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Goodland Academy is a boarding school located in Choctaw County, Oklahoma, 3 miles (4.8 km) southwest of Hugo in southeastern Oklahoma, U.S.. Founded in 1848 as a Presbyterian mission, it is the oldest private boarding school in Oklahoma still in operation. [1]
Jones Academy - Boarding school for grades 1-6, dormitory only for grades 7-12; Oklahoma School for the Blind; Oklahoma School for the Deaf ; Oklahoma School of Science and Mathematics [3] (Oklahoma City) Riverside Indian School; Sequoyah High School (near Tahlequah)
The school is located in Park Hill, Oklahoma, with a Tahlequah post office address, [5] [6] and is a Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) grant school operated by the Cherokee Nation. Sequoyah is one of two boarding high schools for Native Americans in Oklahoma. [ 7 ]
Riverside Indian School is a Native American boarding school near Anadarko, Oklahoma. Riverside first opened its doors to Native American students in 1875 and is still open to Native American students today. Riverside Indian School is an intertribal school, meaning multiple tribes attend the school.
Jones Academy is a Native American boarding school and dormitory for students in grades 1–12 in unincorporated Pittsburg County, Oklahoma, [1] along Oklahoma State Highway 270, near Hartsthorne. [2] It is operated by the Choctaw Nation and is affiliated with the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE).
Pages in category "Boarding schools in Oklahoma" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. F.
A Marquette University scholar's research for the Oklahoma Catholic Church's Native Schools Project will be published in a forthcoming new book.
Oak Hill, Hen House. Oak Hill was developed to provide training in farming and domestic trades, and to teach Christianity to the former Choctaw slave children. [3] According to the school's founders, "[These young people] are transplanted for a time, where they may receive Bible instruction, industrial training and a foretaste of the privileges of an enlightened christian civilization". [4]