We welcome you to the Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre.

The records on our site emerge from the cultural and physical genocide that the Canadian government and churches conducted through the Indian Residential School System, including the ongoing impacts.

Bearing witness to these records may become overwhelming. If you are a Survivor or an Intergenerational Survivor and would like support, you can call the 24-hour National Indian Residential School Crisis Line at:

1-866-925-4419

Please click the button below for other cultural and mental health resources.

Church bus on the Round Lake Indian mission, Grenfell, Sask. : the students are from the Sintaluta Reseve, grades 7 & 8 : they are on their way to join other students at Broadview, Sask.
Church bus on the Round Lake Indian mission, Grenfell, Sask. : the students are from the Sintaluta Reseve, grades 7 & 8 : they are on their way to join other students at Broadview, Sask.

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Church bus on the Round Lake Indian mission, Grenfell, Sask. : the students are from the Sintaluta Reseve, grades 7 & 8 : they are on their way to join other students at Broadview, Sask.
United Church of Canada Archives

Archival Item
1960 February
Image > Photograph
Related School
Round Lake (SK)
Creators and Contributors
Description
Subject: Rev. Earle Stotesbuty and students boarding bus.
About Residential School Photographs
Photographs have multiple meanings and can serve various purposes. Residential school photographs were sometimes taken by teachers, staff, and clergy, and occasionally by students and their families. More frequently, however, government or church personnel took the photographs, with a view of gaining support for the schools. The photographs were staged to depict the assimilation of Indigenous children into settler colonial society, their conversion to Christianity, and the “effectiveness” of the government’s “citizenship” project to “take the Indian out of the child”. These photographs are of students but not by them or for them.

Nevertheless, for Survivors and their families, some of the official photographs are still valued as they represent hard-won achievements in adverse circumstances. Official photographs may be the only photographs available to Survivors of their childhood and their friends, and for families they represent a means to search for, or connect with, family members.

To learn more about Survivors’ perspectives on the schools, see the Legacy of Hope’s “Our Stories, Our Strength” video collection and the hearings from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

If you are a former student and would like to comment on a photograph either in writing or as an audio/video recording, please contact us.

More Information

Holding Repository Identifier
93.049P/2041
Commission Object Identifier
13d-c5710-d31
Extent and Medium
1 photoprint ; 19 x 25 cm
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