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The First Anniversary of Hampton
At the last anniversary of Hampton, Secretary Schurz remarked in his speech
"One day, soon, a very interesting sight will be seen here and at Carlisle. It
will be the first Indian School-visiting Board. Within a few days twenty-five or
thirty Sioux chiefs, among them some warriors whose hands were lifted against
the United States but a few days ago, Red Cloud and others, will go to Carlisle
and come here to see their children in these schools."
Last May, accordingly, this "Indian School-visiting Board" reached Hampton. The
meeting between them and their young relatives would have convinced the most
skeptical that the heart of man answers to heart as face to face in water,
whatever the skin it beats under
As the Gros Ventre and Ree chiefs gathered the children of their own tribes
around them for a special talk, Son of the Star beckoned one of the older girls
to the front, and searching some mysterious depths of his blanket, drew forth a
dirty little coil of string about two feet long, unwound it, straightened it
carefully, and let it hang from one hand to the floor, with the other outlining
some little form about it, bringing quick-flitting smiles to the face of the
girl, while the whole ring looked on with evidently intelligent interest, though
not a word was spoken. Handing the string over to the girl, he dived into his
blanket once more, producing this time a little worn pair of baby shoes. But at
this his watcher broke down entirely in a flood of tender tears; for the whole
silent pantomime had been a letter from home describing the growth and beauty of
the little sister she had left winking in its cradle basket two years before.
Son of the Star was a fine specimen of an old chief of powerful proportions.
Poor Wolf, in full Indian costume, and glory of porcupine quills and eagle
feathers, had put a finishing touch to his dignity by an incongruous and
ludicrously solemn pair of huge gold-bowed spectacles, which made him look like
a caricature of Confucius.
The Gros Ventre were particularly anxious to see Ara-hotch-kish, the only son of
their second chief, Hard Horn, who had been prevented by some accident from
accompanying the expedition. They found the little fellow in the workshop
painting pails, and pressed around him in an admiring group. Ara's dignity was
fully equal to the occasion. He worked away with an air of superb indifference,
vouchsafing the old chiefs no notice whatever, except to elbow them aside, when
his pail was done, to set it up and get down another, only aside glance now and
then through his long lashes, and the shadow of a demure smile around his
firm-set lips, betraying that he was taking in everything, and enjoying his
honors.
All the chiefs were delighted spectators at the merry games of the evening
"conversation hour." In an evil moment, however, the 15-14-13 puzzle was
explained to Confucius by some of his young Gros Venues, and he proved his
common origin. with white humanity by succumbing instantly to its spell. For the
rest of the evening his gold-bound goggles bent over the maddening squares as if
they were the problem of his race, set, according to its white brethren's
favorite arrangement, with thirteen facts, fourteen experiments, and fifteen
theories in hopeless reversion.
A visit from Bright Eyes, the eloquent young advocate of the Ponca, was a very
powerful stimulus to the girls, as showing them what one of their own race and
sex might become. After she left, one of the older girls said to me, with a
pretty, timid hesitancy, "Miss Bright Eyes-I wish I like that." Her own soft
bright eyes shone with a soul in them as she added: "When I came to here, I feel
bad all time; I want go home; I no want stay at Hampton. Now I want stay here. I
not want go home. I want learn more, then go home, teacher my people."
A few weeks after, on the visit of the chiefs from Dakota, this girl, at her own
urgent request, stood up before the whole conclave and the school, and with
flushed cheeks and downcast eyes told her people's. rulers what the school was
to her, and begged them to send all the children to learn the good road. Her
speech, which, in order to reach all the chiefs, had to be translated by two
interpreters, passing through English on the way, was listened to with
respectful attention.
The most important result of Bright Eyes's visit to the school was to rouse in
her own heart the desire to make use of her hold upon public sympathy for he
permanent benefit of her Indian sisters. With this desire she offered her
services to speak at the East in behalf of a project of some Northern friends of
the school to enlarge its work by erecting a building for Indian girls, to cost,
complete and furnished, $15,000. A beautiful site adjoining the school premises,
and now enclosed in them, was given as a generous send off by a lady friend. It
will give room for the training of at least fifty more Indian girls at Hampton,
thus effecting the desired balance of the sexes. The Secretary of the Interior
has signified his readiness to send them from the agencies with the same
appropriation as for the boys, of $150 per year apiece. There is every assurance
of their readiness now to come. It is for the friends of the Indians to decide
whether Hampton's work for them shall be thus rounded and established, and the
timid prayer be heard, "I wish I like that."
