Student file of Jesse Wofford, a member of the Cherokee Nation, who entered the school on December 6, 1912 and departed on April 25, 1917. The file contains a student information card, financial transactions, an application for enrollment, correspondence, and an outing record. The file indicates that after leaving Carlisle, Wofford enlisted in…
Wyly, Wilson
Student file of Albert Bean, a member of the Cherokee Nation, who entered the school on January 4, 1915 and departed on May 7, 1915. The file contains student information cards, an application for enrollment, a federal financial aid form, a medical/physical record, a financial transaction, and correspondence indicating Bean was living in Yale,…
Student file of Wilson Wyly, a member of the Cherokee Nation, who entered the school on January 4, 1915 and departed on May 26, 1917. The file contains student information cards, an application for enrollment, financial transactions, certificates of promotion, and correspondence.
In school documentation Wilson Wyly's name is also…
Student information card of Wilson Wyly (here Wilson Wiley), a member of the Cherokee Nation, who entered the school on January 4, 1915 and departed on May 26, 1917. The file indicates that Wiley graduated in 1917.
A group of male and female students posed on the steps of a building on the school grounds. A male student in the front row holds a banner reading: "Justice Class 1917." A handwritten list of student names below the photo identifies each person. They are: 1) Sarah Fowler 2) Maude Cook 3) Hattie McAfee 4) Theodore Frank 5) Jesse Wofford 6) Peter…
These materials include correspondence regarding holiday greetings between a group students to Cato Sells along with Sells reply.
This document contains correspondence concerning policies governing the graduating class of 1917. This includes a list of students receiving diplomas, required grades, and other related policies.
This program was distributed for a performance by the students as part of the Commencement Exercises for 1917. The play, "The Continental Congress," is taken from McBrien's "America First," and the school borrowed the costumes for the performance. It surrounds the formation of the first Continental Congress and the Declaration of Independence…