Bradby, Herbert

Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 records
Herbert Bradby Progress Card
Date of Entry:

Progress card of Herbert Bradby (here Herbert Bradley), a member of the Pamunkey Nation, who entered the school on September 27, 1910.

Note: Although this card shows an arrival date of September 28, the admissions ledger and his file suggest that he actually arrived on September 27.

Nation:
Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
Herbert Bradby Student File
Date of Entry:

Student file of Herbert Bradby, a member of the Pamunkey Nation, who entered the school on September 27, 1910, and ultimately departed on November 22, 1913. The student did not attend the school continuously, but left and reentered. The file contains medical/physical records, student information cards, an application for enrollment, a…

Nation:
Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
Herbert Bradby Student Information Card
Date of Entry:

Student information card of Herbert Bradby (here Herbert Bradley), a member of the Pamunkey Nation, who entered the school on September 27, 1910 and ultimately departed on November 22, 1913. The file indicates Bradby was living in Lester Manor, Virginia in 1914.

Nation:
Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
James Gabriel Killowat Student File
Date of Entry:

Student file of James Gabriel Killowat, a member of the Kootenai Nation, who entered the school on March 2, 1911 and departed on November 22, 1913. The file contains a student information card, medical/physical records, a progress/conduct card, an application for enrollment, an outing record, outing evaluations, financial transactions, and…

Nation:
Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
Herbert Bradby, c.1910

View of Herbert R. Bradby while a student at the Carlisle Indian School around 1910.

Nation:
Format:
Photographic Print, B&W
Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
First page of the typed transcript of Louis Brown's testimony
February 6, 1914

A typed transcript of Louis Brown's testimony before the Joint Commission to Investigate Indian Affairs. At the time Brown was a student at Carlisle.

Brown discusses the use of force by the disciplinarians of the school and the biased way punishment is given. He claims that students receive punishments disproportionate to the offence they…

Format:
Legal and Government Documents
Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration