Shingwauk Indian Residential School

Shingwauk Indian Residential School was part of the Canadian residential school system and one of the 130 boarding schools for First Nations, Métis, and Inuit children that operated in Canada between 1874 and 1996. Operated by the Anglican Church of Canada and the Government of Canada, the Shingwauk School operated from 1873 to 1970 in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada. Today, Shingwauk Hall, built in 1935, forms the central building of Algoma University.

Shingwauk Indian Residential School Site
Shingwauk Hall, now the central building of Algoma University.
LocationSault Ste Marie, Ontario
Builtoriginal building 1874, Shingwauk Home 1935
ArchitectRoland Gurney Orr
OwnerAlgoma University, Shingwauk Education Trust

History

Early Indian Schools in Sault Ste. Marie

Prior to the establishment of the Shingwauk School smaller school mission schools existed in Sault Ste. Marie. In 1833 William McMurray, an Anglican missionary arrived in Garden River First Nation. His arrival resulted in the establishment of a day school at the top of Pim Hill in Sault Ste. Marie.[1] This day school was attended by children from Garden River First Nation and was funded by the government and the Anglican Church.[2] A second day mission school was later established in the Garden River community in 1870.[1]

Shingwauk Industrial Home

In 1871, Anglican Missionary Reverend Edward Francis Wilson arrived in Garden River First Nation. He worked with the Anglican Church, government, and local First Nation community to raise money for a school. As a result of his fundraising efforts, the first Shingwauk Industrial Home opened on September 22, 1873 in Garden River First Nation.[3] The school opened with sixteen boys enrolled as students. Six days after opening, the school was completely destroyed by fire.[4]

Shingwauk Home

Following the destruction of the School in Garden River, Rev. E.F. Wilson purchased a 90-acre site of land in Sault Ste. Marie, at what is now known as 1520 Queen Street East. On July 31, 1874 the Earl of Dufferin, Governor General of Canada visited the school site and laid the corner stone of what would become the Shingwauk Home.[5] The new school officially opened on August 2, 1875 to 50 students.[4] The school did not have running water or electricity. This building was replaced by the New Shingwauk Hall in 1935.

Wawanosh Home

The Shingwauk Home building was not designed to accommodate both male and female students. As a result the Wawanosh Home, a separate girls residential school was established 5 km away in Tarentorus. The school opened in 1877 with an initial enrollment of ten female students. Construction continued on the Wawanosh Home until 1879 when the school was opened in earnest and enrollment increased to 15 students. The government provided funding of $600 per year for the industrial educational of the Wawnosh students. The Wawanosh Home was administered by the Anglican Church and overseen by Shingwauk Home principal Rev. E.F. Wilson.[6]

By the mid-1880s it was decided by Wilson that the Wawanosh Home could be more effectively managed if the girls were located on the same site as the Shingwauk Home. As a result, a girls wing was added onto the Shingwauk Home on Queen Street. In 1900 the Wawanosh Home officially relocated to the Shingwauk site.

The old Wawanosh Home was purchased by the Children's Aid Society of Algoma. The building was operated as a shelter from 1912-1955. Now the site is home to the Sault Ste. Marie Legion Hall, branch 25 [7]

New Shingwauk Indian Residential School

In 1935 the new Shingwauk Hall opened on the Shingwauk site, immediately behind the old building. This new building was designed for 140 students and contained many modern conveniences such as running water and electricity that the old Shingwauk Home did not have. New Shingwauk Hall was designed by Roland Gurney Orr the Chief Architect for the Department of Indian Affairs, the building was built in an industrial style that was replicated in many residential schools and government building across Canada. Many of Orr's buildings, including Shingwauk Hall were designed in the Collegiate Gothic style.[8] The architecture of the Shingwauk building is almost identical to other residential schools across Canada - including the Indian Residential School in Edmonton, Alberta, the Kamloops Residential School, and the St. Paul's Indian Residential School - all built in the 1920s based on Orr's plans.[9]

