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- Timeline of Mool-Mool, Fort Simcoe and its boarding school
Since Time Immemorial: Mool-Mool springs Indigenous village and crossroads site existed at what is now Fort Simcoe Historical State Park, according to Jon Shellenberger, an archaeologist and
- Yakama descendants search for relatives’ remains at Mool-Mool, or Fort . . .
In Central Washington, people are searching for the remains of Yakama Nation ancestors at a place called Mool-Mool or Fort Simcoe Historical State Park
- Historic photos show student life at Fort Simcoe Indian boarding school
Yakama descendants search for relatives’ remains at Mool-Mool, or Fort Simcoe state park Anna King Northwest Public Broadcasting Northwest News Network
- It Happened Here: Click Relands papers a historical resource
As chairman of the research committee of the Fort Simcoe at Mool-Mool Restoration Society, he participated in the effort to preserve the former Army outpost and Indian boarding school as a
- Searches for unmarked graves at Fort Simcoe narrow focus areas
Layers of history at Mool-Mool Fall and spring are ideal for historic human remains detection dogs to search because mornings are cooler and scent stays closer to the ground
- New efforts shed light on history of Indian boarding school at Fort . . .
None of those buildings remain In studying a historic aerial photo of the site, Miles thinks those three buildings stood in the area between Mool Mool Springs and Fort Simcoe Road
- Historic photos show Fort Simcoe Indian boarding school in the Yakima . . .
John Clark Rhodes, an amateur photographer, took 19 photos at Fort Simcoe in the Yakima Valley in April 1909 The photos offer more information about the government-run Indian boarding school
- More than 500 Northern Paiute were forced to Yakama Reservation in 1879
The Mool-Mool springs Indigenous village and crossroads site has existed since time immemorial at what is now Fort Simcoe Historical State Park, according to Jon Shellenberger, an archaeologist
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