Student information card of Jonah Sonday (Shawdusa), a member of the Ottawa Nation, who entered the school on September 19, 1894 and departed on September 20, 1900. The file indicates Sunday was married and living in Cleveland, Ohio in 1917.
Greenbrier, Adeline


Student file of Jonah Sonday (Shwanadosa), a member of the Ottawa Nation, who entered the school on September 19, 1894 and departed on September 20, 1900. The file contains a student information card, news clippings, and a report after leaving. The file indicates Sonday was working for the Indian Service at Genoa, Nebraska in 1910 and for the…

Student file of Evelyn Pierce, who entered the school on July 1, 1905, graduated in 1910, and ultimately departed on January 3, 1912. The student did not attend the school continuously, but left and reentered. The file contains a trade/position record card, student information cards, medical/physical records, outing evaluations, applications…

Progress card of Adeline Greenbrier, a member of the Menominee Nation, who entered the school on November 14, 1908.
Note: Although this card shows an arrival date of November 16, the admissions ledger and her file suggest that she actually arrived on November 14.

Student file of Adeline Greenbrier, a member of the Menominee Nation, who entered the school on November 14, 1908, graduated in 1910, and departed on June 22, 1911. The file contains an application for enrollment, a physical record, student information cards, an outing record, outing evaluations, a news clipping, a returned student survey, a…

Student information card of Adeline Greenbrier, a member of the Menominee Nation, who entered the school on November 14, 1908, graduated in 1910, and departed on June 21, 1911. The information card indicates that Greenbrier had married Jonah Shawndosa, and was living in Yankton, South Dakota in 1915.

The first article, written by Franz Boas, discussed "Methods in Indian Woodwork." Frank C. Churchill wrote about a council of Ponca, lead by Chief White Eagle and gave an account of the speeches made at the council. Next an article, pulled from the New York Tribune, reported on the improving conditions of Indians across the United…

Group portrait of twenty-three female students wearing costumes. They are the "Puritan Maidens Chorus," characters in the performance of the play, "The Captain of Plymouth," produced at the school from March 29-March 31, 1909.
The program lists a total of twenty-three female students playing Puritan roles, including the Puritan Maidens…