The Shingwauk School was closed by the Department of Indian Affairs in June 1970.[10] Algoma University College moved onto the Shingwauk site in 1971 and the Shingwauk Hall building is presently the main building of Algoma University.[11] Until April 1, 1969 all iterations of the Shingwauk Residential School were operated by the Missionary Society of the Church of England. From April 1st to the closure of the Shingwauk School on June 30, 1970 the Government of Canada took over the administration of the church. Despite this transfer of administrative power the land help by the Shingwauk School remained in the hands of the Diocese of Algoma. This was due to a previous agreement that stipulated that the cost of the land or the land itself would be transferred back to the Diocese at the conclusion of use by the Government. [12]

School Chapel

Bishop Fauquier Memorial Chapel, present day

The Bishop Fauiquer Memorial Chapel is the only remaining building from the early years of the Shingwauk School. Construction of the chapel began in 1881 and was completed in 1883. It was constructed under the guidance of Edward Francis Wilson, who also designed the building. The building is a mixture of Gothic and Tudor architectural styles and was constructed using sandstone found locally in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. It was consecrated by Anglican Diocese of Algoma Bishop Edward Sullivan on August 29, 1883.[13]

The Chapel is named after Bishop Frederick Dawson Fauquier, the first Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Algoma. During the operation of the Shingwauk Indian Residential School students and staff attended weekly services at the chapel and the building was also used for weddings, funerals, and special occasions.[14]

In 1981 the Chapel was designated as a heritage site under the Ontario Heritage Act by the City of Sault Ste. Marie.[15]

School Cemetery

The Shingwauk Memorial Cemetery contains the graves of over 120 students and staff of the Shingwauk Indian Residential School. Many of these graves are unmarked. During the residential school era staff and church officials received stone headstones but the majority of the students' graves were marked with wooden crosses. As a result of vandalism and the deterioration of wood none of these wooden crosses are left.

The land for the cemetery was donated to the Shingwauk School by William Stratton, the owner of the adjacent farm to the Shingwauk School. The cemetery was consecrated by Bishop Frederick Dawson Fauquier on June 2, 1876. The stone wall which surrounds the older original portion of the cemetery was constructed by the students of the Shingwauk School.[16]

In 1988 the Children of Shingwauk Alumni Association and other concerned survivors of the Shingwauk school erected a monument in memory of all who are buried in the cemetery. A list of known individuals buried was created to accompany this monument, copies are held in the Bishop Fauquier Memorial Chapel and the Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre at Algoma University.[17]

Life at Shingwauk

At its peak over 150 students were living and attending school at the Shingwauk Indian Residential School. During the Shingwauk Home era, the School was operated on the industrial school model. Students would attend classes for half a day and do manual labor around the school for the other half. The Shingwauk Home was designed as a self-sufficient institution with a fully functioning farm. Much of the work the students engaged in would have related to the day to day operation of the farm and school.

Similar to other residential schools across Canada there were poor living conditions at Shingwauk and the quality of education that many children received was sub-par. Many survivors from Shingwauk have spoken about abuse, neglect, and the long term impacts of the assimilation process that occurred at residential schools.[18] In latter years, many of the residents at the Shingwauk Home lived at the Home but went to school at the nearby elementary and high schools. Anna McCrea Public School and Sir James Dunn Collegiate and Vocational School (operated by the Algoma District School Board) were built on the original Shingwauk site in the 1950s as part of a government led integration process.[4]

Publications

Our Forest Children

A monthly periodical, by the name of Our Forest Children. Edited by Rev. E.F. Wilson, principal of Shingwauk was published out a printmaking shop on the site of the Shingwauk Home. Students at the Shingwauk Home would have worked at the printmaking shop as part of their manual or industrial school labor.[4] Our Forest Children was published in the supposed interest of Indian Education and Civilization. Active between 1887 and 1907, the publication was published monthly, claiming sixteen to twenty pages each. The paper sold for 10 cents a year and had a self-reported circulation of 2,000 subscribers.[19]

Boasting themselves as the only illustrated magazine providing detailed information about the Indian tribes of North America, their articles include details of the student's lives in the schools, the missionaries' experiences interacting with the Indians, some details on recruitment practices, as well as the missionary goals and viewpoints. Included are tidbits of grammar and vocabulary, and cultural practices from different tribes, provided within each issue. Scattered throughout are insights into how certain tribes reacted to their mission, and the opinions some individuals held on Residential schooling, and Christianity. All while never losing the intense focus on the Education and Christian Training of young Indians in Boarding Schools and Industrial Homes.[20]

