Student information card of Charles Bear, a member of the Nez Perce Nation, who entered the school on October 27, 1879 and departed on August 21, 1880.
Student information card of Charles Bear, a member of the Nez Perce Nation, who entered the school on October 27, 1879 and departed on August 21, 1880.
Student information card of Charles Bear, a member of the Nez Perce Nation, who entered the school on October 27, 1879 and departed on August 21, 1880.
In school documentation Charles Bear is also known as He-zem-te-nat.
Progress card of Charles Bear, a member of the Chippewa Nation, who entered the school on October 8, 1908.
Student file of Charles Bear, a member of the Chippewa Nation, who entered the school on October 8, 1908 and departed on May 23, 1909. The file contains a student information card, a conduct card, a physical record, an application for enrollment, a returned student survey, and a report after leaving indicating that in 1911 Bear was living in…
Student information card of Charles Bear (here spelled Charles Baer), a member of the Chippewa Nation, who entered the school on October 8, 1908 and departed on May 23, 1909.
Note: Students Charles Bear and John Bear were brothers.
J. S. Bender informs Richard Henry Pratt that he believes six to eight students should be returned to their homes because they have "incurable" conditions and will likely "die young." Pratt encloses and endorses Bender's requests to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. In his cover letter, Pratt remarks that he wishes nations would not send…
Richard Henry Pratt requests authority to send four sick students home to Indian Territory and funding for their escort, B. S. Reynolds. The four students, who have all been examined by the school physician and Office of Indian Affairs representative Dr. Kellogg, are Samuel Kahton (Ponca), Beau Niel (Arapaho), Fanny (Kiowa), and Charles Bear.…
Richard Henry Pratt informs the Commissioner of Indian Affairs that he is sending Pine Ridge Sioux students Henry Thigh, Nathan, and Andrew home, escorted by Reverend Robinson, immediately because their health is so poor that they may die at the school before the Commissioner approves their transfer. Pratt adds that the Carlisle Indian School…
This material includes correspondence concerning a November 1910 inspection of Carlisle by James McLaughlin. This includes information concerning the guard house, a list of runaway students, and an investigation into the administrative affairs at the school.