school was another in a long line of attempts by Euro-Americans to"civilize" and indoctrinate American Indian children. This paper will explore this historical dedication to Americanizing Indian people through the use of education by

70. Schools Hail Pastor As A Hero Who Redeemed Teens
Within months of the departure of the kansas City homes Rolff schools Active teen conenctionsto Lester Roloff Mountain Park Baptist boarding Academy Patterson
http://www.mountainparkhorrors.netfirms.com/socalledhero.html

This site is hosted by
Netfirms Web Hosting Schools hail pastor as a hero who redeemed teens
By Matthew Franck
Of the Post-Dispatch
11/17/2002 02:54 PM
A half-smiling portrait of a deceased radio preacher steals the attention of all who enter the small lobby of Mountain Park Baptist Boarding Academy.
It's the visage of Lester Roloff, who is seen by several Missouri reform schools as a hero in the battle to bring wayward teens to Jesus, while fending off the demons of government control.
Mountain Park's Web site proudly says that the school's founder was personally trained by the minister. Elsewhere in Missouri, Agape Boarding School and Thanks to Calvary say they are not Roloff schools, but their leaders praise the pastor's work and display photos of him. Agape has named one of its dorms in Roloff's honor.
Roloff, who died in a plane crash in 1982, is perhaps best known for his "Family Altar" radio ministry, which was once broadcast from Corpus Christi, Texas, to more than 140 stations.
As his radio ministry grew, the fundamentalist Baptist preacher began reaching out to drug-addicted men and rebellious teens. By the late 1960s, he was taking in dozens of wayward girls, most of whom were pregnant.

71. A History Of Parsons Kansas Schools (from A Book Published In 1893)
one of the presidents of the Missouri, kansas Texas service, superintendent of anIndian boarding school, at Under his supervision the schools made excellent
http://skyways.lib.ks.us/genweb/education/1893book/labette.html
A HISTORY OF PARSONS CITY SCHOOLS
(from a book written in 1893)
The following text was transcribed from chapters on the history of education in individual Kansas counties found on pages 143-147 in: THE COLUMBIAN HISTORY OF EDUCATION IN KANSAS...
compiled by Kansas educators and published under the auspices of the Kansas State Historical Society, for the Columbian Exposition.
(Topeka, Kan. : Hamilton Printing Company : E. H. Snow, state printer, 1893) HISTORY AND GROWTH OF SCHOOLS, BY COUNTIES
GREENWOOD COUNTY
LABETTE COUNTY No history of this county was prepared by the proper officer. The following sketch of the schools of Parsons, was written by Supt. H. C. Ford. PARSONS SCHOOLS Before the organization of the city, a school district, No. 33, had been formed by R. J. Elliot, superintendent of public instruction for Labette county, sometime in the year 1867. At a school-district meeting held soon after for that purpose, the following officers were chosen: Anson Kellogg, director; George M. Wilson, clerk; Joseph Simpson, treasurer. At this meeting a certain per cent. was levied for teachers' fund, which, when collected, amounted to $14.04, as may be seen by the treasurer's books. The first school, a three-months term, was taught by Miss Marla Hussey, for the sum of $16.67 per month. Even this amount had to be raised by subscription. The whole number enrolled was 15; the average daily attendance, 10.

