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STEPHAN ā Nestled amongst miles of prairie on the northern part of the Crow Creek Reservation in central South °®¶¹app sits a remnant of a dark period in American history.
Disheveled, abandoned buildings ā dormitories and churchesĀ ā that once housed hundreds of children each year now lie crumbling, awaiting demolition.
In mid-November 2023, Crow Creek Sioux Tribe Chairman Peter Lengkeek and several others stood at the site of a former Catholic boarding school, the Immaculate Conception Mission, digging around in the earth searching for the location of a main water line break, trying to find the shut-off point.Ā
Lengkeek had the idea to try and find the original blueprint for the nearly 74-year-old waterline. Searching through the blueprint records, a small piece of paper sticking out of a pile caught their attention. The paper, a hand-drawn schematic of the waterline and street, identified something strange ā a gravesite.Ā
The map was from the early 1900s, during the early years of the school, and on the left-hand corner, ever so lightly, someone had written the word āgraveyard.ā In 1900, the school received utilities identified as āwater worksā and a gasoline engine, which may be when the map was created.
āNo one had noticed it before,ā Lengkeek said. āAt first we thought these must be the wrong plans because our cemetery is across campusā¦ but it all lined up.ā
Later, a member of the tribeās historic preservation office visited the site and walked around in a clockwise circle. Odell āMuggsā St. John, Lengkeeks first cousin, told Lengkeek to grab some utility flags lying around from the waterline break and whenever St. John would stop, Lengkeek was to place a flag where he stood.Ā
āMuggs has a gift,ā Lengkeek said. āHeās able to heal children and we rely on him to fix things for us. We rely on him to find sacred places like graves, altars, those kinds of things.āĀ
When they finished the two men stepped back and looked at the site. The flags were lined up perfectly, 6-foot rows, 8 feet apart.
āWe knew right then and there that these were graves,ā Lengkeek said.Ā
Tribe members later found a photo depicting 38 little white crosses, matching what Lenkeekās cousin had found and confirming suspicions of a hidden gravesite separate from the school cemetery.
Indigenous children from across the United States came to the school, like other boarding schools, seeking an education. But many faced abuse and neglect, and all were forced to give up their culture and heritage in favor of an education guided by the partnership between the Catholic Church and Bureau of Indian Affairs.Ā
These 38 graves are likely those of children who attended the school during its nearly 100-year run in the Stephan community on the Crow Creek Reservation in central South °®¶¹app, Tribe members said.
From 1887 to 1975, more than 1,000 children were taken, many by force, to the Immaculate Conception Boarding School. While many students came from the Crow Creek and Lower Brule Sioux Tribes, children were taken from tribes across South °®¶¹app and even as far as Wisconsin, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, North °®¶¹app, Nebraska and Iowa.
This was part of a larger initiative to assimilate Indigenous children into white, American culture. The Bureau of Indian Affairs allowed Christian missionaries to help spread efforts out into the United States, establishing the Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions.Ā
A time of turmoil and expansionĀ
Around 1880, Chief Drifting Goose, leader of a band of lower Yanktoni °®¶¹app people, reached out to the āblack robeā missionaries to try and establish a school on the Crow Creek Reservation, much like Chief Red Cloud did in creating the Holy Rosary Mission on Pine Ridge.Ā
Drifting Goose and famous missionary Father Pierre-Jean De Smet met along the banks of the Missouri River and formulated a plan to create a Catholic Mission School on some of Drifting Gooseās land in the northern part of the reservation.Ā
Thus, Immaculate Conception was born ā the name was chosen by a wealthy donor named Katherine Drexel who supplied $20,000, roughly equivalent toy $660,000 today, in memory of her mother.Ā
Initially, Immaculate Conception was to receive the equivalent of about $850 in todayās money per Lower Burle child boarding at the school and $1,600 per Crow Creek child from the government. With time, the school began accepting children from other tribes in the United States, despite not receiving additional compensation for it. The amount grew over time, as did the schoolās attendance, beyond maximum capacity.Ā
In 1929, financial records indicate the school was ordered to build an addition as constant overcrowding was causing health and safety concerns for children. In some school records, children are noted as having to share single beds with each other due to overcrowding.
What originally began as an elementary school in 1887 soon grew into a full K-12 facility, with two students, Aurelia LaRoche and Martina LaFraomboise, graduating in 1938 after spending their entire education careers at the school.Ā
Throughout the school's history, illness spread rapidly in the schoolās overcrowded conditions ā in 1957, nearly all of the student and staff populations were infected with the flu.
