2 edition of Shingwauk indian residential school found in the catalog.
Shingwauk indian residential school
Rev. Cannon F.W Colloton
Published
1944
in Owen Sound, Ont
.
Written in English
Edition Notes
Statement | by Rev. Cannon F.W. Colloton. |
The Physical Object | |
---|---|
Pagination | 4 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. |
Number of Pages | 28 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL22119930M |
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The Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre (SRSC) at Algoma University, is a joint initiative with the Children of Shingwauk Alumni Association. The history and activities associated with the Shingwauk and Wawanosh Indian Residential Schools (), which were located on what is now the university campus are being gathered under the auspices.
New Shingwauk Indian Residential School, designed for pupils, opens October 3rd. It is situated up on the hillside, immediately behind the old Shingwauk Home, soon to be razed. s Residential students offered secondary education in local public high schools. With the growing strength of minority voices in recent decades has come much impassioned discussion of residential schools, the institutions where attendance by Native children was compulsory as recently as the s.
Former students have come forward in increasing numbers to describe the psychological and physical abuse they suffered in these schools, and many. In Shingwauk's Vision, he has autopsied the barely cooled corpse of the native residential school system. With clinical precision he has examined every aspect of a wrong-headed and catastrophic experiment in social engineering that lasted for three-and-a-half centuries before the federal government finally stepped in and pulled the plug in Cited by: Life at the Shingwauk Home: an Indian Residential School.
What began as a scattering of modest buildings on acres of land acquired in for ‘Indian Education’ became an ever-expanding industrial school complex and home to hundreds of Indigenous children. Shingwauk Letter Book by George Ley King.
Publication date Usage Public Domain Mark funding, funding problems, government contacts, government funding, government policy, Indian Agents, Indian Residential School System, Indigenous communities, Indigenous culture, missionary work, public school system, runaway students.
Augustine Shingwauk. In his Journal ofAugustine Shingwauk tells how in the early s his father Chief Shingwauk, after calling a council, led a delegation to York, Toronto to petition Lt.
Governor John Colborne () and Bishop Charles Stewart () to support ongoing missionary work at Garden River.