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Little Indian girl in her room |
Harness-Making Apprentices |
Tinner's Apprentice |
Carlisle, Pennsylvania, like
Hampton, Virginia, is classic ground in
American history. Under the shade of its
unbroken forests Benjamin Franklin met the
red men in council. A British military post
in the Revolution, and falling into the
hands of the Continentals, the Hessian -
built guard-house is still shown as once the
place of Andro's confinement, before his
greater disaster.
The last and greatest change of fortune,
which has filled the empty armories with
ploughshares and pruning-hooks, and the
soldiers' quarters with a government school
for Indian children-as if the spirit of the
earliest and sacredest of Indian treaties
still lingered in the groves of Penn--was
brought about through a bill introduced in
the winter of 1879 in the House of
Representatives, entitled "A bill to
increase educational privileges and
establish additional industrial, training
schools for the benefit of youth belonging
to such nomadic Indian tribes as have
educational treaty claims upon the United
States. "It provided for the utilization for
such school purposes of certain vacant
military posts and barracks as long as not
required for military occupation, and
authorized the detail of army officers by
the Secretary of War for service in such
schools, without extra pay, under direction
of the Secretary of the Interior.
The House Committee on Indian Affairs, in
favorably reporting upon this bill, urged
that the government had made treaty
stipulations specially providing for
education with nomadic tribes, including
about seventy-one thousand Indians, having
over twelve thousand children of school age;
that the treaties were made in 1868, and in
ten years less than one thousand children
had received schooling. It was further urged
that "the effort in this direction recently
undertaken and in successful progress at the
Industrial and Normal Institute of Hampton,
Virginia, furnishes as striking proof of the
natural aptitude and capacity of the rudest
savages of the plains for mechanical
scientific, and industrial education, when
removed from parental and tribal
surroundings and influences"; and that "the
very considerable number of agents,
teachers, missionaries, and others engaged
in educational work who have visited and
witnessed the methods of Hampton, join in
commending them as just what the Indian
needs, while the intercourse between the
youth at Hampton and their parents has
produced extraordinary interest and demand
for educational help from these tribes."
The importance of this measure was so
recognized that even in anticipation of
subsequent favorable action upon it by
Congress, with a wise cutting of red tape,
the "War Department turned over Carlisle
Barracks to the Interior, and Captain Pratt
was detailed to bring children from the
Northern agencies before the frosts came,
which would have delayed it another year.
The transfer of the post was effected on the
centennial anniversary of the battle of
White Plains, eliciting from Secretary
McCreary a felicitous remark upon the
coincidence which on such memorial day gave
up to Indian education a post for eighty
years used as a training school for cavalry
officers to make war chiefly upon Indians.
Taking with him Hampton's godspeed, and two
of his most advanced Dakota boys for
interpreters and "specimens," the captain
started for Dakota in September, 1879,
returning in a few weeks with eighty-four.
All but two of the St. Augustines from
Hampton also accompanied their captain to
Carlisle, to form a starting-point of
English speech and civilization. One of
these young men, a Kiowa, with a companion
who had been under instruction at the North
went on alone to Indian Territory in advance
of Captain Pratt, and by their own influence
they gathered forty-two children and youth
from their own agency for Carlisle. These,
with some more from other agencies in the
Territory, were brought by the captain to
the school and it opened with one hundred
and forty-seven children on the 1st of
November, 1879.
The President's next Message and the report
of the Secretary of the Interior again
commended to public attention the importance
of the -work at Hampton, with the new
efforts to which its "promising results" had
led at Carlisle and at Forest Grove, Oregon,
where arrangements were made for a similar
training at a white boarding-school of a
number of Indian boys and girls belonging to
tribes on the Pacific coast, under charge of
Captain Wilkinson, who is making it quite
successful under many difficulties.

A Class Room
Additions and changes from
time to time have brought the number at
Carlisle up to one hundred and ninety-six at
the present time, fifty-seven of whom are
girls. Besides the Sioux and St. Augustines,
there are in lesser numbers other Cheyenne,
Arrapaho, and Kiowa; also Comanche, Wichita,
Seminole, Pawnees, Keechi, Towaconie, Nez
Percés, and Ponca, from Indian Territory;
Menomonee from Wisconsin; Iowas, Sacs, and
Foxes from Nebraska; Pueblos from New
Mexico; Lipan from old Mexico; to which will
probably be added fifty Utes from Colorado,
the first of the tribe ever in a school.
