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John Mitchell, Choctaw
John Mitchell Et Al.,
Choctaws,
Dawes Commission, No. 116.
United States
court. No. 116.
Citizenship court, No. 101.
Commission. No. 5014.
Record
September 5, 1806. Application was
submitted to the commission for the
admission of John Mitchell, Alfred H.
Mitchell, John W. Mitchell, William J.
Mitchell, Robert H. Mitchell, Dochia A.
Mitchell, Myrtle Lee Mitchell, Ollie
Mitchell, Andrew J. Mitchell, Luella Pyburn.
Milton H. Pyburn, Benjamin H. Pyburn, James
B. Pyburn, Mary L. Pyburn, Emma J. Welch,
Adella B. Welch, John N. Welch, Christian P.
Welch, Meton Welch, David Welch as citizens
of the Choctaw Nation by blood and that they
be duly enrolled as such.
Accompanying the application are the
following affidavits:
(a) Rachel Colbert states:
I am acquainted with John Mitchell, who is a
son of David Mitchell, a white man, who
married Rebecca Folsom, a Choctaw woman by
blood, daughter of Ned Folsom, and that
Rebecca Mitchell (nee Folsom) was the mother
of John Mitchell, applicant for rights of
citizenship in the Choctaw Nation. I have
known them in the old nation. Cotton Gin
County. I am 65 years old, I am a citizen of
the Choctaw Nation and have no interest in
the prosecution of this claim.
(b) The deposition of Tennessee Gardner, an
old enrolled Choc-taw Indian, who stated:
John Mitchell: his mother was Beckie Folsom.
Q. She was the daughter of Ned Folsom, was
she?-
A. Yes sir; old man Ned Folsom.
Q. Ned Folsom was a Choctaw by blood, was
he?-
A. Old man Ned Folsom was a white man, and
his wife was a half breed
Q. They lived in the old nation, did they?-
A. They lived in the old nation at Pigeon
Roost.
Q. Do you know Jerry Folsom?-
A. He was his uncle.
Witness further states that John Mitchell's
mother, Rebecca, was a half-breed and that
John Mitchell has a "house full of
children."
(c) T. L. Wiley states substantially the
same as the above witness.
(d) The affidavit of J. J. Gardiner, stating
that he was attorney for John Mitchell and
family before the citizenship committee in
1892: that he presented their claim and it
was allowed by the committee, and the House
of Representatives in 1894 referred it back
to the committee for additional evidence;
that the case remained before the committee,
but never was acted upon.
The statement of this witness is
corroborated by the records of the Choctaw
Council, which show (citizenship, cases, p.
52) that on October 20, 1892, this case was
allowed by the citizenship committee.
A number of other affidavits setting out the
blood and descent of the claimants from
Rebecca Folsom accompany the petition.
September 19, 1890. Answer of nations
filed, stating:
That the evidence is insufficient to
establish claimants' right to citizenship.
That the evidence shows that claimant has
presented his application for citizenship to
the Choctaw tribunal, and that said
application is still pending there find has
not been decided.
December 1, 1890. The commission rendered
its decision in words and figures as
follows, to wit: "Denied."
February 1, 1897. Case appealed to United
States court, central district, Indian
Territory. The depositions of a number of
witnesses were taken before a master,
all-corroborating the allegations contained
in 'the original petition. No evidence was
offered by the nations.
August 25, 1897. The case was heard by the
court, and judgment was entered admitting
John Mitchell, Andrew J. Mitchell, Milton
Welch, Dosia A. Welch, Luella Pyburn, Emma
J. Welch, Alfred H. Mitchell, John W.
Mitchell, William J. Mitchell, Robert H.
Mitchell, Docia A. Mitchell, Myrtle Lee
Mitchell, Ollie Mitchell, M. H. Pyburn,
James B. Pyburn, Mary L. Pyburn, Odella B.
Welsh, John M. Welsh, and Christian P. Welsh
as members of the Choctaw Nation by blood.
(Certified copy of said judgment hereto
attached.)
December 17, 1902. Judgment of United States
court set aside and vacated by decree of
citizenship court in "test case."
March 9,1903. Record before commission and
United States court certified to citizenship
court for trial de novo.
Attorney for claimants, J. G. Rails, related
by marriage to the Fulsoms.
November 15, 1903. Witnesses examined by
court for claimants: Green Taylor: Rufus
Garner: Sampson Garner, a full-blood
Choctaw; John Mitchell; and D. D. Durant, a
full blood. Witness examined for nations: J.
