• This brought the enrollment down from 950 in 1928 to 425 in 1936. From here on out the Phoenix Indian School served grades 7–12.
  • The ideas and visions prompted by the dictates of a dedicated and dynamic management team, are translated into action at Phoenix Public School, Kodungallur.
  • Phoenix Indian Center. We invite you to explore this site to learn about our rich history and continuous service to the Phoenix-Metropolitan area.
  • Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1999. Trennert, Jr., Robert A. The Phoenix Indian School: Forced Assimilation in Arizona, 1891-1935.
  • The Phoenix Indian School was a boarding school founded in 1891 with the goal of fostering the assimilation of Native Americans into white society.
  • A photo of Native kids from Phoenix Indian School greet people who come into the Phoenix Indian School Visitor Center.
  • Dodésbaáh was one of many thousands of young children who endured trauma at the Phoenix Indian Boarding School, fought the system, and survived.
  • Here & Now's Peter O'Dowd visited the campus of Phoenix Indian School to learn about its complicated and traumatic past.
  • Phoenix Indian School pupils were required to attend Sunday school and services off campus and to perform church-related service.
  • One such school was Phoenix Indian School. Opened in 1891, it began as a K-12 school for native students from all over the southwest.