A Santee Sioux woman, now 20, alleges the state of Iowa allowed her to be adopted by a convicted felon who sexually abused ...
A murder unified Americans in a belief that their colonial masters were perfidious and the cause of independence was ...
Dr. Lincoln Coffie remembers the day back in his native Jamaica when his life changed forever. It was 1989 and he was a ...
The Treasury Department unveiled new coins celebrating America’s 250th anniversary. They failed to include planned designs ...
MAYETTA, Kan. (AP) — The Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation, whose ancestors were uprooted by the U.S. from the Great Lakes ...
The Black and Indian Missions Office originated in 1874 as the Bureau of Catholic Missions, with wider goals added in ...
Earlier this month, the 35th anniversary of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) passed ...
The Trump administration is touting its $50 billion Rural Health Transformation Program as the largest-ever U.S. investment in rural health care. But the government made minimal mention of Native ...
The SUNY Oswego men’s hockey program has had hundreds of men’s hockey players in its more than 60 years of existence. But ...
High Tower and God's Acre were Georgia's two 19th century boarding schools for Native Americans. Elias Boudinot, who signed New Echota Treaty, spent time at both.
A Native American boarding school established by Moravian missionaries in North Georgia in the early 19th century reveals a complicated and compelling history.