Many of the number are children of chiefs or
head-men; among others, of White Eagle, head
chief of the Ponca; Black Crow, American
Horse, and White Thunder, noted chiefs of
the Sioux. The famous old chief Spotted Tail
had four boys there and a daughter, with two
more distant relatives, but, on his visit to
them, took umbrage at finding his half-breed
son-in-law no longer needed as interpreter,
and went off in a huff, with all his little
Spotted Tails behind him. For this hasty
action he was called to account, immediately
on his return, by his people, who could not
understand why, if Carlisle was a bad place,
he should not have brought their children
away too, and on hearing the other side of
the story from the chiefs who had
accompanied him, asked to have him deposed
for "double talking." One of the indignant
parents, with the mild name of Milk, in
writing upon the subject to Captain Pratt,
says, with some lactic acidity, "Spotted
Tail has been to the Great Father's house so
often that he has learned to tell lies and
deceive people." It is pleasant to add that
a judicious letting alone had the due
effect, and he has requested the
government's permission to send his children
back to Carlisle.
Many visitors go to Carlisle to see the
Indians. Some of them, it must be
acknowledged, are disappointed. After
alighting at the commandant's office, and
being courteously received by Captain Pratt
or one of his assistants, the spokesman of
the party asks politely if they may "first
look about by themselves a little." Cordial
permission given, they set forth, but in the
course of half an hour are back again with
clouded brows, and the appeal, "We thought
we might see some Indians round; can you
show us some?" A smile and a circular wave
of the hand emphasize the assurance that a
score or two of noble red men are within
easy eye-range at the moment. Following the
gesture with a glance over the green where
the boys and girls are passing, perhaps, to
their school-rooms, the shade of
unsatisfaction deepens, and they explain:
"Oh, but I mean real Indians. Haven't you
some real Indians-- in blankets, you know,
and feathers, and long hair?"
A little allowance must be made for
sentiment in human nature, and if these
easily disappointed visitors stay long
enough they may be gratified with an
occasional "real Indian" dance of a gentle
type, or without much trouble the well-named
maiden Pretty Day might be persuaded to
attire herself, as becomes a high-born
princess of the plains, in her cherished
dress of finest dark blue blanket,
embroidered deer-skin leggings, and
curiously netted cape adorned with three
hundred milk-white elk teeth, each pair of
them the price of a pony.
Aboriginal picturesqueness is certainly
sacrificed to a great extent in
civilization. One who is willing to
relinquish the idea, however, of a menagerie
of wild creatures kept for exhibition, will
not regret to find instead a school of
neatly dressed boys and girls, with bright
eyes and clean faces, as full of fun and
frolic as if they were the descendants of
the Puritans.
The barracks stand on a knoll half a mile
from the town. From the upper piazza of the
commandant's quarters the eye sweeps over a
beautiful landscape. Spurs of the Blue Ridge
circle it in front and rear, from five to
eight miles away, the old town lies down in
the hollow, green fields stretch between,
and the little "Tort Creek" winds its very
tortuous way round the post grounds and
through a grove of old trees. Beyond the
flag-staff in front of the house is the
parade-ground, where the boys drill and the
girls play. A pretty sight it is to see the
merry little crowd enjoying a game of ball,
or with heads up and toes trying to turn
out, taking off the boys' "setting-up
drill," with shouts of laughter, finishing
all up properly with the difficult
achievement of touching fingers to toes
without bending the knees.

Slate of Little Sioux boy after seven months' training at Carlisle.
Long brick buildings, ranged
in a hollow square `with double sides, are
variously occupied by schoolrooms and
quarters for students and teachers, offices,
dining room, kitchen, hospital, etc. The
large stables of the garrison have been, for
the most part, converted into workshops and
a gymnasium. A little wooden chapel has been
put up for the school, simply a long room,
well lighted and furnished with settees but
this has been all the building needed. So
many substantial edifices, in tolerable
order to start with, have been a great
advantage. This is especially noticeable in
the school building, two stories high like
the rest, the upper half of which affords
four school-rooms, each fifty feet by
twenty-four, and two recitation-rooms of
half the length. All are furnished with
comfortable desks, blackboards, and all the
conveniences of a well-ordered school. The
lower story, containing the same room,
allows for doubling the number of students,
which is the captain's desire.
A walk through these pleasant classrooms is
of great interest. Each contains from thirty
to forty pupils, under the constant care,
for the most part, of one teacher, who, as
may be imagined, hasher hands full to keep
all busy and quiet, but who does it,
somehow, to a remarkable degree. As at
Hampton, the great object is to teach
English, and then the rudiments of an
English education, and the methods employed
are similar.