72. A History Of Dickinson County Kansas Schools (from A Book Published In 1893)
on Lyon creek, there are two schools maintained from to go to Enterprise, Dickinsoncounty, kansas, and accept The boarding halls are owned by private parties.
http://skyways.lib.ks.us/genweb/education/1893book/dickinson.html
A HISTORY OF DICKINSON COUNTY SCHOOLS
(from a book written in 1893)
The following text was transcribed from chapters on the history of education in individual Kansas counties found on pages 117-118 in: THE COLUMBIAN HISTORY OF EDUCATION IN KANSAS...
compiled by Kansas educators and published under the auspices of the Kansas State Historical Society, for the Columbian Exposition.
(Topeka, Kan. : Hamilton Printing Company : E. H. Snow, state printer, 1893) HISTORY AND GROWTH OF SCHOOLS, BY COUNTIES
DICKINSON COUNTY
by A. C. Van Dyke, ex-county superintendent DICKINSON COUNTY The county was organized in 1857. The first county seat was located at Newport, one mile east of Detroit; but in 1862, it was removed to Abilene. The first regular election of county officers was held in November, 1860. Samuel Ruthruff was the first person to fill the office of county superintendent of schools. He was elected in 1860, and till April, 1864, when he resigned in favor of E. W. Bradfield, who held the office till August, 1865. Ex-Superintendent Ruthruff was then appointed for the unexpired term. The first school was organized in 1863, at Lyona. Matilda Smith was engaged to teach the school, at a salary of twelve dollars per month. For several years, the sessions were held in a log church, built by German settlers, and fitted out with plain board benches for seats. School supplies were scarce. Books and slates came from Leavenworth, by ox team. The alphabet was mastered first; then primary reading and number work. The children were robust and healthy. Corn bread and buffalo meat was their principal diet. Although numerous Indians tribes wandered over the county on hunting expeditions, yet, fortunately, no pupil was molested on his way to school.

73. Web Sites For Educators
contact information for US and Canada boarding schools. Independent schools Associationof the Central States Search Information University of kansas Links to
http://www.hofstra.edu/StudentServ/Career/TheCareerCenter_educationjoblinks.cfm
About Hofstra Apply Online Ask Us Campus Map Computing Courses Directions E-mail Events Faculty FallCalendar Grades Hofstra Online January X Libraries Prospectus Registration See Hofstra Tuition-Fees Quick Links
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Main source for official information on teaching in the State of New York. Teach NY Official information about applying to work in New York City Schools. New York City Board of Education Web pages and official information on NYC Schools. Newsday - Links to Local Public and Private School Web Pages United Federation of Teachers Publications and information for new teachers on licensure, salaries, etc. for New York Teachers.

74. Creek Schools
There are quite a number of Indian schools today Eufaula boarding School for girlslocated in the edge of in the northwest part of Oklahoma near the kansas line
http://www.rootsweb.com/~okgenweb/pioneer/ohs/creekschools.html
OKGenWeb OKGenWeb Notice: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Presentation here does not extend any permissions to the public. This material may not be included in any compilation, publication, collection, or other reproduction for profit without permission.
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Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: April 29, 1937
Field Worker: Jefferson Berryhill
Volume 102
Creek Schools THE INDIAN SCHOOLS
There are quite a number of Indian Schools today. Some of the old Indian Missions have been abandoned, but some are still in use. Nuyaka Mission or Nuyaka Boarding School ceased to be a boarding school in 1923. It is located fourteen miles west of Okmulgee. Another Indian School known as Euchee Boarding School is located on the east edge of Sapulpa. When the Nuyaka Boarding School was closed the students of that school were transferred to Euchee Boarding School, which is still in use and retains its same name. Eufaula Boarding School for girls located in the edge of Eufaula.

75. The Wichita Eagle | 10/20/2002 | More Are Tracing Their Ancestry To American Ind
kansas.com The kansas home page, Clem Iron Wing calls the fear period, societyherded American Indian children like him into boarding schools that stripped
http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/news/4324521.htm
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Subscribe to The Wichita Eagle Get all the news you want delivered to your door daily Subscribe today Back to Home Wednesday, Apr 09, 2003 News Posted on Sun, Oct. 20, 2002 More are tracing their ancestry to American Indians BY MARK E. MCCORMICK The Wichita Eagle During what Clem Iron Wing calls the "fear period," society herded American Indian children like him into boarding schools that stripped away their culture. Fear drove many of the adults around him into hiding to practice their beliefs in secret. Others tried to melt into society. But Iron Wing also remembers sitting at his grandfather's knee, watching the sun dissolve on the South Dakota horizon and dreaming of the day that all of those people frightened into hiding could return. "It would be nice to have everybody, every color under the sun black, red, yellow and the white back with us," said Iron Wing, a member of the Sioux tribe now living in Wichita. That day may have arrived.

