Progress card of Bert Miller, a member of the Stockbridge Nation, who entered the school on August 24, 1905.
Miller, Bert
![Bert Miller Progress Card Bert Miller Progress Card](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-ephemera/NARA_1329_b009_c00_0567.jpg?itok=TPiMqShx)
![Bert Miller Student File Bert Miller Student File](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-ephemera/NARA_1327_b040_f2000_0002_combined_0.jpg?itok=lLMWAmf6)
Student file of Bert Miller, a member of the Stockbridge Nation, who entered the school on August 24, 1905 and departed on January 18, 1909. The file contains a student information card, an application for enrollment, a returned student survey, correspondences, trade/position cards, a progress/conduct card, and a report after leaving indicating…
![Bert Miller Student Information Card Bert Miller Student Information Card](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-ephemera/NARA_1329_b013_c00m_0145.jpg?itok=ulc1-Mfe)
Student information card of Bert Miller, a member of the Stockbridge Nation, who entered the school on August 24, 1905 and departed on January 18, 1909. The file indicates Miller was living in Gresham, Wisconsin in 1913.
![Policy Regarding Abandoned Monies Policy Regarding Abandoned Monies](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-document/NARA_RG75_CCF_b014_f19_84751_0003.jpg?itok=Kw2Cu_8d)
These materials include an inquiry from the Carlisle Indian School regarding the request of two students, Bert Miller and George Day, to refund monies due to them but transferred to the school's Emergency Fund. A clarification from the Bureau of Indian Affairs, including their policy on the confiscation of abandoned student funds, is also…
![List of Student Addresses (Supplemental Report Exhibit A) Typed page with handwritten "Exhibit A" in top right corner](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-document/NARA_RG75_CCF_b007_f02_10144_0002.jpg?itok=EcVzrOjg)
This document is a list of student names and corresponding addresses. A small number of students have multiple addresses, possibly accounting for them moving elsewhere.
While this is labelled Exhibit A and is part of the 1914 Congressional Investigation's papers, the document itself does not match the description that Inspector Linnen…