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Education Opportunities for Native American Youth in Oklahoma, 1956-01-01 - 1956-12-31

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 61
Identifier: CAC_CC_001_16_1_61_0026
The text discusses the importance of Indian boarding schools in providing education to young boys and girls of Indian descent, many of whom come from remote places, broken homes, or are orphans. It also mentions the Indian Goodland Orphanage, which receives financial aid from the Federal government and is under the supervision of the Presbyterian Church. The text also mentions day schools operated by the Indian Bureau and tuition payments for Indian children attending local and State schools.

Dates

  • 1956-01-01 - 1956-12-31

Creator

Language of Materials

English

Conditions Governing Access:

Certain series of this collection are stored off-site and require prior notice to access. If you wish to view these materials, please contact the Congressional Archives staff to arrange an appointment.

The following series are stored off-site: Clippings, Invitations, Mail, Miscellaneous, Office, and Post Office.

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Extent

1 Pages

Overview

84th Congress (1955-1957)

Preservica Internal URL

Preservica Public URL Preservica Access

Related Materials

Chickasaw Indians; Choctaw Indians

General

Native Americans
  • TypeCollection

Repository Details

Part of the Carl Albert Center Congressional and Political Collections Repository

Contact:
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Room 202B
Norman Oklahoma 73109 United States