76. Directory Of Schools Missouri - PrepSchoolProfiles.Com
St, kansas City, MO 641122316, (816) 753-1300, Coed, Day, PS - 12, The Principia,13201 Clayton Rd, Saint Louis, MO 63131-1002, (314) 434-2100, Coed, Day, boarding,
http://www.prepschoolprofiles.com/dosmo.htm
The Barstow School 11511 State Line Rd, Kansas City, MO 64114-5501 Coed, Day PS - 12 Chaminade College Preparatory School 425 S Lindbergh Blvd, Saint Louis, MO 63131-2729 Boys, Day, Boarding Chesterfield Day School 1100 White Rd, Chesterfield, MO 63017-2959 Coed, Day PS - 6 The Churchill School 1035 Price School Ln, Saint Louis, MO 63124-1533 Coed, Day Community School 900 Lay Road, Ladue, Saint Louis, MO 63124-1818 Coed, Day PS - 6 Crossroads School 500 De Baliviere Ave, Saint Louis, MO 63112-1906 Coed, Day Forest Ridge School of the Sacred Heart 10040 E. Happy Valley Rd., Unit 659
Hallsville, MO 65255 Girls, Day The Forsyth School 6235 Wydown Blvd, St Louis, MO 63105-2306 Coed, Day PS - 6 John Burroughs School 755 S Price Rd, Saint Louis, MO 63124-1866 Coed, Day Logos School 9137 Old Bonhomme Rd Saint Louis, MO 63132-4417 Coed, Day 7 - PG 101 N Warson Rd
Saint Louis, MO 63124-1326 Coed, Day PS - 12 Missouri Military Academy 800 Grand Avenue, Mexico, MO 65265 Boys, Boarding New City School 5209 Waterman Ave, Saint Louis, MO 63108-1155 Coed, Day

77. Ask Jeeves: Search Results For "Private Investigation Schools"
Teen boarding schools boarding schools For Struggling Teens. 2. private investigationschools for detective co.uk/pi/private_eye.html 4. kansas Association of
http://webster.directhit.com/webster/search.aspx?qry=Private Investigation Schoo

78. Marie Vuckovic, Onward Ever, Backward Never Student Life And
When Haskell Institute in Lawrence, kansas opened its doors on September 17 was tobecome one of America's largest and most prominent Indian boarding schools.
http://www.georgetown.edu/crossroads/dis/01vuck.htm
Marie Vuckovic, "Onward Ever, Backward Never: Student Life and Students' Lives at Haskell Institute, 1884-1920s." University of Kansas, August 2001.
Back to the Alphabetic List of Dissertations
Back to the Crossroads Project Homepage

79. FROM BOARDING SCHOOLS T O SELF DETERMINA TION"
FROM boarding schools TO SELF DETERMINATION" American Indian and Alaskan Native educational systems were broken as a result of an intrusion process. being provided to thirtyeight church schools. However, most of argument for nineteenth century boarding schools was summed up by
http://www.metnet.state.mt.us/EducationalOpportunity/Indian%20Education/%2350861

80. H-AMINDIAN: Discussion, News, And Resources For Students Of North America's Firs
schools. Books Adams, David. Education for Extinction American Indians and theBoarding School Experience, 18751928 . Lawrence University Press of kansas,
http://www.asu.edu/clas/history/h-amindian/bib_--_boarding_schools.htm
h-amindian recommended reading boarding schools
Boarding Schools
Books:
Adams, David. Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1928 . Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1995.
Brant, Charles S., ed. Jim Whitewolf: The Life of a Kiowa-Apache Indian . New York: Dover Publications, 1969.
Coleman, Michael. American Indian Children at School, 1850-1930 . Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 1993.
Ellis, Clyde. To Change Them Forever: Indian Education at the Rainy Mountain Boarding School, 1893-1920 . Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1996.
Huff, Delores J. To Live Heroically: Institutional Racism and American Indian Education . Albany: State University of New York Press, 1997.
Johnston, Basil H. Indian School Days . Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1988.
Knockwood, Isabelle. Out of the Depth: The Experiences of Micmaw Children at the Indian Residential School at Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia . Lockeport, N.S.: Roseway, 1992.
La Flesche, Francis.

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