Native American Boarding School Policy

Patriotic Pageantry and Militarized regimen in Indian Schools During the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century

Authors

  • Diana Escobedo CSUDH

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46787/tthr.v11i1.2576

Keywords:

Native American Boarding Schools Catholic Indian Schools

Abstract

This study examines how anti-Catholic sentiment, and nativist views during the nineteenth century influenced Progressive policy makers during the Native American boarding school era to impose a militarized and patriotic system of education onto Native children. In an attempt to prove their loyalty to the United States, Catholic church policy makers adopted the federal government’s model of educating Native Children. This system unintentionally hurt the Native population because Catholic Priests and Nuns shifted their philosophy of respecting Native values to imposing patriotic values onto Native children. The federal government’s role in the boarding school era often overshadows the role of religious denominations, specifically the influence of Catholic Indian schools. The point of this study is to examine and recognize how the social environment in the U.S. during the nineteenth century influenced Native American policy and gives anyone interested in the boarding school era a more nuanced understanding as to why Progressives sought to assimilate Native children into the American mainstream.

Published

2021-10-20

How to Cite

Escobedo, D. (2021). Native American Boarding School Policy: Patriotic Pageantry and Militarized regimen in Indian Schools During the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century. The Toro Historical Review, 11(1), 1–21. https://doi.org/10.46787/tthr.v11i1.2576