The school frequently ran out of food and needed to supplement from wherever workers could find supplies. The clothing sent by the government for students, brown heavy suits and brown brogan shoes, was usually too small.Ā
Everything at the mission was āexceedingly primitive,ā a book on the schoolās history by former nun Sister Marmion Maiers said.
Aside from illness, the school was set on fire six different times (only burning down twice) and was destroyed by a tornado twice. The second tornado in 1938 is noted to have ātorn up the cemeteryā but it isnāt clear which one, and injured 29 people. Extreme cold led to the deaths of some staff members, most notably one nun in the early years of the school who was unable to find her way back inside during a blizzard.Ā
Marquette University in Milwaukee hosts a majority of records pertaining to the Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions. Amy Cooper Cary, head of the Marquette Archival Collections and Institutional Repository, said the university could not provide enrollment information that would contain private information such as student names and blood quantum, but was able to provide microfilm from the school.Ā
The Marquette website contains digitized correspondence letters between the mission and the Bureau of Indian Affairs from 1926-1932, excluding 1929, which was recently removed. These documents provide a glimpse into life at the school, including multiple strange incidents.
Records from 1928 feature correspondence regarding a 4-year-old Hunkpati °®¶¹app boy named Clarence Little Eagle who was seemingly taken by the mission from his mother to a Sioux Falls orphanage, following a request for help his mother made with the mission. The childās mother and a mission priest fought for his return, but subsequent financial records make no mention of Little Eagleās whereabouts.Ā
In later years, financial documents contained letters from multiple community members calling for a mission doctor to be removed from the reservation over concerns of racism and malpractice, specifically that the doctor ātreated Indians like dogs.āĀ
The mission also seemingly took in children under the age of 7 at random. Per its contract with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the school was only meant to house children ages 7 and up.Ā
Life in Stephan
The 1950s were a turbulent time for the Mandan Hidatsa Arikara Nation in North °®¶¹app. The creation of the Garrison Dam led to a major flood in 1953, consuming a quarter of the reservation and ruining homes, the tribal office and the hospital.
Susan Paulsonās family, like many other MHA families, made the tough decision to send their children off to boarding schools in South °®¶¹app along the Missouri River.Ā
āThey (the U.S. government) made life so difficult that people thought, āWell, this way theyāll be going to a place where theyāll be fed,āā Paulson said.
In 1957, Paulson and her cousins traveled over 400 miles south to South °®¶¹app. Her cousins enrolled at St. Josephās Indian School in Chamberlain and Paulson enrolled 35 miles north at Immaculate Conception.
For many students, life at the school was completely different than life in the dormitories. While the school provided a good education, the dorms were a place of work, fear and physical abuse.Ā
āI learned a lot, and I had good grades, we had good teachers, and nuns were over there, you know. But it was dorm life that was terrible,ā said Roberta āKay Birdā Crows Breast, a Mandan Hidatsa Arikara elder who attended the school starting in 1963. āWhen we went back to the dorm, all we did was work, all we did was work.ā
Zachary King, of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, said the manual labor and abuse at the schools led to his mother Alta Marie Bruce experiencing lifelong back problems.Ā
Bruce, also a citizen of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, was sent 400 miles from her reservation in northern North °®¶¹app to Stephan, where she attended high school until her graduation in 1971.Ā
āWhen I was a kid I remember her talking about having to clean the bathrooms, scrubbing the floors down on her hands and knees, and one time she was kicked in the back (by a nun) really hard,ā King said. āThat lingered on and in her old age she really struggled with arthritis in her hands from being hit with rulers so much.ā
Paulson, now 72, was around 7 years old when she enrolled in 1958. At the school, she and around 100 girls her age lived in the dorms with one nun, called a matron, responsible for their care.Ā
A free spirit, Paulson has always moved to the beat of her own drum, something she said may have bothered the nuns.Ā
One of the nuns, Sister Damien, began locking Paulson in a storage room alone during mealtime, occasionally leaving her there until 2 or 3 in the morning.Ā
āWhen they punished her they really went overboard,ā Crows Breast, 71, said.Ā
Crows Breast, an elder from the three affiliated tribes, came to Immaculate Conception in 1963 seeking reprieve from the rampant racism sheād experienced at the public schools in Parshall, N.D., a town on Fort Berthold Reservation with a significant non-Native population.
