Studio portrait of Lamotte Primaux wearing school uniform.
Ponca
Studio portrait of Lamotte Primaux wearing school uniform.
Studio portrait of Standing Buffalo, a Ponca chief.
The student newspaper records a visit by Standing Buffalo to the school in January of 1881, so that is probably when this photo was taken.
The Cumberland County Historical Society has three copies of this image: PA-CH1-063a and CS-CH-032.1-.2.
Studio portrait of Alfred Laravie wearing school uniform.
Studio portrait of Perry Laravie.
Studio portrait of Alice Baker (left) and Hattie Baker (right) wearing school uniforms.
Studio portrait of Louis McDonald.
Studio portrait of Louis McDonald holding a brass horn instrument.
Studio portrait of fifteen male students and nineteen female students, the graduating class of 1899. According to the label on this photo they are:
Back row: Christian Eastman, Annie Gesis, Joseph Gouge (here J. Jennings Gouge), George Hazlett, Sarah Williams, Chauncey Archiquette, Eliza Smith (here E. Lillian Smith),…
Studio portrait of John Kimball (here Kimble) in a uniform and holding a trombone.
Studio photograph of the graduating class of 1903. They are identified as: 1. Tatiyopa, Henry, 2. Kimball, John, 3. Ezhuna, Joseph, 4. Doxtator, Commodore, 5. Doxtator, Alice, 6. Brown, Lillian, 7. Hill, Amy, 8. Bishop, Frank, 9. Brushel, Samuel, 10. Callsen, Minnie, 11. Callsen, Katie…
Commissioner of Indian Affairs Ezra A. Hayt's letter to Richard Henry Pratt communicating that it is unnecessary to recruit more children from the Pine Ridge Agency to attend the Carlisle Indian School. Hayt says that he does not think it best to take more young people from their home at present time. Hayt also lets Pratt know that he…
Telegram from Commissioner of Indian Affairs Ezra Hayt sent to Richard Henry Pratt or Alfred J. Standing. (Hayt did not know who was at Wichita, Kansas to receive the telegram.)
The telegram reads: "Bring on Osage, Pawnee, and Ponca children."
Two duplicate copies of the monthly school report for January 1880, submitted by the Carlisle Indian Training School to the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The report includes a list of employees, a count of students by Nation/Tribe, descriptions of the educational program, and Superintendent Richard Henry Pratt's remarks about developments and…
A series of sixteen letters written to Captain Richard H. Pratt in response to a questionnaire sent to former students. The accompanying questionnaire forms are not included.
Transcripts follow each handwritten letter.
These materials include a descriptive statement of pupils regarding 10 individuals sent to the Carlisle Indian School from the Santee Agency.