Sacred History: Researching and Preserving Native Cultural
Resources
Researching for Preservation
Contrary
to the belief of some developers, historians do not go around
patently calling for the preservation of everything that is
old. While age is an important factor in rendering a site
or building historic, it is not the only factor. Historians
also look at a number of elements to determine whether an
old site or building has historic value. A number of questions
should be answered, such as:
- What was the site's main purpose?
- Who lived at or otherwise used this site?
- Is the site representative of a social movement or architectural
style?
Answering
these sorts of questions involves performing a substantial amount
of research. Historians can find out some of this information
from government records; local, state, and federal. Other resources
that often prove very helpful include newspaper articles, the
papers of people once associated with the site, and artifacts
at the site itself. In some cases, a Historian will talk to
people who have a history with the site. Researching the history
of a site is very important to determine its historic value,
and in turn, the value of preserving it.
St. Boniface School serves
as an excellent illustration for researching historic value.
As a Historian, I sorted out the site's historic significance
through several avenues of research. I read through newspapers
and Catholic Church archives to understand the school's origins
and purpose. I found people who had attended St. Boniface,
and their memories demonstrated the impact the school had
on local and regional history. Through examining the history
of Native people in the 19th and 20th centuries, I fit St.
Boniface into two major themes in U.S. And California history:
the rise of Federally-funded Indian Boarding Schools at the
turn of the century, and Catholic missionary efforts among
Indians in the southwest since the 16th century.
This research led me to believe
that the school's site would have been an excellent site to
preserve and maintain for public education. Sadly, the City
of Banning saw only a structural safety hazard when they demolished
the site in 1974. Sometimes the toughest thing to accept is
that the historic site you've researched has lost it's historic
integrity, or nobody is willing to pay for its restoration.
More about St. Boniface
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