āThe racism was horrible, they made fun of Indians, and if they brushed past us theyād have to āwipeā us off of them,ā Crows Breast said.Ā
But at Immaculate Conception, Crows Breast witnessed abuse and neglect perpetrated on Indigenous children, including Paulson, by mission nuns.
Paulson and Crows Breast would go on to form a lifelong friendship.Ā
āA lot of people have no memories (of the school), but Kay Bird, she helps me to remember the details,ā Paulson said.Ā
The two women recounted hearing stories of āthe belt line,ā where male students were forced to punish each other. Boys would be lined up in rows of two and the boy being punished would run through the line as both sides hit him with belts.Ā
āI never witnessed it but I heard of it,ā Paulson said. āThey would talk about it in whispers.āĀ
Paulson remembered seeing a little boy from Mandaree, a community on her home Fort Berthold Reservation, who was bullied for sores on his face.Ā
A nun's treatment of Paulson eventually escalated into physical violence.Ā
When she was 9, Paulson and a few other students decided to try to run away from the school. It was winter, bitterly cold on the Great Plains, but the girls were determined to escape the abuse theyād been living in.Ā
Dressed in brown denim dresses with big clunky shoes and brown stockings, the girls made a break for it, but it wouldnāt be long before they realized their goal was unattainable.Ā
Paulson was over 400 miles away from home and one of her fellow runaways was 740 miles away from Chicago, from where sheād been sent. With no hats, gloves or winter clothes and no way out, the girls turned back.Ā
āWe were so far away from home it wasnāt even funny,ā Paulson said. āIf we didnāt turn back, weād probably have been frozen kids lying on the prairie somewhere; they wouldnāt have found us until spring.ā
When they came back, the girls were beaten and reprimanded for trying to escape.Ā
For a while, life went back to the way it had been. Paulson was responsible for laundering student bedding, and had several other chores around the school.Ā
One day in 1964, when Paulson was 13, she was walking down the stairs when Damien jumped on top of her in front of Paulsonās friend, Crows Breast. Damien attacked Paulson, and Paulson fought back.
Following the fight, Paulson was expelled from the school after standing up to Damien, who had been abusing her for seven years. After Paulson left, Crows Breast remained at the school, coming back every year for the friends sheād made.
āMy mom asked me why I didnāt say anything to her about how bad it was, but I went back for my friends,ā she said. āWe became like family.ā
Many students never came home, and their stories and names are yet to be revealed to tribal leaders whoāve begun the search for students.Ā
A broader struggle to identify graves
From 1872 until the present day, over 32 Indian Boarding Schools have operated across South °®¶¹app, bringing students from across the country for an assimilative education. Most are closed, but a mix of tribal, religious and federal-controlled Indian boarding school facilities remain around South °®¶¹app including MaČpĆya LĆŗta (formerly Holy Rosary Mission), Flandreau Indian School, St. Josephās Indian School, Crow Creek Tribal Schools and the Pierre Learning Center.
So far only roughly 50 graves have been identified in the state, though this number is expected to change as more past and present schools begin their searches.Ā
In 2008, Canada established the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which operated until 2015, and was organized by the parties of the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement.
The search for truth and healing picked up steam in 2021 when more than 215 childrenās graves were discovered in Canada at the Kamloops Indian School, sparking an international trend of grave searches and wider education on the existence of boarding schools in Canada and the United States.Ā
Around this time, Zachary King said his mother, Alta Marie Bruce, began speaking to him and his siblings about what sheād experienced at Immaculate Conception.Ā
āPeople just didnāt talk about it,ā King said. āThere were people around here that had a good experience, and I think thatās why maybe my mom didnāt talk about it as much.ā
King said he felt his mom, who passed away in 2020, was afraid to speak about what happened to her because of the positive experiences she heard from others.Ā
āSome of the people that live around here, theyāve got big families, around 13 kids, and sometimes they werenāt able to feed them. So going to a place (like a boarding school) with three meals a day was huge,ā King said.Ā
The search for graves continued to spread, reaching South °®¶¹app. Schools such as MaČpĆya LĆŗta and the former Rapid City Indian School have begun searching for and identifying graves. And while the Rapid City search has made great progress, work at the Immaculate Conception school is just starting.Ā
For tribal leaders, the search for answers is complicated. The Immaculate Conception church is no longer in operation and the Sioux Falls Diocese and Bureau of Indian Affairs have provided little to no answers as to who the children are or how they died. With the church and mission gone, death records have become even harder to find. According to the Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions, in a situation like this, death records should be housed in the diocese.Ā
Someone, somewhere, has these records, said Lengkeek, the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe chairman.Ā
āWe were told that half of the archives went to the University of South °®¶¹app in Vermillion and half went to Augustana in Sioux Falls,ā Lengkeek said. āBut they wonāt let us in there to look.ā
The University of South °®¶¹app was able to provide āThe History of Immaculate Conceptionā by Sister Marmion Maiers to ICT and The Journal through an interlibrary loan. The dissertation contains a detailed timeline of the mission but does not contain any information on student deaths.