The Algoma Missionary News and Shingwauk Journal

This paper was established as the first diocesan newspaper in the Algoma region by Rev. Wilson in 1874. It underwent substantial name changes through the years and was known as the Algoma Quarterly, the Algoma Missionary News and Shingwauk Journal, the Algoma Missionary News. In 1956 the publication was replaced by Algoma Anglican.[21] The publication and editorship of the publication was transferred to the Anglican Diocese of Algoma following the departure of E.F. Wilson from the Shingwauk Home. A complete set of back issues of the Algoma Missionary News and the Algoma Anglican are housed in the Anglican Diocese of Algoma Archives at Algoma University.[22]

The Peace Pipe

The first issue of The Peace Pipe was published on October 1, 1878. The tagline of the paper was "an Ojibway newspaper published monthly at the Shingwauk Home". Subscriptions were available for 35 cents a year.[23] The paper had an eight page form and aimed to start with 300 subscribers. It hoped to cover topics in both English and Ojibway and include translations of bible verses, hymns, and extracts from Ojibway grammar books. This publication served as a supplement to the Algoma Missionary News.[24]


School Principals

Principal Name Years
Rev. E.F. Wilson 1873-1893
Rev. James Irvine 1893-1894
James Lawler 1894
George Ley King 1897-1906
Rev. Benjamin P. Fuller 1910-1929
Rev. Charles F. Hives 1929-1941
Rev. Canon Arthur E. Minchin 1941-1948
Rev. Douglas C. Wickenden 1948-1954
Rev. Roy Phillips 1954-1966
Robert Martin 1964-1965
David Lawson 1966-1967
Allan Wheatley (administrator) 1967-1968
Rev. Noel Goater (administrator) 1968-1970

[25]

Memorials

Memorial to School Founder
Memorial plaque at Shingwauk Hall

There are numerous memorials on the Shingwauk Indian Residential School Site, including:

  • Cairn dedicated to the founder of the Shingwauk School, Rev. E.F. Wilson. This monument is current located on the front lawn of Algoma University and was constructed from stones from the original principal's residence that was on the site until 1935.
  • Directly behind the Wilson Cairn is a monument put up by the Children of Shingwauk Alumni Association. This monument was erected in August 2012 and is in memory of all who attended residential school across Turtle Island with an emphasis on those who didn't return home. The commemorative plaque is surrounded by the seven grandfather teachings. This monument was constructed as part of larger the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada community commemoration event program. [26]
  • The Shingwauk Memorial Cemetery cairn erected by the Children of Shingwauk Alumni Association and the cemetery committee following the 1981 Shingwauk Reunion commemorates all who are buried in the cemetery.
  • Also located in the Shingwauk Memorial Cemetery is a commemorative bench. The bench features the inscription "In Memory of Shingwauk Residential School. Students Remembering Students" and was placed in the cemetery in 2012.[27]
  • There is also an Ontario Heritage Foundation plaque commemorating the history of the Shingwauk site. This marker is situated outside the Bishop Fauquier Chapel, the only remaining structure from the early years of the Shingwauk School.[15]
  • The Shingwauk Residential School site has also received two commemorative markers as part of the Assembly of First Nations commemorative marker project. These markers are for the Shingwauk Indian Residential School and the Wawanosh Indian Residential School. One of the markers is temporarily on display in the Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre. The permanent placement of the markers is still being decided.[28]
  • On August 3, 2018 the Reclaiming Shingwauk Hall commemorative exhibition was opened on the Shingwauk Site.[29] This exhibition honors the experience of residential school survivors and also teaches the general public about this history of the site.[30]
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See also

