Wolf, Lizzie

Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 records
Lizzie Wolf Progress Card
Date of Entry:

Progress card of Lizzie Wolf (here Elizabeth Wolfe), a member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee, who entered the school on October 3, 1903.

Note: Other records show Wolf first entered the school on April 5, 1898. The card documents her reenrollment.

Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
Lizzie Wolf Student Information Card
Date of Entry:

Student information card of Lizzie Wolf (here Mary Elizabeth Wolfe), a member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee, who entered the school on April 5, 1898 and departed on May 4, 1908. The file indicates that Wolfe graduated in 1908 and was living in Swayney, North Carolina.

Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
Lizzie Wolf Student Information Cards
Date of Entry:

Student information card of Lizzie Wolf, a member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee, who entered the school on April 5, 1898 and ultimately departed on May 4, 1908.

In school documentation Lizzie Wolf's name is also spelled Lizzie Wolfe. She is also known as Elizabeth Wolfe and Mary Elizabeth Wolfe.

Note: In addition to the outing…

Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
Rose McArthur Student File
Date of Entry:

Student file of Rose McArthur, a member of the Umpqua Nation, who entered the school on October 3, 1903, and ultimately departed on June 20, 1910. The student did not attend the school continuously, but left and reentered. The file contains a student information card, a position record card, an application for enrollment, a physical record, a…

Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
The Red Man and Helper (Vol. 1, No. 6)
August 17, 1900

A description of this document is not currently available.

Note: This issue was also published as The Red Man (Vol. 16, No. 9).

Format:
Newspapers
Repository:
Cumberland County Historical Society
The Indian Craftsman (Vol. 1, No. 4)
May 1909

This issue, which commemorates the Commencement Exercises of the Class of 1909, featured speeches highlighting the success of Indian education. Francis E. Leupp, in his address, among many things spoke on the success of the arts at Carlisle. He was followed by Moses E. Clapp, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. Clapp shared "…

Format:
Magazines
Repository:
Dickinson College Archives & Special Collections
Report on the Health of Cherokee Students at Carlisle
December 19, 1904

Report on the health of current and former Cherokee students of the Carlisle Indian School.

Format:
Letters/Correspondence, Reports
Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration