Fort Mohave Industrial School.
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Fort Mohave Industrial School.
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Fort Mohave Industrial School.
Fort Mohave Indian School.
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Fort Mohave Indian School.
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Following the Civil War, proponents of "cultural equality" championed the creation of so-called Indian schools. At first the schools were placed near reservations, but cultural assimilation was typically unsuccessful. Later schools became boarding schools to which Native American parents were forced to send their children for an education that often amounted to cultural reprogramming. In 1879, the Carlisle Indian School opened in Pennsylvania to serve as the prototype for off-reservation industrial schools. The Fort Mohave School in Arizona was one such school. In 1889, President Harrison selected Thomas J. Morgan to oversee the reformulation of Indian education policy as his new Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Morgan believed that the American public school system had succeeded in absorbing foreign immigrants into the mainstream of American life and saw no reason why the same approach would not work for Native Americans. Under Morgan Congress allocated funds to establish the Fort Mohave Industrial School in 1890 to serve the Walapai and Mohave Indians. "Situated on a granite bluff on the east bank of the Colorado River near the head of the Mojave Valley..." the fort was formally turned over to Morgan's choice for school superintendent, Samuel M. McCowan. An active Republican and experienced educator, McCowan oversaw the opening of the school and remained its supervisor for six years until he moved to the nearby Phoenix Indian School in 1896. Off-reservation Indian boarding schools came under increasing attack by progressives beginning in 1902 when the last such schools were built. Protest continued to build over two decades, and the schools were soon decried by officials, who preferred the expansion of day schools and on-site schools in reservations. It was under their authority that the Fort Mohave Industrial School closed in 1931.
Historical note: Fort Mohave Indian School was established in 1890 in northern Arizona on the Colorado River at old Fort Mojave military post. The post was established in 1858 to protect immigrants and assist in the crossing of the Colorado River. The school was established when the military post closed. It consisted of 24 buildings including dormitories, dining room, kitchen, classrooms, and staff housing. It operated until 1932.
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Boarding schools
Havasupai Indians
Hualapai Indians
Indians of North America
Indians, Treatment of
Mohave Indians
School superintendents
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Arizona
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