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American Indian outing programs

Native American outing programs were associated with American Indian boarding schools in the United States. These were operated both on and off reservations, primarily from the late 19th century to World War II.[1] Students from boarding schools were assigned to live with and work for European-American families, often during summers, ostensibly to learn more about English language, useful skills, and majority culture, but in reality, primarily as a source of unpaid labor. Many boarding schools continued operating into the 1960s and 1970s.

The boarding schools were established by law in 1891, and more were founded by the federal government in the early 20th century. Their goal was to educate Native American children to learn English, math, literacy, and European-American mainstream culture, though this was achieved by stripping children of their family and community ties, punishing children for speaking Native languages, and forcing them to live in a militarized fashion with harsh punishments for even inconsequential infractions. Those in charge of the program thought this to be necessary for the survival of Native Americans in modern American culture, though many--including Native people--disagreed.[2]

Richard Henry Pratt developed the first such boarding school at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in 1879, which became a model for the government program. He also developed the outing program. In 1891 the federal government authorized by law establishing other Indian boarding schools. By 1900, several other American Indian boarding schools in the west had begun federal outing programs modeled after that of Carlisle. These included schools in Salem, Oregon; Lawrence, Kansas; Riverside, California; Carson City, Nevada; and Albuquerque, New Mexico.[3]

Most of the children involved in outing programs lived and worked with their assigned families for part of every day and often whole summers.[2] Other children stayed with their assigned families throughout the year.[4] Typically, boys were assigned to do farm work and girls were assigned to domestic tasks.[2] Pratt emphasized that children participating in outing programs should be treated as members of the assigned family, rather than as servants.[5] But enforcement of such a vision was lacking. For most children, taking part in outing programs entailed long days of hard work with little time off; such work was also typical for members of farm families.[6]

History of outing edit

As historian Victoria Haskins writes in her journal article, "Domesticating Colonizers: Domesticity, Indigenous Domestic Labor, and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation" (2019), Native Americans had long been used as domestic servants and even slaves in white households.[7] Native American children had been sent to white households for assimilation since the colonial era.[8] 18th-century ministers in both New England and Virginia, for instance, brought Native American children into their homes to teach them their ways.[8]

American Indian boarding schools that had no dormitories for female students assigned girls to live with local families. There they were also supposed to learn homemaking skills.[8]

Carlisle Indian Industrial School outing program edit

In 1878, the US government decided to return a group of Native Americans held as prisoners in Fort Marion (Castillo de San Marcos) in St. Augustine, Florida to their reservations.[9] In 1878, First Lieutenant Richard Henry Pratt persuaded the Bureau of Indian Affairs to give him custody of either fifteen or seventeen young men set to be released for education at Hampton Institute (Hampton University) in Hampton, Virginia.[9][10] The first formal outings in the United States took place that year when Pratt decided that the Native Americans would benefit from spending the summer with white farmers, and that farmers would benefit from free child labor.[11]

In 1879, Pratt decided that the Native American students should leave the primarily Black Hampton Institute (Hampton University) for closer contact with white people.[11] With the permission of Secretary of the Interior Carl Schurz, Pratt was allowed to open the first government-sponsored American Indian boarding school, the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, that year.[11][12]

The Carlisle Indian Industrial School's outing program started in 1880.[13] Twenty-four children were sent out, but most of the host families returned their assigned children to the school.[13] 109 children were used in Carlisle's outing program the following year, and only six host families returned their assigned children to the school.[13] In 1885, nearly 250 children were included in the summer outing program at Carlisle, and more than 100 continued during the school year.[4] Over the next several years, Carlisle's outing program continued to grow rapidly, peaking at 947 children laborers in 1903.[14]

Other outing programs edit

Between 1880 and 1886, the Bureau of Indian Affairs opened more than one hundred American Indian boarding schools modeled after Carlisle across the United States, primarily on reservations.[15][12] Congress passed a series of laws designed to encourage the development of outing programs in those new schools.[16]

