The Stewart Indian School

The Stewart Indian School in 1930. Photo courtesy of the Western Nevada Historic Photo Collection. Click on the photo to view the original image.

The Pyramid Lake Indian war of 1860 marked the beginning of an extremely difficult time for the American Indian population of the Great Basin area. Until this time, the Indians and the European emigrants were able to tolerate each other with just a few exceptions.

When silver was discovered on the Comstock Lode in 1859, there was a sudden increase in the white population of Nevada Territory. With this increase in population came an increase in demand for resources including food, water, land and timber. The white emigrants took over the traditional lands where the Native Americans had hunted and gathered for their subsistence for centuries.

Farms, mines and mills took over the places where Indians had hunted and fished for food. The pine forests were cut for firewood and lumber where the Indians had once gathered pine nuts to help them survive the winters. Since the Native Americans had few skills useful in a more modern world and few could speak English, jobs were near impossible for them to find. Discrimination following the Indian Wars made matters worse. Some Indians camped on the outskirts of Virginia City, Dayton and Carson so they could scavenge for food and clothing and look for menial jobs they could do.

In 1860, California attorney William Stewart arrived in Virginia City at the time when Indian-White Relations were most volatile. In 1865, Stewart became Nevada’s first senator. He was very supportive of Indian education in order to improve their social and economic situation in the state. While in congress, Stewart worked with the Indian Service and served as chairman of the Commission on Indian Affairs. He thought that rather than relying on the reservation system, Indians would be better served with training that would help them to become self sustaining individuals and citizens.

In 1888, Stewart introduced a Senate bill to establish an Indian school in Nevada. With Stewart’s political persuasion, an Indian boarding school was established south of Carson City in 1890 with money and land dedicated by Ormsby County. Senator William Stewart helped obtain funding from the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs. He also succeeded in establishing the University of Nevada, first in Elko, then in Reno.

During the early years, the Stewart Indian school was a boarding school for elementary students learning to speak and read English, basic math and some vocational skills. It later had a high school with a graduation program and a first class athletic department. Students at Stewart were required to live on campus and were not allowed to speak their native languages. In addition to the local Paiute, Shoshone and Washoe Indians, there were tribes represented from California, Arizona and New Mexico.

The campus grew in size to about 80 buildings. There was a gymnasium, swimming pool, boarding houses, offices and residences for staff members. A railroad spur for the Virginia and Truckee Railroad was built to bring passenger and freight service to the campus. The campus had a cemetery where Washoe Indian basket maker Dat So la Lee is buried.

Discipline was very strict at the school and the students were required to attend classes for about half of each day, then work in vocational training the other half. The vocational part of the training included work on the campus such as carpentry, masonry and agriculture. The students planted and harvested crops that were used to feed the student body and staff. Farm animals were raised for meat and dairy products. Girl students operated the laundry, performed sewing and dress making. Many worked in the kitchen preparing meals and doing cleanup chores.

If you visit the Stewart campus today, you can still see many of the old colorful stone buildings built by Hopi Indian stone masons from rock they gathered along the Carson River. When I was a child on our family farm in Sparks in the 1940s and 50s busloads of the Steward Indian students came out to pick potatoes each fall during harvest time. This was cheap labor for the farmers and it made extra money for the school. The workers were not paid, since the experience was considered part of their education.

The Stewart Indian School closed in 1980 after 90 years of operation. The campus was taken over by the State of Nevada as an office complex. My landscape company was hired in the 1980s to install sprinkler systems in some of the lawn areas for the State Public Works Dept. For several years, there was a small museum at the Stewart campus. I donated an interesting collection of Indian artifacts to the museum where it was displayed until the museum closed. I then repossessed the collection and re-donated it to the Carson Valley Historical Museum in Gardnerville, where it resides today.

This entry was posted in American Indian, American West, History and tagged , by Dennis Cassinelli. Bookmark the permalink.

About Dennis Cassinelli

Dennis Cassinelli is a Nevada author, historian and outdoorsman. He’s written extensively about American Indian culture and Comstock history. His book, Preserving Traces of the Great Basin Indians, contains up-close photographs and detailed pen-and-ink drawings of American Indian stone artifacts. It also contains a fold-out chronology chart showing projectile points across a 12,000-year time scale. The book is a must-have for every enthusiast of Great Basin archaeology. Dennis’s website is DennisCassinelli.com.

2 thoughts on “The Stewart Indian School

  1. Thanks for the on-going installments, I really enjoy each segment. I’m fortunate to be one of the Conductor/Narrators for the V&T Railroad and therefore thoroughly enjoy the history of Nevada that you provide so well.

    Like

    • Neil,
      Thanks for your nice comment about my Stewart Indian School article.
      Coincidentally, I am a volunteer tour guide for the Nevada State Museum.
      It is always nice to hear from readers who appreciate my work.

      Like

Comments are closed.