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Website. stewartindianschool .com. NRHP reference No. 85002432 [1] Added to NRHP. September 18, 1985 [1] The Stewart Indian School (1890–1980) was an American Indian boarding school southeast of Carson City, Nevada. Today, it is the Stewart Indian School Cultural Center and Museum. [2]
The Battle of Kelley Creek, also known as the Last Massacre, is often considered to be one of the last known massacres carried out between Native Americans and forces of the United States, and was a closing event to occur near the end of the American Indian warfare era. [2] In January 1911 a small band of Shoshones [3] were accused of rustling ...
Stewart Indian School, Carson City, Nevada Sulphur Springs Indian School, Pontotoc County, Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory [79] open 1896–98 [2] Theodore Roosevelt Indian Boarding School, founded in 1923 in buildings of the U.S. Army's closed Fort Apache, Arizona , as of 2016 still in operation as a tribal school [80]
Pupils at Carlisle Indian Industrial School, Pennsylvania, c. 1900. American Indian boarding schools, also known more recently as American Indian residential schools, were established in the United States from the mid-17th to the early 20th centuries with a primary objective of "civilizing" or assimilating Native American children and youth into Anglo-American culture.
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By 1890, outing programs had started at Haskell Institute (Haskell Indian Nations University) in Kansas, Perris School (Sherman Indian High School) in California, Carson School (Stewart Indian School) in Nevada, and Fiske Institute in Albuquerque, New Mexico. In 1893, Phoenix Indian School in Phoenix, Arizona, began its outing program. It ...
Stewart School, Cuttack is an Anglo-Indian School and its Principal is the State's only non-official representative on the Inter-State Board for Anglo-Indian Education. Dr William Day Stewart the founder of Stewart and the Medical school passed away on 23rd November 1890 in Cuttack and is buried at the local 'European Gora Kabar' cemetery.
Denetdale's parents had both attended Stewart Indian School, a boarding school in Carson City, Nevada. Denetdale was raised in Tohatchi, New Mexico from childhood with her three sisters and one brother. Her four clans are the Zia (or Weaver) Clan, and she was born for the Salt People Clan.