CARLISLE, Pa. -- For much of the 19th and 20th centuries, the United States government and Christian denominations operated boarding schools where generations of Native American children were isolated from their families. Along with academics and hard work, the schools sought to erase elements of tribal identity, from language and clothing to hairstyles and even their names. The Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania, where the remains of 17 students were exhumed and repatriated in recent weeks, served as a model for other schools. By the Numbers: ___ An Interior Department review published in 2024 found 417 federally funded boarding schools for Native children in the United States. Many others were run by religious groups and other organizations. An “incomplete” number of buria
Native American boarding schools in the US, by the numbers
ABC News US3 hrs ago118


Cheboygan Daily Tribune
Raw Story
Fast Company Technology
AlterNet
@MSNBC Video
Tribune Chronicle Community
The Fayetteville Observer Sports
CNN