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Bishop Horden Hall residential school(moose hall), T - Coggle Diagram
Bishop Horden Hall residential school(moose hall)
Facts about the school staff, location, etc.
In 1905 the Bishop of Moosonee converted his former residence into a residential school.
The School is at moose island, ON
Anglican missionaries established a boarding school at Moose Island on Hudson Bay in the 1850s.
In 1914 the bishop school was destroyed by fired and replaced with the Moose Fort school.
The school is also known as "moose hall"
Statistics
25 kids died there
Children were abused at Horden hall
Relation to the Indian act
The first residential school was created in 1886, it was included in the indian act.
Link Title
The school permanently closed in 1976
Between 1906 and 1927, an average of 25 children lived at the school. Residency peaked between 1957 and 1958, with 251 children. When the school closed in 1976, there were 107 children living there.
In 1851, the Church Missionary Society decided to establish a permanent mission on the island, and recruited English schoolteacher John Horden to run it.
Girls circa 1940 work in the kitchen at the Bishop Horden Memorial School, a residential school in the indigenous Cree community of Moose Factory, Ontario.
SURVIVORS
Survives asking for federal government to release documents
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