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August 21, 2024

Take Carlisle Boulevard to Indian School Road. At 12th and Indian School, where there's now a McDonalds, two convenience stores, and a hotel, look around. The Presbyterian-founded Albuquerque Indian School (AIS) was here. Walk north and west to Menaul Street to a little park. Now known as the AIS burial ground, its use was unacknowledged until city workers installing sprinklers in 1973 discovered the remains of children.

These names on the land in New Mexico return inexorably to the national project to "civilize the Indian," initiated at the federal level in Carlisle...

August 21, 2024
Seal of the Commission on Ecumenical Mission and Relations, 1961. [Pearl ID: islandora:372046].

The United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. (UPCUSA) Commission on Ecumenical Mission and Relations (COEMAR) Records have been processed as RG 547, and the guide to the records is now available:...

July 29, 2024
CIVIL RIGHTS SUPPORTERS EXPRESS VICTORY HOPES WASHINGTON, D.C. [Pearl ID: islandora:348444]

July 2, 2024 was the 60th anniversary of the passing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The culmination of decades of Black activism and public pressure, in defiance of political resistance and racist violence, the 1964 bill was the most impactful legislation for human and civil rights in the United States since Reconstruction.

The Religious News Service was not...

July 24, 2024
The Fundamentals: A Testimony, "Compliments of Two Christian Laymen," n.d. Image No. 4656.

By Kazimierz Bem [1]

--

Thanks to excellent research by Bradley Longfield (and others) the Fundamentalist-Modernist struggle among the Presbyterians is well known. In contrast, the Congregationalists are often portrayed as the more liberal, modernist sister...

July 22, 2024
Tucson Indian Training School students ready to leave for a basketball game off campus, Spring 1937. Pearl ID: islandora:362723

--by Elaine Shilstut, Nick Skaggs, and Allison Davis

In 1906, an 8-year-old Akimel O'odham (Pima) student named Annie Moore enrolled at the Tucson Indian Training School. “We were not allowed to speak the Pima tongue at school,” Moore would recall almost 70 years later...

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