In 1889, a dozen boys at Chemawa Indian School in Salem, Oregon, were sent to work in nearby farms. This was the first formal outing program in the western United States.[16] 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.[3]

In 1893, Phoenix Indian School in Phoenix, Arizona, began its outing program. It eventually became the second-largest in the country, with hundreds of children being sent out as free labor to area families and businesses.[17]

Outing matrons edit

The placements of girls within the outing system were overseen by outing matrons, agents of the Bureau of Indian Affairs.[2] In addition to supervising girls and their assigned families, outing matrons courted wealthy families to host children and sought to identify unfit living situations.[18] Still, outing matrons often failed to prevent or respond to abuse and neglect within the outing system.[19]

Support for outing programs edit

In the United States, the formal primary objective of outing programs was to assimilate Native American children into white American society.[2] Supporters of outing programs hoped that the Native American children involved would be "civilized" and "uplifted" by immersion in white households.[2] Supporters of the programs also argued that the Native American children could be made "useful" through their training for menial positions.[2] That many white families benefited materially through the use of unpaid child labor, and that their farms and other businesses produced wealth via this labor, was not the proclaimed objective of the program.

Opposition to outing programs edit

Richard Henry Pratt believed that outing programs oriented toward assimilation were more ethical than outing programs oriented toward labor.[20] Pratt spent his retirement years criticizing work-oriented outing programs that were common in the western United States.[20] But abuses have been documented in both types of outing programs.

Major criticisms arose at the start of the outing system.[5] Some people feared that those who would choose to host Native American children would not be motivated by altruism, but would exploit and abuse them.[5] They assumed that only the less honorable would be willing to take Native American children to their homes.[5] They were particularly concerned that families in the western and southwestern United States less morally upright and would not provide a safe home environment for children in the outing system.[5]

Others had concerns about the questionable educational benefits for children in many outing programs and their lack of supervision.[21] In 1926, the Institute for Government Research (Brookings Institution) commissioned the Meriam Report to provide a comprehensive study of the social and economic status of Native Americans.[21] In 1928, the report concluded that the outing system had primarily become a scheme for hiring Native American children for odd jobs and domestic service, rather than providing them with any real training.[21] Also, the report noted that Native American children often earned unfair wages in low-level positions with little oversight.[21]

Results of outing programs edit

In her article "Working on the Domestic Frontier: American Indian Domestic Servants in White Women's Households in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1920-1940," (2007), historian Margaret Jacobs argues that the outing system failed to assimilate Native American girls.[22] Jacobs explains that Native American girls in outing programs often challenged their assigned roles as servants and host families' attempts to "uplift" them, actively asserting their own independence.[2] She adds that many Native American girls in outing programs rejected the gender and sexual norms promoted by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, instead maintaining the norms of their own communities, while also adopting the gender and sexual norms of urban youth culture.[22]

Nonetheless, in "The Hidden Half: A History of Native American Women's Education," Deirdre Almeida argues that boarding schools and their outing programs contributed to the destruction of Native American women's traditional roles.[6] In addition, boarding schools and their outing programs limited Native American women's work skills so that, for many, becoming servants in white homes was the only choice of work they had when they returned from boarding schools to their reservations.[6]