C. Fulsom.
In addition, all the affidavits and
depositions filed before the commission in
1896 and depositions taken before the United
States court in 1897 were offered and
objected to by counsel for the following
reasons as stated:
Mr. Cornish. The nations object to the
introduction of the papers referred to. As
to all papers referred to as having been
filed before and made use of by the
Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes,
except affidavits, the nations object,
because they are parts of a void proceeding
had before the Commission to the Five
Civilized Tribes under the act of June 10,
1896, to which both nations were necessary
and interested parties and wherein only one
nation was served and made a party. As to
affidavits filled and made use of before the
Dawes Commission, they urge that they are
not competent for the reason they are ex
parte having been taken without notice to
the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, the
necessary and interested parties. As to all
papers filed before and made use of by the
United States court, except depositions, the
nations object for the reason that they are
parts of a void proceeding had before the
United States court, wherein both nations
were necessary and interested parties and to
which only the Choctaw Nation was served and
made a party. They object for the further
reason that the cause was tried de novo In
the United States court when the action of
the court should have been confined to a
review of the proceeding on the papers and
evidence filled before the commission. As to
all depositions filed before the United
States court the nations object and set
forth the same objections as urged In
connection with affidavits filled before the
Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, and
also for the reasons set forth in objections
to other papers.
The nations wish to call attention to the
fact that the depositions of Green W. Taylor
was introduced and asked to be considered as
evidence when he was present here on the
stand today.
The court withheld its ruling on the
objection until after the case was finally
submitted. While the record does not
disclose that the objection was sustained in
this case, the court uniformly sustained a
similar objection in all other cases. No
opportunity, therefore, was afforded
claimants to call witnesses for examination
by this court.
Judge Adams, in rendering the decision of
the court, says:
The evidence in this case shows that John
Mitchell, the principal applicant (the other
plaintiffs being his descendants), was born
in the State of Mississippi, and that he
emigrated from that State to the State of
Arkansas about the year 1858, where he
remained until about 13 or 14 years ago,
when he moved into the Indian Territory.
That Nathaniel Fulsom, who seems to be the
originator of the Fulsom family, who are now
Choctaw Indians, married a Choctaw woman in
the State of Mississippi, and had the
following children: Mollie F. Fulsom, Delia
Fulsom, David Fulsom, Rebecca Fulsom, Rhoda
Fulsom, and Israel Fulsom: that Mollie
Fulsom married a man named Sam Mitchell, and
had two children by that marriage, one of
them dying In infancy, and the other, whose
name was Sophia, seems to have been married
three times; the first time to a man named
Hancock, and then to a man named Moore, and
then to a man named Tiner; that Delia
married a man named Cameron and had two
children named Margaret and Alex: that David
married Mary Nail and had the following
children: Cornelius, Henry, Loren, Simpson,
Nora, David, and Rhoda: and that Rhoda.
another daughter of Nathaniel Fulsom,
married P. P. Pitchlyn, who was at one time
principal chief of the Choctaw Nation, and a
delegate to Washington; that Rebecca married
n man named Black: and that Israel Fulsom
married Tobitha Nail.
This accounts for tho descendants of the
original Fulsom, who was a white man, and
married a Choctaw woman.
The plaintiff, John Mitchell, claims to be
the son of Rebecca, when the evidence shows
that she married a man named Black.
I am of the opinion that these applicants
have failed to produce sufficient evidence
to show that they are Choctaw Indians; or,
that they are descendants of such Choctaw
Indians as would entitle them, under the
laws and treaties, to citizenship and
enrollment as Choctaw Indians.
The case, therefore, turns upon the one
question as to the descent of claimants from
Rebecca Fulsom: whether she married David
Mitchell, claimant's father and grandfather,
or whether she married a man named Black, as
held by the court.
All the testimony offered before the
commission and the United States court is
clear that Rebecca Fulsom married David
Mitchell, father of John Mitchell, leading
claimant herein. In those proceedings there
was no question to the contrary. Of the six
witnesses who testified before the
citizenship court, five of them, who knew
the Mitchells and Fulsoms in Mississippi,
testified that David Mitchell married
Rebecca Fulsom. Only one witness, J. C.
Fulsom, who came to the Choctaw Nation,
Indian Territory, in 1831, and whose
principal knowledge of his own family was by
tradition, "testified that Rebecca Fulsom,
whose relationship to him is not shown,
married a man by the name of Black. When
asked: "If these people were related to you
would you know it (meaning John Mitchell's
family) he answered: "The record of the
Fulsoms would show it, but I never have seen
it." It was then shown that the family
record of the Fulsoms had been lost, and was
not in existence. It was admitted by J. C.
Fulsom that he had been in the penitentiary,
having been convicted of murder.
Thus the decision of the citizenship court
is based upon the testimony of one witness
alone, who did not profess to know the facts
of his own personal knowledge, but by family
tradition only. All the other testimony in
the record (which is voluminous) upon this
point is that Rebecca Fulsom married David
Mitchell, and that John Mitchell was the
issue of that marriage.
April 18, 1904. Decree was entered denying
claimant's admission to citizenship in the
Choctaw Nation.
