Abstract: An analysis of the historical annals of the Sisters of the Holy Child Jesus' school in Avoca, Minnesota, helps illuminate the meaning of death at Native American boarding schools run by Catholic missionaries. By placing the deaths of two students in 1889 within the larger context of nineteenth-century death culture, this study suggests that white missionaries understood these students' deaths in a manner that reflected both larger societal and Catholic ideas of "a good death." These deaths became a form of assimilation as they taught Native students the ars moriendi , or the art of dying.
Elisabeth C. Davis (Sun,) studied this question.