The results possible can not be more fairly
shown than by a slate not fairly shown than
by a slate not gotten up for the occasion,
but filled with the day's work of one of the
pupils--not the best offered, but chosen
because it was the work of a little Sioux
boy of twelve or thirteen. who, seven months
and a half before, had never had any
schooling in any language, and did not know
a word of English, nor how to make a letter
or a figure. He evidently did know how to
make pictures, as most of his race do. The
blackboards of an Indian recitation-room are
usually rich in works of art illustrative of
the clay's doings, or memories of home life.
The industries, agricultural and mechanical,
are under, the charge of master-workmen; a
skilled farmer, carpenter, wagon-maker, and
blacksmith, harness maker, tinner,
shoemaker, baker, tailor, and printer. All
the boys not learning trades are required to
work in turn on the farm. Twelve acres of
arable land belong to the post, and twelve
more have been rented--two hundred could
well be used. The articles manufactured in
the shops are taken by government for the
agencies. Under this wise encouragement they
have already turned out wagons and farm
implements, dozens of sets of harness,
hundreds of dozens of tinware, and numbers
of pairs of shoes, besides doing all the
mending, and making all of the girls'
clothing and most of the boys' underwear.
The amount of students' work on these
varies. No-waste is allowed; the masterwork
men do the cutting out and planning for the
most part, but the apprentices are brought
forward as fast as possible, and the masters
say they are up to any apprentices. Indeed,
the enthusiastic master-tinsmith put a
challenge into a Carlisle paper, which was
not taken up, offering to back Roman Nose,
one of the St. Augustines, against any
apprentice with no longer practice, for $100
a side. One of the Young Sioux shoemakers
took his father's measure when he visited
the school, and sent him by mail, after he
went home, a pair of boots made entirely by
himself.
The two printer apprentices are practiced
chiefly upon. the monthly "organ" of the
school, the Eadle-Keatah-toh (Morning Star),
a very interesting little sheet. One of the
bays, however, Samuel Townsend, a Pawnee
from Indian Territory, prints a tiny paper,
the School News, of which he is both editor
and proprietor, writing his own editorials
and correcting his owls proof.
The girls' industrial room makes as good
showing as the boys'. Many have learned to
sew by hand, and some to run the
sewing-machine. Virginia, daughter of the
Kiowa chief Stumbling Bear, made a linen
shirt, with bosom, entirely by herself,
washed and ironed it herself, and sent it to
her father. Two Sioux girls have made calico
shirts for their fathers. Mending is very
neatly done. At Carlisle, as at Hampton, the
tender maidens sweeter industry with
sentiment, and carefully rummage the darning
basket for the stockings of the boys they
like the best.
The young St. Augustine from Hampton who
went to Indian Territory to collect pupils
for Carlisle, took wise advantage of the
opportunity to bring back a sweetheart for
himself. His naive account of the affair to
the captain makes a good companion piece to
the Hampton love-letter.
"Long time ago, in my home, Indian
Territory, I hunt and I fight. I not think
about the girls. Then you take us St.
Augustine. By-and-by I learn to talk
English. I try to do right. Everybody very
good to me. I try do what you say. But I not
think about the girls. Then I go Hampton.
There many good girls. I study. I learn to
work. But I not think about the girls. Then
I come Carlisle. I work hard; try to help
you. By-and-by you send me Indian Territory
for Indian boys and Indian girls. I go get
many fifteen. I see all my people, my old
friends. But I not think about the girls
there. But Laura, she think. She tell me she
be my wife. I bring her here, Carlisle. She
know English before. She study and sew. Now
Laura's father dead, since come here. Now I
think all the time, I think who take care of
Laura? I think, by-and-by I find place to
work near here; I work very hard. I take
care of Laura."
Besides this frank damsel, who "thinks" to
so much purpose, he brought with him a
bright little sister of his own, and several
brothers and sisters of the other St.
Augustines, all of whom are among the most
promising of the Carlisle pupils.
Carlisle, like Hampton, has met with much
sympathy from its neighbors. It is
illustrated, with other points, in an item
which appeared in a Carlisle paper during
the visit of the Sioux chiefs: "A few
mornings since we noticed one of the young
Indian men passing in the direction of the
post-office, and at his side a comely Indian
maiden. The day being warm, the young man
carried a huge umbrella to shield them from
the sun. Only a short distance in front of
them several Indian chiefs were stalking
along, wrapped in blankets, and bare-headed.
