The Golden West
B/W w/ narration 1950 The Golden West - A Navajo Indian reservation and gold miners in the old west. - Mountains with snow, Navajo Indians on horses, ride down hill, attack cowboys, herdsmen, steal horses, drive them through mountain pass, covered wagon caravan, western town, gold miners, sluice with water, gold assayer, paying money, saloon party, dancing, robbers ambush stagecoach, riders through town, ghost town, modern Navajo on horse, Window Rock Arizona Indian reservation, Indian officials, looking at map, pueblo school house, Indian children in school with books, child doing math, girl at sewing machine, blacksmiths, hair cutting, sand painting medicine men, small town main street in west, Virginia City, Nevada, gold mining with heavy equipment, water cannons, blasting, large chains chew off ore, smelting molten metal, scientists searching for gold, lone prospector gold miner with pack mule, using pickaxe, smoking pipe, discovers gold nugget, Sierra mountains Notes: Window Rock is the administrative Capitol and administrative center of the Navajo Nation, getting its name from the hole in the 200-foot high sandstone hill (Window Rock) located there. Located about 27 miles northwest of Gallup, N.M., and about 6 miles southeast of Fort Defiance, Arizona, it is just across the New Mexico-Arizona state line, on the Arizona side, in Apache County. Window Rock is located at Latitude: 35o, 40', 50"" N, and Longitude: 109o, 3', 7"" W, and has a 1980 census of 2230 residents. Window Rock contains the Navajo Nation Council House, the Navajo Nation Museum, and Navajo Tribal Zoo (until its closure in 1999), and Window Rock Fairgrounds where the Navajo Nation Fair (Widow Rock Fair) is annually held. Until 1936, the Window Rock area was simply one of the scenic wonders of Navajo land, until the Commissioners of Indian Affairs at that time, John Collier, selected the site for the planned Navajo Center Agency. In 1936, the administrative buildings the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Navajo Tribe, and Public Health Service were constructed of russet-colored sandstone, quarried from the local sandstone, were completed. These were laid out on curved lanes and well spaced. Later, a Navajo Tribal Council House would be built in Window Rock.
INDIAN LOGOS CONTROVERSY 1993
REPORTER JODI HUISENTRUIT TELLS US ABOUT LONG PRAIRIE HIGH SCHOOL IN MINNESOTA CHANGING ITS TEAL MASCOT NAME FROM THE INDIANS AS MANY SCHOOLS IN THE NATION ARE GETTING AWAY FROM NATIVE AMERICAN THEMED MASCOTS.
INDIAN SCHOOL FUNDING INVESTIGATION
U.S. Indian school's fundraising letters sent to millions signed by fictitious kids. ST JOSEPH'S INDIAN SCHOOL POVERTY PORN
News Clip: Indian Creek Elementary School Pig Day
Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story.
1955 Nairobi Kenya
Nairobi, Kenya - city street - Byramjee Street - Renamed Uyoma Street - Indian Girls School - East Africa
TREETOP SCHOOL
Titles read: "Treetop School". <br/> <br/>Hampstead, London. <br/> <br/>At King Alfred's School we see M/S of schoolboys stretching on a games field. Schoolchildren paint pictures at outdoor tables. Boys run and jump over a horse (box). Two girls play on a swing. Children play pirates and American Indians in costume (that's what it looks like!). Children climb up a ladder leading up a tree and read books up there at tables in a treehouse. The children climb down the tree and walk off. <br/> <br/>Good footage of progressive school.
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School students gather in honor of Princess Elizabeth visit to Kenya in 1952
Various schools providing education to North American Native American Indian students in the United States.
U.S. Federal provisions for the education of the North American Indians in the United States during the Great Depression era. Native American Indian students come out of Chemawa Indian School boarding school in Oregon. An elementary school in Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota. Indian children on the grounds of Shiprock Reservation in New Mexico. Animated map depicts Indian schools in the United States. Cloth lines on the grounds of a school. A man walks out of a government school building. Location: United States USA. Date: 1933.
NEWSREELS
WALKER ON INDIAN PROLEMS. ARIZONA. 6/19/29 C.L. WALKER SURROUNDED BY GROUP OF NAVAJO NATIVE AMERICAN INDIANS. WITH INDIAN CHILDREN FROM ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO SCHOOL (WESTERN NAVAHO SCHOOL) & HASKEL INSTITUTE, KANSAS SCHOOL. WALKER CONTRASTS TRADITIONAL LIVES VS. GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS. MENTIONS THAT THEY ARE DECREASING IN POPULATION. SOCIOLOGY, EDUCATION.
Indian Residential School
Interior, day; Series of shots showing children attending music class at Mackay Residential School for Indigenous children.
INDIAN WOMEN AT SCHOOL
Series of MS in Indian school room with female teacher lecturing at the blackboard and students outside studying in groups.
AFP-149Z 16mm Negative 35mm Nitrate Dupe, WRS# 258-11 VTM-149Z Beta SP
INDIANS
Cuomo Income Tax; 3/3/93
School children, civic meeting, Indian headress/tea bag flyer
Fish searching for food
Schools of fish, including tuna (Thunnini sp.) and sergeant majors (Abudefduf saxatilis), swimming in search of food. Filmed in the Indian Ocean.
INDIAN SCHOOL / AMERICAN INDIAN
OC AND CP / OC 200 SOF MAG AND OPT A ROLL FTG OF INDIAN SCHOOL. SU. CS: PETER JENNINGS. PAN OF INDIAN SCHOOL. CHIDREN LEAVING SCHOOL. VS CLASSROOM. SU JENNINGS IN FACTORY WHERE INDIANS PACK LITTLE PLASTIC DOLLS IN CARDBOARD BOXES.