List of American Indian boarding schools with outing programs edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Haskins, Victoria (2019-10-01). "Domesticating Colonizers: Domesticity, Indigenous Domestic Labor, and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation". The American Historical Review. 124 (4): 1290–1301. doi:10.1093/ahr/rhz647. ISSN 0002-8762.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Jacobs, Margaret D. (2007). "Working on the Domestic Frontier: American Indian Domestic Servants in White Women's Households in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1920-1940". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 28 (1): 166. doi:10.1353/fro.2007.0028. ISSN 1536-0334. S2CID 143755650.
  3. ^ a b c Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 282–283. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  4. ^ a b Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 273. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  5. ^ a b c d e Haskins, Victoria (2019-10-01). "Domesticating Colonizers: Domesticity, Indigenous Domestic Labor, and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation". The American Historical Review. 124 (4): 1295. doi:10.1093/ahr/rhz647. ISSN 0002-8762.
  6. ^ a b c Almeida, Deirdre (1997-12-01). "The Hidden Half: A History of Native American Women's Education". Harvard Educational Review. 67 (4): 765. doi:10.17763/haer.67.4.7142g172t1ql4g50. ISSN 0017-8055.
  7. ^ Haskins, Victoria (2019-10-01). "Domesticating Colonizers: Domesticity, Indigenous Domestic Labor, and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation". The American Historical Review. 124 (4): 1293. doi:10.1093/ahr/rhz647. ISSN 0002-8762.
  8. ^ a b c Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 269. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  9. ^ a b Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 270. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  10. ^ Almeida, Deirdre (1997-12-01). "The Hidden Half: A History of Native American Women's Education". Harvard Educational Review. 67 (4): 763. doi:10.17763/haer.67.4.7142g172t1ql4g50. ISSN 0017-8055.
  11. ^ a b c Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 271. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  12. ^ a b Almeida, Deirdre (1997-12-01). "The Hidden Half: A History of Native American Women's Education". Harvard Educational Review. 67 (4): 764. doi:10.17763/haer.67.4.7142g172t1ql4g50. ISSN 0017-8055.
  13. ^ a b c Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 272. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  14. ^ Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 275. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  15. ^ Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 275–276. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  16. ^ a b Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 276. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  17. ^ Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 279–281. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  18. ^ Haskins, Victoria (2019-10-01). "Domesticating Colonizers: Domesticity, Indigenous Domestic Labor, and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation". The American Historical Review. 124 (4): 1296. doi:10.1093/ahr/rhz647. ISSN 0002-8762.
  19. ^ Haskins, Victoria (2019-10-01). "Domesticating Colonizers: Domesticity, Indigenous Domestic Labor, and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation". The American Historical Review. 124 (4): 1298. doi:10.1093/ahr/rhz647. ISSN 0002-8762.
  20. ^ a b Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 288. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  21. ^ a b c d Trennert, Robert A. (1983-08-01). "From Carlisle to Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System, 1878-1930". Pacific Historical Review. 52 (3): 290. doi:10.2307/3639003. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3639003.
  22. ^ a b Jacobs, Margaret D. (2007). "Working on the Domestic Frontier: American Indian Domestic Servants in White Women's Households in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1920-1940". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 28 (1): 167. doi:10.1353/fro.2007.0028. ISSN 1536-0334. S2CID 143755650.

Further reading edit

  • Haskins, V. K. (2012). Matrons and Maids: Regulating Indian Domestic Service in Tucson, 1914–1934. United States: University of Arizona Press.
  • Sakiestewa Gilbert, M. (2010). Education Beyond the Mesas: Hopi Students at Sherman Institute, 1902-1929. United Kingdom: University of Nebraska Press.
  • The Indian School on Magnolia Avenue: Voices and Images from Sherman Institute. (2012). United States: Oregon State University Press.
  • Trennert, R. A. (1988). The Phoenix Indian School: forced assimilation in Arizona, 1891-1935. United Kingdom: University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Whalen, K. (2016). Native Students at Work: American Indian Labor and Sherman Institute's Outing Program, 1900-1945. United States: University of Washington Press.

