Image provided by: The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde; Grand Ronde, OR
About Weekly Chemawa American. (Chemawa, Or.) 189?-198? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1910)
2 THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN idea is that the Indians should not be pampered and spoiled and have money spent upon them lavishly without doing anything toward teaching them self-support. The same policy which is good for the white boy, we think, is good for the Indian boy, and it is pretty good for either to give him ah opportunity and then to let him 'root hog or die'. "On the reservations which have been allotted, we are aiming to have the In dians do everything possible toward de veloping their own lands. On the other hand, where they are renting their lands, we are not favoring the plan and when they sell them, we are asking that they sell only to actual settlers who will devel op the land, pay taxes on it and make the property productive, thereby helping the state and at the same time teaching the Indian, by example, what can be done. "At all the Indian schools the primary aim is to teach the girls house keeping and the boys farming and the use of took in connection with farms. Some of the trades are also taught. Inasmuch as a large percentage of the boys have allot ments, it follows that agricultural educa tion is fundamental in all the schools. On some reserves where lands have been allotted the Indians have sold out their lands and have squandered the money, but on the other hand, there are many who are doing well. - "In my judgment, if the Indian had formed the habit of farming and had be come attracted to the farm house there would be fewer who would sell out. To encourage that idea the office is employ ing jl better class of farmers for teaching and has been paying a higher salary to farmers already in thd field who have made good, and tj the new men employ ed. Some agricultural college men have been employed this year, but they have not been tried out as yet. As a rule, the most successful farming teachers are those who have had experience with the Indians and know something about handHng them. "As an example of the progress which is being made along the line of farming witn the Indians, I held a council with a tribe in North Dakota, at Fort Berthold last Fall. After talking over the farm! ing possibilities, the Indians voted $25. 000 of their own funds for the purp seof developing a farm on their leserve to raise pure seel and pure stock for dis tribution among them. "The superintendents in the service, in order to encoiirage the idea of agricui ture among the Indians, have been, at the suggestion of the office, following a "plan of holding annual agricultural fairs. The office is encouraging the utilization of all school land for the purpose of dem. onstrating the best methods of farming." Mr Abbott is vitally impressed with the idea of making thn Indians self-supporting through the utilization of their 1 nds. He holds that one of the bet methods of accomplishing this is through the Indian schools which will, with a large farm, teach the young Indians to make the plants contribute the maximum toward the support of the institution and at the same time train the Indians to understand the full possibilities of the soil. He said the superintendents throughout the country have been in hearty accord with the policy of the Administration in this respect. The Assistant Commissioner has al ready traveled 20,000 miles by train and 2000 miles by stage and on horsebacu. He has visited the schools all over the country and has been the first man in his position who has spent so much time in becoming in touch with the Indians in their homes. The idt a of administra ting affairs from an office in Washington does not appeal to him, but it is to know tirst of all the actual needs of the red men that has taken him out into their haunts. Oregonian.