The contrast was so striking that it
attracted the attention of many persons on
the street. And the conclusion was
irresistibly forced upon all who noticed the
incident that the Indian school is proving a
great success."
The visit of the Sioux chiefs to Carlisle
was prolonged to eight or ten days, and,
with the exception of Spotted Tail's
uncomfortable episode, was pleasant and
profitable to all.

Cook and his Daughter Grace
Accompanying the party was
one Indian named Cook, who, not being a
chief, had not been invited to come at
government expense, so he came at his own
expense, all the way from Dakota, to see his
little girl at the Carlisle school. He was
greatly pleased with her surroundings and
progress, and the day after he arrived went
out into the town and bought her a white
dress, a pair of slippers, and a gold chain
and cross. Arrayed in these gifts, he took
his precious "Porcelain Face" out with him
to have their photographs taken to carry
home.
Both Hampton and Carlisle afford excellent
opportunity for study of race character. The
chief conclusion will be that Indian
children are, on the whole, very much like
other children, some bright and some stupid,
some goad and solve perverse, all
exceedingly human. The untamed shyness, so
much ill the way of their progress, seems to
be as marked in the half-breeds as in those
of full blood, unless they have been brought
up among white people. It wears off fastest
in the younger odes, in constant meeting
with strangers, and association with new
companions. A certain self-consciousness and
sensitive pride is left which is not a bad
point in the character. A quick sense of
humor is its correlative, perhaps, and both
may result from the trained and inherited
keenness of observation which appreciates
both the fitting and the incongruous.
The pupils at Carlisle and Hampton are in
constant receipt of letters from their
parents and friends, written some in picture
hieroglyphics, some in Sioux, and some,
through their interpreters, in English, but
all expressive of earnest desire for their
progress in school. Abort a hundred of theca
letters were sent to the Indian Department
by Captain Pratt, forty of which were
referred to the Senate in answer to Senator
Teller's resolution against compulsory
education for the Cheyenne. Indian
sentiments on education expressed by
themselves, and the real effect upon Indian
parents of sending their children to a white
man's school, no one need question who reads
the following specimens of these letters;
translated from the Sioux:
"Pine Ridge Agency, Dakota, April 15, 1850.
"My Dear Son,
I send my picture with this. You see that I
had my War Jacket on when taken, but I wear
white man's clothes, and am trying to live
and act like white men. Be a good boy. We
are proud of you, and will be more so when
you come back. All our people are building
houses and opening up little farms all over
the reservation. You may expect to see a big
change when you get back. Your mother and
all send love.
"Your affectionate father,
"Cloud Shield."
"Rosebud Agency, January 4, 1880
"My Dear Daughter,
Ever since you left ate I have worked hard,
and put up a good house, and am trying to be
civilized like the whites, so you will never
hear anything bad from me. When Captain
Pratt was here he came to my house, and
asked me to let yon go to school. I want you
to be a good girl and study. I have dropped
all the Indian ways, and am getting like a
white man, and don't do anything but what
the agent tells me. I listen to him. I have
always loved you, and it makes me very happy
to know that yon are learning. I get my
friend Big Star to write.
If you could read and write, I should be
very happy.
Your father,
Brave Bull
"Why do yon ask for moccasins? I sent you
there to be like a white girl, and wear
shoes."
A small Indian girl who wanted to exhibit
her knowledge of a good big English word,
announced that she had come East to be "cilyized."
I hope I have shown sufficiently that it is
the effort of Hampton and Carlisle not to
sillyize the Indian. Let us not, on the
other hand, sillyize ourselves. One great
lesson of the missionary work of fifty years
has been to work with nature and not against
nature; the next must be to be content with
natural results. We forget that we our
ourselves but the saved remnant of a race. I
can not do better on this point for both
schools than to quote from an address of
General Armstrong: " The question is most
commonly asked, Can Indians be taught? That
is not the question. Indian minds are quick;
their bodies are greater care than their
minds; their character is the chief concern
of their teachers. Education should be first
for the heart, then for the health, and last
for the mind, reversing the custom of
putting the mind before physique and
character. This is the Hampton idea of
education."
Indian Education at Hampton and
Carlisle
Notes About the Book:
Source: Indian Education at Hampton and Carlisle, by Helen Wilhelmina Ludlow,
1881, Harper's Magazine, April 1881.
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output.
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Indian Education at Hampton and Carlisle
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