External links edit

  • Berkeley Talks transcript: How Native women challenged a 1900s Bay Area assimilation program
  • Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
  • The Carlisle Indian Industrial School: Assimilation with Education after the Indian Wars
  • A search for native children who died on 'Outings' in Pa.
  • The sad legacy of American Indian boarding schools in Minnesota and the U.S.

american, indian, outing, programs, native, american, outing, programs, were, associated, with, american, indian, boarding, schools, united, states, these, were, operated, both, reservations, primarily, from, late, 19th, century, world, students, from, boardin. Native American outing programs were associated with American Indian boarding schools in the United States These were operated both on and off reservations primarily from the late 19th century to World War II 1 Students from boarding schools were assigned to live with and work for European American families often during summers ostensibly to learn more about English language useful skills and majority culture but in reality primarily as a source of unpaid labor Many boarding schools continued operating into the 1960s and 1970s The boarding schools were established by law in 1891 and more were founded by the federal government in the early 20th century Their goal was to educate Native American children to learn English math literacy and European American mainstream culture though this was achieved by stripping children of their family and community ties punishing children for speaking Native languages and forcing them to live in a militarized fashion with harsh punishments for even inconsequential infractions Those in charge of the program thought this to be necessary for the survival of Native Americans in modern American culture though many including Native people disagreed 2 Richard Henry Pratt developed the first such boarding school at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in 1879 which became a model for the government program He also developed the outing program In 1891 the federal government authorized by law establishing other Indian boarding schools By 1900 several other American Indian boarding schools in the west had begun federal outing programs modeled after that of Carlisle These included schools in Salem Oregon Lawrence Kansas Riverside California Carson City Nevada and Albuquerque New Mexico 3 Most of the children involved in outing programs lived and worked with their assigned families for part of every day and often whole summers 2 Other children stayed with their assigned families throughout the year 4 Typically boys were assigned to do farm work and girls were assigned to domestic tasks 2 Pratt emphasized that children participating in outing programs should be treated as members of the assigned family rather than as servants 5 But enforcement of such a vision was lacking For most children taking part in outing programs entailed long days of hard work with little time off such work was also typical for members of farm families 6 Contents 1 History of outing 2 Carlisle Indian Industrial School outing program 3 Other outing programs 4 Outing matrons 5 Support for outing programs 6 Opposition to outing programs 7 Results of outing programs 8 List of American Indian boarding schools with outing programs 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory of outing editAs historian Victoria Haskins writes in her journal article Domesticating Colonizers Domesticity Indigenous Domestic Labor and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation 2019 Native Americans had long been used as domestic servants and even slaves in white households 7 Native American children had been sent to white households for assimilation since the colonial era 8 18th century ministers in both New England and Virginia for instance brought Native American children into their homes to teach them their ways 8 American Indian boarding schools that had no dormitories for female students assigned girls to live with local families There they were also supposed to learn homemaking skills 8 Carlisle Indian Industrial School outing program editFurther information Carlisle Indian Industrial School In 1878 the US government decided to return a group of Native Americans held as prisoners in Fort Marion Castillo de San Marcos in St Augustine Florida to their reservations 9 In 1878 First Lieutenant Richard Henry Pratt persuaded the Bureau of Indian Affairs to give him custody of either fifteen or seventeen young men set to be released for education at Hampton Institute Hampton University in Hampton Virginia 9 10 The first formal outings in the United States took place that year when Pratt decided that the Native Americans would benefit from spending the summer with white farmers and that farmers would benefit from free child labor 11 In 1879 Pratt decided that the Native American students should leave the primarily Black Hampton Institute Hampton University for closer contact with white people 11 With the permission of Secretary of the Interior Carl Schurz Pratt was allowed to open the first government sponsored American Indian boarding school the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle Pennsylvania that year 11 12 The Carlisle Indian Industrial School s outing program started in 1880 13 Twenty four children were sent out but most of the