The six Indigenous girls stand side by side, all wearing identical loose dresses of striped fabric, with diagonally folded cloth scarves covering their heads. A few wear beaded necklaces; one
Credits: This timeline was compiled by Carlos Pelley of Yakima Valley Libraries; Anna King, a correspondent with the Northwest News Network and Northwest Public Broadcasting; and editor Joanna Markell and
The six Indigenous girls stand side by side, all wearing identical loose dresses of striped fabric, with diagonally folded cloth scarves covering their heads. A few wear beaded necklaces; one
Credits: This timeline was compiled by Carlos Pelley of Yakima Valley Libraries; Anna King, a correspondent with the Northwest News Network and Northwest Public Broadcasting; and editor Joanna Markell and
Search dogs and use of ground-penetrating radar continue to yield more information and context about an Indian boarding school that operated at Fort Simcoe in the Yakima Valley until 1920.