The Sioux Falls Catholic Diocese, which oversaw the church, did not respond to numerous requests for information.Ā
Working to heal a nationĀ
One year after the discovery on the Immaculate Conception grounds, on Nov. 9, survivors from North °®¶¹app and South °®¶¹app gathered in StephanĀ ā about 227 miles east of Rapid CityĀ ā to honor the children who died at the school and share their own stories. In near-freezing temperatures and drizzling rain, elders and youth gathered at the newly discovered gravesite fenced off near the intersection of BIA-23 and Crow Creek Loop.Ā
For decades, community members and former boarding school students had traversed this land unaware of the secrets lying beneath.Ā
Paulson, Crows Breast and Paulsonās daughter, Jennifer YoungBear, traveled four hours from Bismarck, North °®¶¹app to Stephan for the ceremony, joining a handful of other survivors who made the journey. It was an emotional reunionĀ ā many hadnāt seen each other for decades since their time at the school.Ā
āI think that everybody that was supposed to be here was here,ā Lengkeek said. āThis is a step closer for my people to heal, and thatās what Iām really excited about.ā
Excavating the site will be difficult, Lengkeek said. Much of the land is now private property with trees overgrown on the site, but the tribe and the people havenāt forgotten about the children.Ā
On Oct. 25, President Joe Biden delivered the first formal presidential apology for the federal boarding school era while visiting the Gila River Indian Community just south of Phoenix.Ā
In his apology, Biden referred to the period as a āsin on our soul.āĀ
āAfter 150 years, the government eventually stopped the program (of boarding schools) but never formally apologized,ā Biden told the crowd. āI formally apologize today as President of the United States of America for what we did. I apologize, apologize, apologize!ā
In July, a final investigative report from the Department of the Interior on Indian Boarding Schools called for the formal apology from the United States, among other recommendations, including Congressional approval of a proposed Truth and Healing Commission to further investigate boarding schools, a national memorial to acknowledge the painful history and financial support for tribal programs that include repatriation, education, mental health support and community rebuilding.Ā
Bruce, King said, coped with her trauma through her Anishinaabe culture.Ā
āShe led a really remarkable life,ā King said. āThe culture was her outlet. She attended sweats, she sundanced. The culture is what got her through it.āĀ
In addition to providing avenues for healing, the Truth and Healing Commission bill would grant the authority to subpoena records from church-run schools, ICT reported in October. The bill is currently pending in Congress.Ā
This would greatly aid the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe in their years-long struggle to obtain death records from the school and work towards identifying graves.Ā
āThese children are ready now, theyāre going to start showing up all over the United States because they want to go home,ā Lengkeek said. āTheyāve been here long enough and if theyāre here any longer they wonāt be able to make it home, at least thatās what we believe.āĀ
The most recent 38 graves arenāt the first time the school has discovered unmarked graves, Lengkeek said.
In 2011, during the construction of the Crow Creek Tribal School, Lengkeek said three child-size caskets and bone fragments were found under the grounds which formerly belonged to Immaculate Conception.Ā
ā(The children) theyāre ready now, theyāre ready to go home,ā Lengkeek said. āWe need to help them, we need to reunite them with their moms and dads, their siblings and their people.ā
This story is co-published by the °®¶¹app and ICT, a news partnership that covers Indigenous communities in the South °®¶¹app area.
Amelia Schafer is the Indigenous Affairs reporter for ICT and the °®¶¹app. She is of Wampanoag and Montauk-Brothertown Indian Nation descent. She is based in Rapid City. You can contact her at aschafer@rapidcityjournal.com.