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''' Project Proposal:  The Relationship between Pratt and Lippincott
<center>[[History 204]] | [[History of Indian Education]] | [[The Public Relationship Between Dickinson and the Indian School]] | [[Collective Biography of Indian Dickinson Students]] | [[Insitute to Institute: Dickinson College and Carlisle Indian School]] | [[Essays]] |  [[Bibliographic Information]]</center>
'''


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[[Image:Lippincott.jpg]]
== The Relationship between Pratt and Lippincott ==




'''Focus:'''
[[Image:Lippincott.jpg|thumb| Image found on ''Encyclopedia Dickinsonia'' (http://chronicles.dickinson.edu/encyclo/l/ed_lippincottJA.htm)]]
My group’s area of concentration in researching the relationship between Dickinson College and the Carlisle Indian School is the general connections that existed between the two communities.  I will specifically be focusing on the relationship between Richard Henry Pratt and Joshua Allan Lippincott. At the time of the founding of the Indian School in 1879, Lippincott was a professor of mathematics and astronomy at Dickinson College. Lippincott was also and ordained Methodist clergyman and was a chaplain to the Indian School. The Morning Star Newspaper mentions Lippincott frequently, including a report from Lippincott on a journey to the Midwest to obtain students for the Carlisle Indian School.  Professor Lippincott became the Chancellor of the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas in 1883.  A few sources have mentioned the Haskell Institute in Lawrence, Kansas, where some students attended after they left Carlisle Indian School.  An assumption could be made that Lippincott continued to assist Pratt in his work with Indian Schools even when he was no longer a part of the Dickinson community.  There is a possibility that much of Lippincott and Pratt’s relationship did not relate directly to Dickinson College and the Carlisle Indian School’s relations, but I am mostly concerned with the connection between Lippincott and Pratt as a whole, not simply confined to Dickinson College’s friendship with the Indian School.  Lippincott holds a unique position in his relationship with Pratt because not only is he a member of Dickinson College community, but also the Carlisle community.  Lippincott acts as a bridge between the two communities within Carlisle and this important fact could have made a fairly large impact on the acceptance of the Indian School in the town of Carlisle.
By Anna Lovett
Class of 2010


'''Significance:'''
Focusing on Lippincott and Pratt’s relationship as a whole is important because it will ultimately help answer the broader question of what was the extent of the relationship between Dickinson College and Carlisle Indian School.  In several sources including Pratt’s Battlefield and Classroom, the friendship between the Indian School and Dickinson is mentioned.  Most frequently mentioned the scientific experiments of “lightning” shown by Professor Hines to the Indian students and their parents.  What is not really clarified is what else, or how else, did the Indian School benefit from their relationship with Dickinson, or vice versa.  By understanding this relationship better, the relationship of both the Carlisle Indian School and Dickinson College to the greater Carlisle community can possibly be explained better.  Why did the Carlisle community receive the Indian School with such acceptance?  Did Dickinson have any help in integrating the newly arrived Indian’s into town society?  When studying the Carlisle Indian School, most emphasis is placed on the Indian School and how outside persons affected what happened within the school.  Looking at the Indian School’s relationship to Dickinson College changes the perspective and reveals the Indian School’s affect on the surrounding communities, rather than the surrounding communities affect on the Indian School.


'''Methodology:'''
Captain Pratt established Carlisle Indian School with a clear plan in mind. To solve the Indian problem, the Indians had to be educated in the white man’s way at boarding schools away from the influence of the reservations. Pratt transformed the image of the students from savage Indians to civilized Americans by trading their Indians clothes for uniforms and cutting their long hair into the style of the white man. Just as Pratt rapidly changed their appearance, he sought to rapidly change their entire culture and way of life in order to assimilate them into white civilization. All skills useful to the Plains Indians were replaced by vocational skills like carpentry or printing. Students were not permitted to speak their native tongue and were only allowed to speak in English. In addition, Pratt also stressed the need for Christianity to fully integrate the Indians into civilized society.
First, to understand the relationship between Lippincott and Pratt, more must be known about Pratt and his motivations for institutes like Carlisle Indian School.  Secondary sources will be the most helpful in learning about that. Pratt’s Battlefield and Classroom also reveals his motivations and actions against the Federal policy of Indian Reservations.  Most of my resources will most likely be primary sources.  Correspondence between Lippincott and Pratt would obviously reveal the most about their relationship.  I know that in the Henry Richard Pratt Collection at Yale contain two letters from Lippincott to Pratt.  I am not sure if I could find any correspondence of Pratt to Lippincott.  Maybe contacting the University of Kansas will prove fruitful.  Another source that so far has been the most informative is contemporary newspapers. I have already found Lippincott Newspapers like Eadle Keatah Toh, The Morning Star, and the Red Man. The Dickinsonian has provided a glimpse at Dickinson’s overall interaction with the Indian School.  The newspapers will provide general information but I want to find speeches, pamphlets, and other campaigning type materials from either Lippincott or Pratt hopefully.  I know through the card catalogue that the Dickinson archives posses many documents pertaining to Pratt so hopefully I will find leads as to where to look next for more information. The Cumberland County Historical Society likewise has a lot of materials pertaining to the Indian School so I am sure careful searching will produce a lot more sources. The online databases will be another option to find both primary and secondary sources.  I plan to use the databases that are under the list of history and primary research. The method in which I plan to search through the various material available are to start with finding material on the Indian School, then find information about Pratt, and then information about the people who contributed or volunteered at the school.  Obviously there’s overlapping of these fields but I figure it is easier to start searching on a broader subject and get more specific the more thoroughly I research.
Bibliography:


