Prentice Reid

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One evening in 1922, the superintendent at Albuquerque, a school where whipping was a fairly a rare occurrence, wrote in his diary the punishment he had handed out to four students found in bed together: “This morning I whipped the two boys here in the office building until they lay down on the floor and whined like dogs. I also whipped the two girls.”
Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875–1928
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