Photo via American Indian Association of Illinois
Native American Educational Services (NAES) College was founded by the Native American Committee (NAC) in 1973 to continue their mission of increasing accessible education for the Chicago Native American community. NAES College began as Native American Educational Service (NAES) with the initial founding of the school being grounded in providing Native students with a system of higher education, supporting community members in earning their G.E.D., and promoted traditional academic knowledge combined with tribal knowledge.
After the opening of the Chicago campus NAES College expanded to study sites in Minneapolis Saint-Paul, the Menominee Reservation, Fort Peck, Leech Lake, Northern Cheyenne, and Santo Domingo. After issues with a federal grant, NAES administrators partnered with Antioch College to keep the institution going in some form to support Native students who sought higher education.
Today NAES College has been reconfigured as Native American Educational Services, Inc. Its library and archives were split between the University of Chicago and the American Indian Association of Illinois (IAIA). In its current form, the organization continues to advocate for Native students through a partnership with AIAI and its president Dr. Dorene Wiese in stewarding the stories of its alumni, faculty, and administrators.
James B. LaGrand. Indian Metropolis: Native Americans in Chicago, 1945-75. Champaign: University of Illinois Press. 2002.
John J. Laukaitis. Community Self-Determination: American Indian Education in Chicago, 1952-1996. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2015.
"Mission,"NAES College - Native American Education Services College.
“Native American Educational Services College” NAES College – Native American Education Services College.
"History," NAES College - Native American Education Services College.