“Athletics. The Dickinsonian, 16, no. 1 (October 1888):  16-17.
When Pratt arrived in Carlisle in 1879, Dickinson College promptly offered support, and a friendship was soon established between the two institutions. One of the first relationships Pratt established was with Joshua Allen Lippincott, professor of mathematics and astronomy at Dickinson College. As chaplain for the initial years of the school, Lippincott was one of the first Dickinsonians to help establish a strong Christian influence at the Carlisle Indian School. Every Sunday, the Indian students would attend morning service at a local church they belonged to. Afternoon services would then be conducted by Lippincott at the Carlisle Indian School. The fact that the Indian School’s Sunday schedule replicated Dickinson’s was not a coincidence. The use of Dickinson as a model for religious practices was most likely suggested by Lippincott to PrattAs chaplain to the Indian School, Lippincott also performed other religious duties such as funerals. In March 1883, ''The Morning Star'' reported Lippincott conducting the funeral of William Snake, the nephew of Standing Bear. Lippincott’s service to the Carlisle Indian School was greatly appreciated by Pratt who remarked that he was “indebted [to Rev. Dr. Lippincott] for [his] faithful and zealous services as a chaplain.”(1)  


Lippincott believed in the importance of Christianity to fully integrate Carlisle Indian School students into society. Lippincott once remarked on the importance of religion saying, “[t]he maximum of conscious power in the process of character forming, is reached when the soul is moved by highest activity by conscious religious experience. Religion is one of the most potent of all influence that away the hearts of men...love toward God, and good will to men…are enforced under the most solemn sanctions to make this transforming power, and to seek it with all assiduity is of the highest wisdom. Therefore seek wisdom, get understanding.”(2) Lippincott probably conveyed a similar message to the Indian students, seeing conversion, or a higher understanding of Christianity, as an important measure in understanding the white man’s way.


Dorian, Ellwood. “Monthly Home Letters” Eadle Keatah Toh, 2, no. 7
In addition to Lippincott’s regular visits to the Indian School, his interest in the issues of Indian education was the basis for the special relationship existed between the students at Carlisle Indian School and Professor Lippincott. Ellwood Dorian, an Indian student, wrote a letter home describing Lippincott as “a very good man; [who] comes out every Sunday and talks to us about the Bible, and we all like him because he is very kind to us.”(3) Ellwood refers to a sermon when Lippincott explains the significance of the New Year and its relations to the season, showing Lippincott’s interest in the education of the students beyond Christianity. Evidence of Lippincott’s belief in Pratt’s system and care for the welfare of the students was also shown when he traveled to the Midwest in September, 1882 to help recruit students for CIS. In his report to Pratt, Lippincott recounted conversations with Indian leaders who were being taken advantage of because of the absence of definite and clear titles to their land. Lippincott sympathized with them remarking “that the chief employment of the Indian in the initial stages of his civilization must be grazing and agriculture, and no people can be expected to improve land that may be taken from them at any time by a mere caprice of an officer of the government.(4) The necessity for Pratt’s program of vocational training and education was Lippincott’s point of persuasion, resulting in Lippincott’s return to Carlisle with fifty-one Indian children.  
(February 1882):  5.


Naturally, the importance of education to Lippincott extended beyond Indian education. As expressed in a letter to Governor Robinson of Kansas, Lippincott explained that the University of Kansas produces “men and woman whose influence shall be more sturdily wielded, more deftly directed to the accomplishment of the better ends of a nobler citizenship because of the privileges here enjoyed”(5) Parallels to the Indian education can be derived from this comment. Although the education at Carlisle Indian School was not as advanced as the education at either the University of Kansas or Dickinson College, this letter clearly states Lippincott’s belief in education as a means for success.  Through education, citizenship is established, and through citizenship, the Indian would be able to find a place in society.


