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Steele Indian School Park

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Nau (President - Native American Heritage Society), Tom Amiotte (President - Native American Viet Nam Veterans) presented their concepts and ideas to Mayor Paul Johnson and members of his staff in early 1991. This group was active in every public meeting regarding the development of the property, supporting the inclusion of cultural and historical significance in the site plan. No mention of the group or its efforts appeared in the public media or final documentation of the story of how the park was developed. Jean passed in 1998. The park opened in November 2001.
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The Phoenix Indian School Preservation Coalition, co-chaired by Jean Chaudhuri and Lenny Foster, gathered support from 18 of 21 tribes in Arizona for the specific purpose of encouraging certain design features in the development of the park. Jean, along with John Lewis (Inter-tribal President), Arlo
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was built in the late 1990s in downtown Phoenix by a partnership between Barron Collier Company and Opus West Corporation on land acquired in the exchange). At the time, Barron Collier Company also established a $ 35 million trust fund for the education of Native children in Arizona. The park is
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The Phoenix school began operations on the site in 1892. In the late 1980s it was declared unnecessary as most Native students attended schools either in the general community, or on their own reservations, by this time; also, the land on which the school was built, now part of a busy commercial
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into the dominant Euro-American socio-cultural system. These schools became controversial in later decades for the mistreatment of their students, as well as the suppression and prohibition of the students' indigenous culture and languages.
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district in Central Phoenix, was much too financially valuable by this time to justify the school's continued operation. After the school shut down for good in 1990, the buildings and grounds sat vacant for a few years.
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Indian School Road, on which the former Phoenix Indian School and the current Steele Indian School Park are located, is a major east/west arterial street connecting Central Phoenix and its western suburbs, such as
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named after Horace C. Steele, a local businessman and philanthropist; his charitable foundation donated $ 2.5 million to start development of the park. The park opened in late 2001.
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and are being restored and renovated. Alumni of the school want to use several buildings as museum for documenting the school's history, and for a Native American cultural center.
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The Indian School Band Building built in 1931 and located in the compounds of Phoenix’s Steele Indian School Park in 300 E. Indian School Rd.
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The city of Phoenix obtained the land in 1996 through an intricate three-way land exchange involving the
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owned and operated by the U.S. government, designed in the late 19th century to socialize and assimilate
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involving two television news helicopters of both local Phoenix television stations, ABC affiliate
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festival in the park, near the V.A hospital. The city of Phoenix has held its annual
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https://www.phoenix.gov/parks/parks/alphabetical/s-parks/steele-indian-school
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Phoenix and Collier Reach Agreement on Indian School Property, GAO report
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Department of the Interior News Release on the Exchange, August 10, 1992
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The park and its ponds are open 364 days a year. It is served by the
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is located on the northeast corner of Indian School Road and
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The Phoenix Indian School buildings that are on the
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Assimilation of indigenous peoples of North America
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Index


Encanto Village
Phoenix, Arizona
Coordinates
33°29′52.0116″N 112°4′11.0316″W / 33.497781000°N 112.069731000°W / 33.497781000; -112.069731000
Indian School Road and Central Avenue
https://www.phoenix.gov/parks/parks/alphabetical/s-parks/steele-indian-school
Central Avenue
Encanto Village
Phoenix
Arizona
Avondale
Goodyear
Litchfield Park
Buckeye
Scottsdale
Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community
Phoenix Indian School
boarding schools
Native Americans
Florida
Barron Collier
Bank of America Tower
mid-air collision
KNXV-TV
KTVK
Central at Indian School station
METRO Light Rail
National Register of Historic Places
Native American arts

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