host families returned their assigned children to the school 13 109 children were used in Carlisle s outing program the following year and only six host families returned their assigned children to the school 13 In 1885 nearly 250 children were included in the summer outing program at Carlisle and more than 100 continued during the school year 4 Over the next several years Carlisle s outing program continued to grow rapidly peaking at 947 children laborers in 1903 14 Other outing programs editBetween 1880 and 1886 the Bureau of Indian Affairs opened more than one hundred American Indian boarding schools modeled after Carlisle across the United States primarily on reservations 15 12 Congress passed a series of laws designed to encourage the development of outing programs in those new schools 16 In 1889 a dozen boys at Chemawa Indian School in Salem Oregon were sent to work in nearby farms This was the first formal outing program in the western United States 16 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 3 In 1893 Phoenix Indian School in Phoenix Arizona began its outing program It eventually became the second largest in the country with hundreds of children being sent out as free labor to area families and businesses 17 Outing matrons editThe placements of girls within the outing system were overseen by outing matrons agents of the Bureau of Indian Affairs 2 In addition to supervising girls and their assigned families outing matrons courted wealthy families to host children and sought to identify unfit living situations 18 Still outing matrons often failed to prevent or respond to abuse and neglect within the outing system 19 Support for outing programs editIn the United States the formal primary objective of outing programs was to assimilate Native American children into white American society 2 Supporters of outing programs hoped that the Native American children involved would be civilized and uplifted by immersion in white households 2 Supporters of the programs also argued that the Native American children could be made useful through their training for menial positions 2 That many white families benefited materially through the use of unpaid child labor and that their farms and other businesses produced wealth via this labor was not the proclaimed objective of the program Opposition to outing programs editFurther information Meriam ReportRichard Henry Pratt believed that outing programs oriented toward assimilation were more ethical than outing programs oriented toward labor 20 Pratt spent his retirement years criticizing work oriented outing programs that were common in the western United States 20 But abuses have been documented in both types of outing programs Major criticisms arose at the start of the outing system 5 Some people feared that those who would choose to host Native American children would not be motivated by altruism but would exploit and abuse them 5 They assumed that only the less honorable would be willing to take Native American children to their homes 5 They were particularly concerned that families in the western and southwestern United States less morally upright and would not provide a safe home environment for children in the outing system 5 Others had concerns about the questionable educational benefits for children in many outing programs and their lack of supervision 21 In 1926 the Institute for Government Research Brookings Institution commissioned the Meriam Report to provide a comprehensive study of the social and economic status of Native Americans 21 In 1928 the report concluded that the outing system had primarily become a scheme for hiring Native American children for odd jobs and domestic service rather than providing them with any real training 21 Also the report noted that Native American children often earned unfair wages in low level positions with little oversight 21 Results of outing programs editIn her article Working on the Domestic Frontier American Indian Domestic Servants in White Women s Households in the San Francisco Bay Area 1920 1940 2007 historian Margaret Jacobs argues that the outing system failed to assimilate Native American girls 22 Jacobs explains that Native American girls in outing programs often challenged their assigned roles as servants and host families attempts to uplift them actively asserting their own independence 2 She adds that many Native American girls in outing programs rejected the gender and sexual norms promoted by the Bureau of Indian Affairs instead maintaining the norms of their own communities while also adopting the gender and sexual norms of urban youth culture 22 Nonetheless in The Hidden Half A History of Native American Women s Education Deirdre Almeida argues that boarding schools and their outing programs contributed to the destruction of Native American women s traditional roles 6 In addition boarding schools and their outing programs limited Native American women s work skills so that for many becoming servants in white homes was the only choice of work they had when they returned from boarding schools to their reservations 6 List of American Indian boarding schools with outing programs editCarlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle Pennsylvania Chemawa Indian School in Salem Oregon Phoenix Indian School in Phoenix Arizona Haskell Institute Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence Kansas Perris School Sherman Indian High School in Riverside California Carson School Stewart Indian School in Carson City Nevada Fiske Institute in Albuquerque New Mexico 3 See also editIndian Relocation Act of 1956 Richard Henry Pratt Carlisle Indian Industrial School Phoenix Indian School American Indian boarding schools Meriam Report American Indian boarding schools in Wisconsin Cultural assimilation of Native Americans Contemporary Native American issues in the United States Indian Placement ProgramReferences edit Haskins Victoria 2019 10 01 Domesticating Colonizers Domesticity Indigenous Domestic Labor and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation The American Historical Review 124 4 1290 1301 doi 10 1093 ahr rhz647 ISSN 0002 8762 a b c d e f g h Jacobs Margaret D 2007 Working on the Domestic Frontier American Indian Domestic Servants in White Women s Households in the San Francisco Bay Area 1920 1940 Frontiers A Journal of Women Studies 28 1 166 doi 10 1353 fro 2007 0028 ISSN 1536 0334 S2CID 143755650 a b c Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 282 283 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 a b Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 273 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 a b c d e Haskins Victoria 2019 10 01 Domesticating Colonizers Domesticity Indigenous Domestic Labor and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation The American Historical Review 124 4 1295 doi 10 1093 ahr rhz647 ISSN 0002 8762 a b c Almeida Deirdre 1997 12 01 The Hidden Half A History of Native American Women s Education Harvard Educational Review 67 4 765 doi 10 17763 haer 67 4 7142g172t1ql4g50 ISSN 0017 8055 Haskins Victoria 2019 10 01 Domesticating Colonizers Domesticity Indigenous Domestic Labor and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation The American Historical Review 124 4 1293 doi 10 1093 ahr rhz647 ISSN 0002 8762 a b c Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 269 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 a b Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 270 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 Almeida Deirdre 1997 12 01 The Hidden Half A History of Native American Women s Education Harvard Educational Review 67 4 763 doi 10 17763 haer 67 4 7142g172t1ql4g50 ISSN 0017 8055 a b c Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 271 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 a b Almeida Deirdre 1997 12 01 The Hidden Half A History of Native American Women s Education Harvard Educational Review 67 4 764 doi 10 17763 haer 67 4 7142g172t1ql4g50 ISSN 0017 8055 a b c Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 272 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 275 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 275 276 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 a b Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 276 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 279 281 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 Haskins Victoria 2019 10 01 Domesticating Colonizers Domesticity Indigenous Domestic Labor and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation The American Historical Review 124 4 1296 doi 10 1093 ahr rhz647 ISSN 0002 8762 Haskins Victoria 2019 10 01 Domesticating Colonizers Domesticity Indigenous Domestic Labor and the Modern Settler Colonial Nation The American Historical Review 124 4 1298 doi 10 1093 ahr rhz647 ISSN 0002 8762 a b Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 288 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 a b c d Trennert Robert A 1983 08 01 From Carlisle to Phoenix The Rise and Fall of the Indian Outing System 1878 1930 Pacific Historical Review 52 3 290 doi 10 2307 3639003 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3639003 a b Jacobs Margaret D 2007 Working on the Domestic Frontier American Indian Domestic Servants in White Women s Households in the San Francisco Bay Area 1920 1940 Frontiers A Journal of Women Studies 28 1 167 doi 10 1353 fro 2007 0028 ISSN 1536 0334 S2CID 143755650 Further reading editHaskins V K 2012 Matrons and Maids Regulating Indian Domestic Service in Tucson 1914 1934 United States University of Arizona Press Sakiestewa Gilbert M 2010 Education Beyond the Mesas Hopi Students at Sherman Institute 1902 1929 United Kingdom University of Nebraska Press The Indian School on Magnolia Avenue Voices and Images from Sherman Institute 2012 United States Oregon State University Press Trennert R A 1988 The Phoenix Indian School forced assimilation in Arizona 1891 1935 United Kingdom University of Oklahoma Press Whalen K 2016 Native Students at Work American Indian Labor and Sherman Institute s Outing Program 1900 1945 United States University of Washington Press External links editBerkeley Talks transcript How Native women challenged a 1900s Bay Area assimilation program Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs The Carlisle Indian Industrial School Assimilation with Education after the Indian Wars A search for native children who died on Outings in Pa The sad legacy of American Indian boarding schools in Minnesota and the U S Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Indian outing programs amp oldid 1212304238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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