Eastman, Elaine Goodale.  PrattThe Red Man’s Moses. Norman, OK:  University of
In 1883, Lippincott was elected Chancellor of the University of Kansas. Leaving Carlisle, now home to the firmly establish Carlisle Indian School, he moved to Lawrence, Kansas, where another Indian school was being formed. The Haskell Institute was established in 1884 to provide education for Indian studentsAlthough Haskell followed many of the methods of Carlisle, its location was contrary to a primary philosophy of the Carlisle Indian School. To effectively integrate Indians, they had to be removed entirely from the vicinity of reservations. Whether Lippincott continued his involvement in Indian education in the Midwest is uncertain, however Lippincott did continue his relationship with Pratt. ''The Red Man'' continued to publish news about Lippincott long after he left Carlisle. Most of those articles were updates on Lippincott and his career. One article from the August edition of ''The Red Man'' in 1892 happily announced Lippincott’s return from Kansas to take up the pastorate of the Arch Street Methodist Church of Philadelphia. Nearly ten years after his departure from Carlisle, Lippincott was still known to Carlisle Indian School.  
Oklahoma Press, 1935.


Gilcrest, Everett Arthur. “Richard Henry Pratt and American Indian Policy, 1877-1906:
Upon his return to Pennsylvania, Lippincott’s relationship with Pratt and the Carlisle Indian School continued. In March 1898, Lippincott gave the commencement speech at Carlisle Indian School. Encouraging the graduates to not return to a life on the reservation, Lippincott urged the students to continue living among white civilization. He articulated, “You are not to be Indians anymore! The Indian is DEAD in you. Someone says that the only good Indian is a Dead Indian! Be men and women, but not Indians! Let all that is INDIAN within you die! Then you will be men and women, freemen, American citizens.” Pratt commented on this speech saying, “I have never fired a bigger shot, and never hit the bull’s eye more centre.”(6) This speech was probably the inspiration for Pratt’s best known phrase, “Kill the Indian to save the man." Pratt and Lippincott believed that for an Indian to be completely integrated into American society, their Indian culture had to be completely erased.  Although the eradication of the Indian culture in the Carlisle students has been heavily criticized, Pratt and many of his contemporaries believed that this was the only way for Indians to be successfully integrated. Whether Pratt’s solution to the Indian problem was successful or not is debatable. However, it is certain that Pratt and his supporters, like Lippincott, only acted with the best intentions for Indians.  
A study of the Assimilation Movement.”  Dissertation, Yale University, 1967.


Through his friendship with Pratt, Lippincott established a unique relationship between the two institutes. The atmosphere of Christian missionary on Dickinson campus first took root with Lippincott’s weekly visits to the Indian School. A liberal arts philosophy of education and citizenship can also be applied to Pratt’s goals for the Carlisle Indian School. As ''The Red Man'' in March 1889 quoted the ''NY Daily Sentinel'', “[t]he way to civilize the Indian is to begin with the rising generation and work up.”(7) Lippincott and Pratt believed that education was the key to civilizing the rising generation. Two pillars of Dickinson College and Carlisle Indian School, religion and education, were united and strengthened through the dedication of professors like Lippincott.


Pratt, Richard Henry. Battlefield and Classroom:  Four Decades with the American
Indians.  Edited by Robert. M. Utley.  Hartford, CT:  Yale University Press, 1964.


“Sabbath School.”  The Morning Star, 3, no. 3 (October 1882):  3.


'''Endnotes:'''


“The Leading Sioux Chiefs. Dickinson College Centennial Bulletin, no. 2 (June 10,
1“Sabbath School,''The Morning Star'' 3, no. 3 (October 1882):  3.
1880):  3.


2 Quoted in “Commencement,” ''Topeka Weekly Capital'' 11, no. 23 (June 13, 1889): 6.


“Training School for Indian Youth at Barracks. Dickinson College Centennial Bulletin,  
3Ellwood Dorian, “Monthly Home Letters,''Eadle Keatah Toh'' 2, no. 7 (February 1882): 5.
no.1 (February 11, 1880): 4-5.


4“Dr. Lippincott’s Report,” ''The Morning Star'' 3, no. 2 (September 1882): 1.


“Sabbath School.”  The Morning Star, 3, no. 3 (October 1882):  3.
5Lippincott, Joshua Allen, to Charles Robinson, 2 June 1888, Charles and Sara T. Robinson Collection, manuscript division, Kansas State Historical Society, Topeka, KS.


