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| | Restoration of the North Building at Shawnee Methodist Mission, Kansas Historical Quarterly, November, 1942 |
 | | It was used as a dormitory and school where Indian girls were taught spinning, weaving and other domestic arts, and as the residence of Thomas Johnson, the founder and long-time superintendent, and other teachers. |
 | | The furniture is genuinely antique, except a few desks and beds for Indian students which were built by the museum project of the WPA from 1845 models. |
 | | Cooperating with the society are the Colonial Dames, the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Daughters of 1812, the Daughters of the American Colonists and the Shawnee Mission Indian Historical Society. |
| www.kshs.org /publicat/khq/1942/42_4_mission.htm (901 words) |
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