Applications were submitted to the
commission before January 1, 1906, for the
enrollment of the following newborn
children: Roy Addus Mitchell, son of Robert
H. Mitchell, and Jessie Lee Mitchell and
Mattie Mitchell, children of William
Mitchell.
May 24, 1904. Applications denied by
commission, because the parents of said
children had been decreed by the
Choctaw-Chickasaw citizenship court not to
be citizens of the nation.
Counsel for claimants respectfully submit
that those persons admitted by judgment of
the United States court in 1897, and their
children for whose enrollment applications
were duly made to the commission within the
time required by law, should be enrolled.
They are: John Mitchell, Andrew J. Mitchell,
Milton Welsh, Dosia A. Welsh, Luella Pyburn,
Emma J. Welsh, Alfred H. Mitchell, John W.
Mitchell, William J. Mitchell, Robert H.
Mitchell, Docia A. Mitchell, Myrtle Lee
Mitchell, Ollie Mitchell, M. H. Pyburn,
James B. Pyburn, Mary L. Pyburn, Odella B.
Welsh, John M. Welsh, Christian P. Welsh,
Roy Addus Mitchell, Jessie Lee Mitchell,
Mattie Mitchell.
Respectfully submitted.
Walter S. Field.
Copy of Order of Court
United States Of America.
Indian Territory, Central District, ss:
In the United States court in the Indian
Territory, central district, at a term
thereof begun and held at South McAlester,
in the Indian Territory, on the 25th day of
August A. D. 1897.
Present, the Hon. William H. H. Clayton,
Judge of said court.
The following order was made and entered of
record, to wit:
John Mitchell et al. v.
Choctaw Nation. 116. Judgment.
On this day this cause came on to be
heard, whereupon the plaintiffs and
defendants announced ready for trial, and
the court having heard the evidence and
argument of counsel finds the issues in
favor of the plaintiffs herein, and finds
that the plaintiffs. John Mitchell, Andrew
J. Mitchell. Milton Welsh, Dosia A. Welsh,
Luella Pyburn, Emma J. Welch, Alfred H.
Mitchell, John W. Mitchell, William J.
Mitchell, Robert H. Mitchell, Docia A.
Mitchell, Myrtle Lee Mitchell, Ollie
Mitchell, M. H. Pyburn, Benj. H. Pyburn,
James B. Pyburn, Mary L. Pyburn, Odella B.
Welch, John M. Welsh, and Christenia P.
Welch are members by blood of the Choctaw
Nation, and that all of said plaintiffs are
entitled to be placed upon the rolls of the
members of the Choctaw Nation as such
members, and entitled to all the rights,
privileges, immunities, and benefits as such
members.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and
decreed that the said plaintiffs. John
Mitchell, Andrew J. Mitchell. Milton Welsh,
Dosia A. Welsh, Luella Pyburn, Emma J.
Welch, Alfred H. Mitchell, John W. Mitchell,
William J. Mitchell, Robert H. Mitchell,
Docia A. Mitchell, Myrtle Lee Mitchell,
Ollie Mitchell, M. H. Pyburn, Benj. H.
Pyburn, James B. Pyburn, Mary L. Pyburn,
Odella B. Welch, John M. Welsh, and
Christenia P. Welch are members by blood of
the Choctaw Nation, and that the defendant,
the Choctaw Nation, recognize the said
plaintiffs ;is such members in all respects,
and that the Commission to the Five
Civilized Tribes place the names of these
plaintiffs upon the rolls as members of the
Choctaw Nation as herein adjudged, and that
the clerk of this court furnish to said
commission a certified copy of this
judgment: and that the plaintiffs have and
recover of and from (he defendant all their
costs herein laid out and expended, for all
of which let execution issue.
The within is a true copy from the records
of an order made by said court on the 25th
day of August 1897.
[seal.] E. J. Fannin, Clerk.
This is to certify that I am the officer
having custody of the records pertaining to
the enrollment of the members of the
Choctaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee, Creek, and
Seminole Tribes of Indians, and the
disposition of the land of said tribes, and
that the above and foregoing is a true and
correct copy of a "copy of order of court,"
rendered on August 25, 1897, by William H.
H. Clayton, judge of the United States
court, central district, Indian Territory,
in case No. 116. John Mitchell et al. v.
Choctaw Nation.
J. Geo. Wright, Commissioner to the Five
Civilized Tribes,
By W. H. Angell, Clerk in charge of Choctaw
Records.
Muskogee. Okla., October 25, 1910.
Notes About the Book:
Source: Five Civilized Tribes In Oklahoma, Reports of the Department of the
Interior and Evidentiary Papers in support of S. 7625, a Bill for the Relief of
Certain Members of the Five Civilized Tribes in Oklahoma, Sixty-second Congress,
Third Session, Published 1913, by the Department of the Interior, United States.
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and then ocr'd. Minimal editing
has been done, and readers can and should expect some errors in the textual
output.
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