6“Dr. Lippincott.”  ''The Red Man'' 14, no. 10 (March 1898): 6.


Works Referenced:
7Quoted in “Recent Comments on Indian Matters From Out Leading Papers,” The Red Man 9, no. 4 (March 1889): 6.


Dickinson College. “Joshua Allan Lippincott.”  Encyclopedia Dickinsonia.
http://chronicles.dickinson.edu/encyclo/l/ed_lippincottJA.htm.


Wikipedia contributors. "Carlisle Indian Industrial School." Wikipedia, The Free
[[Bibliographic Information]]
Encyclopedia, http://en.wikipedia.org.
 
 
Wikipedia contributors. "Richard Henry Pratt." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia,
http://en.wikipedia.org.

Latest revision as of 04:49, 9 January 2008

History 204 | History of Indian Education | The Public Relationship Between Dickinson and the Indian School | Collective Biography of Indian Dickinson Students | Insitute to Institute: Dickinson College and Carlisle Indian School | Essays | Bibliographic Information

The Relationship between Pratt and Lippincott

Image found on Encyclopedia Dickinsonia (http://chronicles.dickinson.edu/encyclo/l/ed_lippincottJA.htm)

By Anna Lovett Class of 2010


Captain Pratt established Carlisle Indian School with a clear plan in mind. To solve the Indian problem, the Indians had to be educated in the white man’s way at boarding schools away from the influence of the reservations. Pratt transformed the image of the students from savage Indians to civilized Americans by trading their Indians clothes for uniforms and cutting their long hair into the style of the white man. Just as Pratt rapidly changed their appearance, he sought to rapidly change their entire culture and way of life in order to assimilate them into white civilization. All skills useful to the Plains Indians were replaced by vocational skills like carpentry or printing. Students were not permitted to speak their native tongue and were only allowed to speak in English. In addition, Pratt also stressed the need for Christianity to fully integrate the Indians into civilized society.

When Pratt arrived in Carlisle in 1879, Dickinson College promptly offered support, and a friendship was soon established between the two institutions. One of the first relationships Pratt established was with Joshua Allen Lippincott, professor of mathematics and astronomy at Dickinson College. As chaplain for the initial years of the school, Lippincott was one of the first Dickinsonians to help establish a strong Christian influence at the Carlisle Indian School. Every Sunday, the Indian students would attend morning service at a local church they belonged to. Afternoon services would then be conducted by Lippincott at the Carlisle Indian School. The fact that the Indian School’s Sunday schedule replicated Dickinson’s was not a coincidence. The use of Dickinson as a model for religious practices was most likely suggested by Lippincott to Pratt. As chaplain to the Indian School, Lippincott also performed other religious duties such as funerals. In March 1883, The Morning Star reported Lippincott conducting the funeral of William Snake, the nephew of Standing Bear. Lippincott’s service to the Carlisle Indian School was greatly appreciated by Pratt who remarked that he was “indebted [to Rev. Dr. Lippincott] for [his] faithful and zealous services as a chaplain.”(1)

Lippincott believed in the importance of Christianity to fully integrate Carlisle Indian School students into society. Lippincott once remarked on the importance of religion saying, “[t]he maximum of conscious power in the process of character forming, is reached when the soul is moved by highest activity by conscious religious experience. Religion is one of the most potent of all influence that away the hearts of men...love toward God, and good will to men…are enforced under the most solemn sanctions to make this transforming power, and to seek it with all assiduity is of the highest wisdom. Therefore seek wisdom, get understanding.”(2) Lippincott probably conveyed a similar message to the Indian students, seeing conversion, or a higher understanding of Christianity, as an important measure in understanding the white man’s way.

In addition to Lippincott’s regular visits to the Indian School, his interest in the issues of Indian education was the basis for the special relationship existed between the students at Carlisle Indian School and Professor Lippincott. Ellwood Dorian, an Indian student, wrote a letter home describing Lippincott as “a very good man; [who] comes out every Sunday and talks to us about the Bible, and we all like him because he is very kind to us.”(3) Ellwood refers to a sermon when Lippincott explains the significance of the New Year and its relations to the season, showing Lippincott’s interest in the education of the students beyond Christianity. Evidence of Lippincott’s belief in Pratt’s system and care for the welfare of the students was also shown when he traveled to the Midwest in September, 1882 to help recruit students for CIS. In his report to Pratt, Lippincott recounted conversations with Indian leaders who were being taken advantage of because of the absence of definite and clear titles to their land. Lippincott sympathized with them remarking “that the chief employment of the Indian in the initial stages of his civilization must be grazing and agriculture, and no people can be expected to improve land that may be taken from them at any time by a mere caprice of an officer of the government.”(4) The necessity for Pratt’s program of vocational training and education was Lippincott’s point of persuasion, resulting in Lippincott’s return to Carlisle with fifty-one Indian children.

