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Carlisle Indian Industrial School

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Profiles

  • Chief John Big Tree (1877 - 1967)
    Seneca/Deer Clan Acting name: Chief John “Johnny” Big Tree Biography Son of Lewis and Lucy (Jemison) Johnyjohn Attended Carlisle Indian Industrial School from 1892-1893 Married 1st: Phoebe Whi...
  • Amelia A. Jimerson (1885 - 1950)
    Seneca/Wolf Clan Daughter of Steeprock and Abby Elizabeth (Shongo) Kennedy. Attended Thomas Indian School Attended Carlisle Indian Industrial School from 1895-1902 Married Elmer C. Armstron...
  • Asenoth Pierce (1878 - 1917)
    Seneca/Turtle Clan Daughter of Thomas Bishop and Agnes Jemison (Jimerson) Attended Thomas Indian School from 1880-1888 Graduated from Carlisle Indian Industrial School in 1904 Attended Carlis...
  • Flora Remington Gordon (1886 - 1926)
    Seneca/Deer Clan Daughter of John Tandy Jimeson and Lorinda (Blinkey) Jimeson Attended Carlisle Indian Industrial School from 1897-1902 Attended Hampton Institute in VA from 1908-1910 Married...
  • Hiram Blackchief (1880 - 1932)
    Tonawanda Seneca/Bear Clan "... Hiram Blackchief, a member of the Tonawanda Seneca Nation, who entered the school on September 16, 1892 and departed on July 3, 1899." Married Emily Hatch Thei...

Wikipedia

The United States Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, generally known as Carlisle Indian Industrial School, was the flagship Indian boarding school in the United States from 1879 through 1918. Founded in 1879 by Captain Richard Henry Pratt under authority of the US federal government, Carlisle was the first federally funded off-reservation Indian boarding school. It was founded on the principle that Native Americans were the equals of European-Americans, and that Native American children immersed in mainstream Euro-American culture would learn skills to advance in society. In this period, many Anglo-Americans believed mistakenly that Native Americans were a vanishing race whose only hope for survival was rapid cultural transformation.

References

  • Carlisle Indian School Digital Resource Center < link >

This reference is a very valuable source for the names of the students at the School. Some parents are listed as well as the students themselves and the Reservations that they came from.