https://omeka.dlcs-ida.org/s/ida/page/home
Historians, scholars, and readers with an interest in Native American
history may want to check out the Indigenous Digital Archive (IDA).
Launched in 2017, this ongoing project enables visitors to "explore the
history of US government Indian boarding schools in the 19th and 20th
centuries." Also known as residential schools, these government-run
boarding schools were created to forcibly assimilate young Native
Americans into mainstream American culture by separating them from their
own traditions, cultural practices, and languages. The archive provides
access to more than 500,000 primary source documents related to these
schools, including letters, school records, yearbooks, and more. Readers
can browse the IDA by categories such as school names, tribes, themes,
and series, and they can also search the collections by keyword.
Directed by archivist Dr. Anna Naruta-Moya, the IDA is a collaboration
between the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture, the New Mexico State
Library's Tribal Libraries Program, and the Indian Pueblo Cultural
Center. It is supported by funding from the Institute of Museum and
Library Services and from the Knight Foundation.
via https://scout.wisc.edu/archives/r51002/the_indigenous_digital_archive
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