Naturally, the importance of education to Lippincott extended beyond Indian education. As expressed in a letter to Governor Robinson of Kansas, Lippincott explained that the University of Kansas produces “men and woman whose influence shall be more sturdily wielded, more deftly directed to the accomplishment of the better ends of a nobler citizenship because of the privileges here enjoyed”(5) Parallels to the Indian education can be derived from this comment. Although the education at Carlisle Indian School was not as advanced as the education at either the University of Kansas or Dickinson College, this letter clearly states Lippincott’s belief in education as a means for success. Through education, citizenship is established, and through citizenship, the Indian would be able to find a place in society.

In 1883, Lippincott was elected Chancellor of the University of Kansas. Leaving Carlisle, now home to the firmly establish Carlisle Indian School, he moved to Lawrence, Kansas, where another Indian school was being formed. The Haskell Institute was established in 1884 to provide education for Indian students. Although Haskell followed many of the methods of Carlisle, its location was contrary to a primary philosophy of the Carlisle Indian School. To effectively integrate Indians, they had to be removed entirely from the vicinity of reservations. Whether Lippincott continued his involvement in Indian education in the Midwest is uncertain, however Lippincott did continue his relationship with Pratt. The Red Man continued to publish news about Lippincott long after he left Carlisle. Most of those articles were updates on Lippincott and his career. One article from the August edition of The Red Man in 1892 happily announced Lippincott’s return from Kansas to take up the pastorate of the Arch Street Methodist Church of Philadelphia. Nearly ten years after his departure from Carlisle, Lippincott was still known to Carlisle Indian School.

Upon his return to Pennsylvania, Lippincott’s relationship with Pratt and the Carlisle Indian School continued. In March 1898, Lippincott gave the commencement speech at Carlisle Indian School. Encouraging the graduates to not return to a life on the reservation, Lippincott urged the students to continue living among white civilization. He articulated, “You are not to be Indians anymore! The Indian is DEAD in you. Someone says that the only good Indian is a Dead Indian! Be men and women, but not Indians! Let all that is INDIAN within you die! Then you will be men and women, freemen, American citizens.” Pratt commented on this speech saying, “I have never fired a bigger shot, and never hit the bull’s eye more centre.”(6) This speech was probably the inspiration for Pratt’s best known phrase, “Kill the Indian to save the man." Pratt and Lippincott believed that for an Indian to be completely integrated into American society, their Indian culture had to be completely erased. Although the eradication of the Indian culture in the Carlisle students has been heavily criticized, Pratt and many of his contemporaries believed that this was the only way for Indians to be successfully integrated. Whether Pratt’s solution to the Indian problem was successful or not is debatable. However, it is certain that Pratt and his supporters, like Lippincott, only acted with the best intentions for Indians.

Through his friendship with Pratt, Lippincott established a unique relationship between the two institutes. The atmosphere of Christian missionary on Dickinson campus first took root with Lippincott’s weekly visits to the Indian School. A liberal arts philosophy of education and citizenship can also be applied to Pratt’s goals for the Carlisle Indian School. As The Red Man in March 1889 quoted the NY Daily Sentinel, “[t]he way to civilize the Indian is to begin with the rising generation and work up.”(7) Lippincott and Pratt believed that education was the key to civilizing the rising generation. Two pillars of Dickinson College and Carlisle Indian School, religion and education, were united and strengthened through the dedication of professors like Lippincott.



Endnotes:

1“Sabbath School,” The Morning Star 3, no. 3 (October 1882): 3.

2 Quoted in “Commencement,” Topeka Weekly Capital 11, no. 23 (June 13, 1889): 6.

3Ellwood Dorian, “Monthly Home Letters,” Eadle Keatah Toh 2, no. 7 (February 1882): 5.

4“Dr. Lippincott’s Report,” The Morning Star 3, no. 2 (September 1882): 1.

5Lippincott, Joshua Allen, to Charles Robinson, 2 June 1888, Charles and Sara T. Robinson Collection, manuscript division, Kansas State Historical Society, Topeka, KS.

6“Dr. Lippincott.” The Red Man 14, no. 10 (March 1898): 6.

7Quoted in “Recent Comments on Indian Matters From Out Leading Papers,” The Red Man 9, no. 4 (March 1889): 6.


Bibliographic Information