CARLISLE
The Best Football Story You've Never Heard
Gus Welch: Chippewa, Honor Roll, Student Government President, Pre-Law, and Best Quarterback in America, faces expulsion if he continues to speak up against the Intolerable Conditions at the Carlisle Indian School.
The Famous Carlisle Marching Band
The Front Gate
The Superintendents House
The Academic Building
Girls on a Parade Ground sidewalk
Shop Classes Dining Hall
Double decker gymnasium, the best equipped in the State of Pennsylvania.
Thank you for the composition Dennis P.
Students studied half of the day.
And worked in School Industries and Shop Classes the second half of the day.
The Indian Arts Department, instructed by Angel DeCora, manufactured and sold these items to the public. The School Photography Department was also stocked with the best equipment.
The Captain of Plymouth - A Comic Opera The Carlisle Orchestra w/Fred Cardin
Cadet Officers and Girls Competitive Drill Teams.
The 1912 School Government.
PRESIDENT GUS WELCH, BACK ROW, FAR RIGHT.
The Printing Department, equipped with the most modern machines, produced outstanding work, even doing a large part of U. S. Government annual reports.
Yale, Syracuse, Harvard, and Franklin Field are some of the Famous fields played on.
The Famous Carlisle Indian School Marching Band, on Franklin Field in Philadelphia. The section behind them is filled with female Carlisle students and other supporters. The Carlisle Girls were fierce with their chants and songs, unnerving the Quakers with thier "We will scalp you Pennsy!" yells!
1912 Carlisle Backfield.
Alex Arcasa Stancil Powell Gus Welch Jim Thorpe
1908 BASEBALL TEAM
1910 LACROSSE TEAM
1911-1912 TRACK TEAM JIM THORPE GUS WELCH
1911-1912 Lewis Tewanima Mitchell Arquette
Richard Henry Pratt Glenn S. (POP) Warner
Superintendent Moses Friedman
Jim Thorpe, Lewis Tewanima, and Pop Warner, leaving for the 1912 Olympics. The King of Sweden placing a laurel wreath on Jim's head. Jim's trophies and medals. The Viking ship has a gold interior, silver exterior, with precious stones inlaid. The bust is Bronze and takes two men to carry.
Members of the Blackfeet Nation, visiting during Commencement Week. There is a steady stream of Chiefs and Tribal Leaders visiting the school, often in Traditional Regalia. The students are from L-R: Jeanette Pappin, Clemence LaTraille, and Blanche Jollie.
IN MEMORY OF