368 Legacies of the Brafferton Indian School

Ben Franklin's World

10-10-2023 • 1 hr 3 mins

The Brafferton Indian School has a long and complicated legacy. Chartered with the College of William & Mary in 1693, the Brafferton Indian School’s purpose was to educate young Indigenous boys in the ways of English religion, language, and culture. The Brafferton performed this work for more than 70 years, between the arrival of its first students in 1702 and when the last documented student left the school in 1778.

This second episode in our 2-episode series about the Brafferton Indian School will focus on the legacy of the Brafferton Indian School and how it and other colonial-era Indian Schools established models for the schools the United States government and religious institutions established during the Indian Boarding School Era.

As one of the architects of these later Boarding Schools, Richard Henry Pratt, stated, the purpose of these boarding schools was to “kill the Indian and save the man.” Pratt meant that the United States government desired to assimilate and fully Americanize Indigenous children so there would be no more Native Americans.

But Indigenous peoples are resilient, and they have resisted American attempts to extinguish their cultures. So we’ll also hear from three tribal citizens in Virginia who are working in different ways to reawaken long-dormant aspects of their Indigenous cultures.

Show Notes: https://www.benfranklinsworld.com/368



Sponsor Links


Complementary Episodes

Series Music

Listen!


Helpful Links

You Might Like

History Daily
History Daily
Airship | Noiser | Wondery
The Ancients
The Ancients
History Hit
Dark History
Dark History
Audioboom Studios
The Rest Is History
The Rest Is History
Goalhanger Podcasts
Lore
Lore
Aaron Mahnke
History Extra podcast
History Extra podcast
Immediate Media
Gone Medieval
Gone Medieval
History Hit
Tides of History
Tides of History
Wondery / Patrick Wyman
BADLANDS
BADLANDS
Double Elvis