Indigenous Peoples of the United States School Records

History
Many of those involved in Indian Affairs desired to assimilate the native population and to teach them to rid themselves of their native culture. Efforts were made to accomplish that by sending representatives of various religious denominations to “convert them to Christianity.” Certainly, this effort was met with some success.

Another approach was tried in the late 1800s. Some Bureau of Indian Affairs officials felt that if the American Indian children could be sent to schools off the reservations, they could be taught English and to renounce their culture. Lt. Richard Henry Pratt established the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania, which became the beginning of the Indian Boarding School System.

An Education Division of the Bureau of Indian Affairs was established in 1885. This brought an intensification of the effort to educate the younger American Indians in agriculture, domestic skills, mechanical training, and the basic subjects of reading, writing, and arithmetic.

A number of boarding schools were established, all of which required the young person to leave their family, their reservation, and their culture to live at the school and be taught. Some of the larger and more well-known boarding schools included the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania, Haskell Institute in Kansas, Sherman Institute in California, Chilocco School in Oklahoma, Chemawa Indian School in Oregon, and the Intermountain Indian School in Utah. There were also many smaller boarding schools, the Pipestone Indian Boarding School in Minnesota as an example. In all, there were some 500 boarding schools, some near the reservations they served, but many which were far away. Most of the boarding schools had ceased to operate by the 1980s.

In addition to boarding schools, day schools were established on or near some reservations.

The education of Native American children changed significantly with the passage of the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. Tribes were given greater autonomy in where their students could go to school, what they were taught, etc. Indian education continues to evolve. For information about Indian education in today's world, see the web site of the Bureau of Indian Education.

States with BIA Schools: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wisconsin

Brief Timeline

 * 1879: November 1: Carlisle, Pennsylvania - Carlisle School opened
 * 1884: 200 Indian Schools were operating
 * 1887: 10,000 Indian children were in school
 * 1890: 104 Reservation schools were operating
 * 1894: 77 Reservation boarding schools were operating
 * 1896: Congress reduced funds to the Indian Schools; in this year the funding was cut 80%
 * 1900: government support for church-run Indian schools was completely withdrawn
 * Mid 1900: government schools were discontinued and the Indian students were to be assimilated into the public schools
 * 2004: 34 Tribal Colleges serving 30,000 were in operation

Types of Schools
Mission early -1870 Independent Mission Schools Reservation boarding schools Reservation day schools Off-Reservation schools Agricultural and industrial schools Advanced Schools -- Carlisle in Pennsylvania, Chemawa in Oregon, Haskel in Kansas, Chilocco in Oklahoma, Sherman in California and Inter mountain in Utah

Some boarding schools were managed by church groups under government contract.

Records
The agents of the Bureau of Indian Affairs on each reservation were required to maintain records of potential students. School census records included names of school-age children, their age, place of birth, and, in some cases, the name of their parent or guardian.



Reports were sent by the agents to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs regarding the enrollment of students from their reservation.

The schools themselves maintained individual pupil files, as well as attendance records, and other records of the health of the students, teachers at the schools, etc.

Some of the records of government boarding and day schools have been transferred to the National Archives and Records Administration system. If the school is still in operation, some records are still maintained by their administrative office. Some records have been acquired by historical societies or universities

See also:
Under each state of the United States is a heading, "American Indians." One of the sub-headings on that page is "Schools." Pages regarding the history, location, and availability of the records for each school are being developed.

There may have been a cemetery associated with the School; students, staff and employees may have died and been buried on School property.

See also:
Indians_of_the_United_States_and_Their_Records