High School Teacher and Students in a School Library
An Indigenous Navajo high school teacher with a group of students in a school library.
85284 1958 NAVAJO INDIANS DOCUMENTARY "BETWEEN TWO WORLDS" NATIVE AMERICANS
This 1958 color film shows the Navajo Nation of the 1960s, with a postscript from the 1970s (:13). It’s “A Line on America” film presentation of “A People Between Two Worlds” (:50), produced by Francis and Helen Line. This largest Indian tribe lives on a reservation mostly in Arizona into New Mexico, Utah, and Colorado (1:18). Sheep provides resources and an income (1:50-2:08). Most of the 15 million acres are too barren, mountainous, or heavily forested (2:10-2:34). Only 4 acres in 1,000 have enough moisture for crops (2:41). Life revolves around the hogan home and ancient customs (2:48-3:42). Trading posts provide a place to barter (3:43-4:00), including pawning turquoise jewelry, worn regardless of the task (4:01-4:22). A baby is shown on a cradleboard (4:25-4:34). In spring, wind creates sandstorms (5:14-5:30). In summer, flash flooding destroys roads and bridges (5:32-5:49). The roads are hard on buckboard wheels (6:11). A woman weaves a colorful patterned rug (6:36-7:04). New resources include oil pumps, natural gas wells, and uranium mines. Processing plants built at the edge of the reservation provide jobs and royalty payments (7:05-8:15). Students attend school (8:20-8:30). Report cards are often signed by a parent’s thumbprint (8:30-8:40). In response, the US government built elementary (up to 6th grade) boarding schools where children live for 9 months, such as at Shiprock (8:43-9:40). The government also built experimental trailer schools on the reservation with non-Navajo teachers (9:50-11:20). A bathroom trailer provides new experiences of running water, flush toilets, and toothbrushes (11:31-11:50). Before class, a breakfast of cold cow’s milk and biscuits is served (11:53-12:22); a happy lamb is bottle-fed (12:26-12:37); and the Pledge of Allegiance is given (12:40-12:52). The school teaches about the US government; health; prayer before a lunch that uses knives and forks; and gives out vitamins (12:53-13:35). They learn to read, speak, and sing English (13:36-13:54). A member of the Navajo Tribal Council visits the school, driving what may be a 1955 GMC Suburban carrier pickup truck (13:57-14:07). He talks to the classroom in Navajo, explaining the coming changes (14:09-14:20). An old Navajo woman is shown (14:45). The Postscript and Forecast (16:52) shows power lines across the desert providing electricity (16:59-17:12). Other changes include coin-operated laundries (17:20), shopping center supermarkets (17:27), a 1974 Navajo newspaper (17:33), water towers (17:39), and factories (17:44). The film predicts a population of 200,000 Navajos by the 1980s (341,128 at the 2015 census). The traditional hogan house stands in contrast to modern frame structures in housing communities (18:1-18:42). Roads are being paved and interstate highways built (18:51-19:00). The Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River provides new water resources via Lake Powell (19:23). Rainbow Natural Bridge and others (19:33-1944) provide tourist income. The Great Seal of the Navajo Tribe represents its new tribal government, often called the Navajo Nation (19:47-20:00). Strip mining for coal and power plant pollution bring issues (20:15-20:45). Public schools have been built, including the Rough Rock Demonstration School and a community college, both run by the Navajo (20:48-21:39). <p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
A group of middle and high school kids walking through school corridor
Young indigenous Navajo group of middle and high school kids walking through school corridor
INDIAN SCHOOL / AMERICAN INDIAN
OC AND CP / 600 SIL C ROLL CONTINUATION OF FTG OF INDIAN SCHOOL. EXT ESTAB SHOTS OF INDIAN SCHOOL AND CHURCH. MS SIGN READING: ST LABRE INDIAN SCHOOL. MS DOG. VS BLACK MAN WATCHING TELEVISION (TV) IN A LIVING ROOM. VS YOUNG INDIAN CHILDREN WALKING IN SCHOOL YARD. VS IN SCHOOL CAFETERIA DURING LUNCH. MS BARN AND SILO, A GROUP OF BOYS ENTER THE BARN. VS IN CLASSROOMS AND LIBRARY. VS YELLOW SCHOOL BUSES LINED UP OUTSIDE SCHOOL, CHILDREN BOARDING VS POTTERY WORKSHOP. CU BULLETIN BOARDS. VS TEENAGERS AT INTV W/ PETER JENNINGS. VS FOOD LINE IN CAFETERIA, IN DOLL FACTORY. CU PILES OF PLASTIC DOLLS.
SJT FEUILLETON - EPISODE 2 - AGROTOURISME (Clothed)
CHOCTAW SUCCESS #3
00:00:00:00 [Choctaw Reservation]--VS Choctaw Artifacts/ VS Choctaw Central High School, Football Team/ VS Choctaw Health Center (0:00)/
1980s Pasadena Rose Parade
Pasadena - California - Tournament of Roses - Rose Parade - woman dressed like the queen with a miniature horse or pony - float of indigenous people in canoes - Native Americans - American Indians - St. Louis High School Crusader Band from Honolulu Hawaii - marching band - dragon float - marry-go-around float
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Bob Feller pitching for Cleveland Indians against Chicago White Sox