Notes

  1. Colloton, Frederick W. "The Church in Sault Ste Marie" (after 1890) [textual]. Frederick W. Colloton fonds, Box: 001, File: 010, ID: 2009-073-001-001. Sault Ste Marie, ON: Engracia De Jesus Matias Archives and Special Collections, Algoma University. 2009-073.
  2. Shingwauk Indian Residential School fonds. Sault Ste Marie, ON: Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre, Algoma University.
  3. "Missionary Work Among the Ojebway Indians, part 1 of 2" (1886) [textual]. Edward F. Wilson fonds, Series: Wilson publication series, Box: 001, File: 039, ID: 2010-022-001-039. Sault Ste Marie, ON: Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre, Algoma University.
  4. Auger, Donald J (2005). Indian Residential Schools in Ontario. Nishnawbe Aski Nation.
  5. Miller, James Rodger (1996). Shingwauk's Vision: A History of Native Residential School Schools. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-7858-3.
  6. Martin, Carol (November 19, 2008). "Shingwauk Indian Residential School - Sault Ste Marie, ON". Anglican Church of Canada. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
  7. "Children's Aid Society of Algoma A Brief History" (PDF). Children's Aid Society of Algoma. 2013. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
  8. "Unmaking Things 2013-14 | Houses, Schools, Hospitals: "Indian" Architecture and the Design of Genocide in Canada". unmakingthings.rca.ac.uk. Retrieved 2017-05-23.
  9. "Orr, Roland Guerney | Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada". www.dictionaryofarchitectsincanada.org. Retrieved 2017-05-23.
  10. Shingwauk's Vision: From Traching Wigwam to Shingwauk University. Shingwauk Project, Algoma University. 1992.
  11. Algoma University.Academic Calendar, 2010-2011 ed.; Introduction: History of Algoma University, pg. iii
  12. "Shingwauk IRS School Narrative" (PDF). National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation. 2004. Retrieved July 7, 2016.
  13. "Remember This? Bishop Fauquier Memorial Chapel". SooToday.com. Retrieved 2019-10-23.
  14. "The Bishop Fauquier Memorial Chapel, A History" (1985) [textual]. Bishop Fauquier Memorial Chapel (Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.) fonds, Series: Chapel restoration series, Box: 002, File: 003, ID: 2009-070-002-03. Sault Ste Marie, ON: Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre, Algoma University. 2009-070.
  15. "Bishop Fauquier Memorial Chapel". Canada's Historic Places. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  16. Colloton, F.W. "The Story of the Shingwauk cemetery" (1954) [textual]. Shingwauk Project collection, Series: Document series, Box: 003, File: 005, ID: 2010-046-003-005. Sault Ste Marie, ON: Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre, Algoma University. 2009-046.
  17. Morrow, Harry. "Reunion follow-up letter about the Shingwauk cemetery" (1984) [textual]. Shingwauk 1981 reunion fonds, Box: 002, File: 019, ID: 2010-050-002-019. Sault Ste Marie, ON: Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre, Algoma University. 2009-050.
  18. Sims, Jane (March 12, 2015). "Susie Jones was taken from her family and transferred to a residential school". London Free Press. London, Ontario. Retrieved April 26, 2016.
  19. Griffith, Jane (2019). Words Have A Past: The English Language, Colonialism, and the Newspaper of Indian Boarding Schools. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4875-2155-4.
  20. http://eco.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.8_06666
  21. "Algoma Missionary News (newspaper series)". Engracia De Jesus Matias Archives and Special Collections. July 30, 2013. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
  22. "Anglican Diocese of Algoma Archives | Algoma University Archives". archives.algomau.ca. Retrieved 2017-05-23.
  23. "First Diocesan publication made its appearance in 1874" (PDF). Algoma Anglican. 33 (3). March 1986. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
  24. "The Peace Pipe" (PDF). The Algoma Missionary News. 2 (10). Anglican Diocese of Algoma. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
  25. Shingwauk Indian Residential School fonds, Series: Indian Homes Committee series. Sault Ste Marie, ON: Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre, Algoma University. 2014-020.
  26. Purvis, Michael (July 17, 2012). "Shingwauk site to become memorial for 'the forgotten children' of Indian residential schools". Sault Star. Sault Ste Marie, Ontario. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
  27. Baker, Patricia (April 1, 2012). "Shedding her shell". Sault Star. Sault Ste Marie, Ontario. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
  28. Alamenciak, Tim (June 18, 2015). "Why Ontario's residential school sites are a chance for reconciliation". TVO. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
  29. Smith, Riley. "A Stark Reality: 'Reclaiming Shingwauk Hall' | SaultOnline.com". saultonline.com. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  30. "Reclaiming Shingwauk Hall: from residential school to transformative art | CBC News". CBC. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
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