Student information card of Albert Penn (Hah-moh-shin-ka), a member of the Osage Nation, who entered the school on September 26, 1884 and departed on July 6, 1885.
Penn, William
![Albert Penn (Hah-moh-shin-ka) Student Information Card Albert Penn (Hah-moh-shin-ka) Student Information Card](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-ephemera/NARA_1329_b013_c00p_0080.jpg?itok=7U0K7Vqs)
![Frank Penn (Kah-he-gra-in-kah) Student Information Cards Frank Penn (Kah-he-gra-in-kah) Student Information Cards](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-ephemera/NARA_1328_b003_c00p_0061.jpg?itok=Y3AQ-77Q)
Student information cards of Frank Penn, a member of the Osage Nation, who entered the school on September 26, 1884 and departed on March 21, 1894.
In school documentation Frank Penn is also known as Kah-he-gra-in-kah.
![Fred Penn (Hun-kah-th-she) Student Information Card Fred Penn (Hun-kah-th-she) Student Information Card](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-ephemera/NARA_1329_b013_c00p_0081.jpg?itok=n2t-Qa5A)
Student information card of Fred Penn (Hun-kah-th-she), a member of the Osage Nation, who entered the school on October 18, 1891 and departed on September 30, 1895. The file indicates Penn was living in Kellyville, Oklahoma in 1914.
![Fred Penn (Hun-rah-th-she) Student File Fred Penn (Hun-rah-th-she) Student File](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-ephemera/NARA_1327_b025_f1170_0001.jpg?itok=sLiulENg)
Student file of Fred Penn, a member of the Osage Nation, who entered the school on October 18, 1891, and departed on September 30, 1895. The file contains a student information card, correspondence, and a report after leaving indicating that Penn was living in Kelleyville, Oklahoma in 1914.
In school documentation Fred Penn is…
![Eadle Keatah Toh (Vol. 1, No. 11) Eadle Keatah Toh (Vol. 1, No. 11)](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-pub/CCHS-MorningStar_001_11_0001.jpg?itok=YZx-bwTj)
Page one opened with the methods and various uses of ground corn, from sweetening water, to making traveling bread. There was also a letter from Jno D. Miles, and another from Minerva Cheyenne. One article on creating competition between the Arapahoe and Cheyenne. Page two opened with the story of D.L. Payne, who used military force to remove…