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Z. T. Bottoms Et Al.,
Choctaw
Z. T. Bottoms Et Al.,
Choctaw.
Dawes Commission. No. 8.
United States
court, No. 115.
Citizenship court. No. 75-T.
Commission, No. 5024
September 8, 1800. Petition filed with
Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes,
alleging that claimants were descendants of
Billy Bottoms, alias Nockatubbee, a
half-breed Choctaw and Ann Meshulahtubbee, a
full-blood Choctaw; that certain of
claimants were residing in the nations and
enjoying privileges of citizens. Attached to
the petition were 37 affidavits in support
thereof.
Note.-In the Court of Claims record of
Mississippi Choctaw Indians claiming land
under the treaty of 1830 the following names
appear upon pages indicated: Nocatubbee,
pages 140-149: Nockahtubbee, pages 592, 370
and 648: Nocentubbee, page 196;
Masholetubbee, page 559; and in the records
of the Atoka Revisory Board, on page 306
appears the name "Nockehtubbee."
October 9, 1896. Answer of Choctaw Nation
filed, alleging that " there is no evidence
that this claim has ever been disputed by
the Choctaw Nation."
December 1, 1896. The word "Denied" written
across back of petition.
February 22, 1897. Appeal perfected in
United States court, southern district.
Indian Territory, for trial de novo: answer
of Choctaw Nation stricken from files
because filed too late; evidence taken
before master: no appearance on part of
nation: it was shown by the testimony that
the petitioners were residents of the
nation, enjoying the rights of citizenship;
that Z. T. Bottoms had been sued in the
Chickasaw court as a citizen; that the
following writ of possession had been issued
by the district judge of the Chickasaw
Nation:
Indian Territory,
Chickasaw Nation, Pontotoc County.
To the sheriff or any constable of Pontotoc
County, greeting:
You are hereby commanded by his honor, R. B.
Willis, district Judge of the Chickasaw
Nation, to proceed and attach one Z. T.
Bottoms, a citizen and resident of Pontotoc
County, Chickasaw Nation, a house and lot of
posts, put up and owned by W. T. Shannon, a
citizen of said county and nation, in the
year 1890. You are hereby commanded to hold
this improvement in your possession until
the rights of property can be tried at the
May term of court, 1897, or some Judicial
proceedings made of the same. Fail not but
make your return of this to said court.
A. T. McKinney, Clerk of District Court,
Chickasaw Nation.
June 23. 1897, Master's report filed. The
master found as follows:
The testimony in this case shows that the
applicants, except those that were
Intermarried, were descendants of William
and Ann Bottoms. The evidence in the case
further shows that William and Ann Bottoms
were Choctaw Indians.
The master further found that 34 of the
applicants were nonresidents or intermarried
not in accordance with the laws of the
nation, and recommended that they be not
enrolled. The report concluded as follows:
I recommend that the lineal descendants of
William and Ann Bottoms as contained In this
record, who reside In the Indian Territory,
be admitted as members of the Choctaw Tribe.
November 15, 1897. Judgment of United States
court rendered, admitting the
following-named persons as citizens of the
Choctaw Nation:
William Fletcher Bottoms, William Henry
Bottoms, Rosa Bell Bottoms, William Elmer
Bottoms, Rebecca Morrow, William Fletcher
Morrow, Walter Morrow, Letitia Morrow,
Jewell Morrow, Beulah Morrow, Minnie Morrow,
Winnie Morrow, William Ira Bottoms, Claudie
McClellan Bottoms, Bettie Jane Bottoms,
Pearl Putnam, Hattie Jane Putnam, Frankie
Lee Putnam, Pauline E. Bennett, Zachariah
Thomas Bottoms, William Luther Bottoms,
Francis Caroline Bottoms, James Zachariah
Bottoms, Joseph Smith Bottoms, Bertha May
Bottoms, September Bottoms, Ester E.
Bottoms, William Alexander Bottoms, Allia A.
Bottoms, Bertha Annie Bottoms, Thomas
Atwood, Emmett Montgomery, Thomas W.
Segroves, Elizabeth Segroves, Charles
Webster Segroves, George Franklin Segroves,
Doc Thomas Segroves, William Cleveland
Segroves, Zachariah Segroves, Para lee
Segroves, James B. Segroves, Samuel
Montgomery Segroves, Eldredge Kirkland,
Jessie Ester Kirkland, Mary Pruda Kirkland,
William Walter Kirkland, Sallie Grace
Kirkland, Joseph Kirkland, Beulah Kirkland,
William Kirkland, Monte Kirkland, Lee
Kirkland, Laura Inez Kirkland, Roxie
Kirkland, Sallie Kirkland, Ulsley Mainnard,
Marcus L. Ivey, James L. Ivey, William J.
Ivey, Thomas F. Ivey, Nora E. Ivey, Lewis A.
Ivey, Nancy Ann Steppick, Charles Franklin
Steppick, Thomas Joseph Steppick, George
Washington Steppick, William Oscar Steppick,
Bessie L. Steppick, John H. Gregory, Thomas
L. Ivey, Elisha W. Ivey, Bertie L. Ivey,
Katie Crawford, Nora Lee Crawford.
Certified copy of judgment hereto attached,
marked "Exhibit A."
January 21, 1808. Motion for new trial
filed by nation. Record does not disclose
proceedings on motion, but case was appealed
by nation to United States Supreme Court.
March 3, 1890. Judgment corrected, on motion
of claimants, by striking out the names of
Bertha Ann Bottoms, Sallie Gracie Kirkland,
and James L. Ivey.
May 15. 1899. Mandate of United States
Supreme Court affirming judgment of United
States district court.
December 17, 1002. Decree of
Choctaw-Chickasaw citizenship court vacating
judgment of United States district court in
"test case."
March 10, 1003. Record filed in citizenship
court for trial de novo. In the citizenship
court 43 witnesses were examined by both
attorneys for claimants and for nations.
(List of witnesses and synopsis of testimony
hereto attached.) Seventeen of the 43
witnesses gave positive testimony that
claimants were descendants of Choctaw
Indians, said testimony being based upon
personal knowledge of the Indian ancestors.
Twenty-five of the 43 witnesses confined
their testimony to family connections,
relationship, and descent from Indian
ancestors. Although 42 witnesses testified
in this case before the citizenship court to
material facts, such as blood, descent,
residence or tribal affiliation, and
recognition of claimants, the court saw fit
to refer to the testimony of only of the six
witnesses to which reference is made, one is
shown to be mentally unsound, and two others
based their testimony on his statements to
them. The statements of the court as to what
the others testified to are incorrect, and
in one instance the exact opposite of what
the witness stated.
Z. T. BOTTOMS.
List of names of claimants not in court
judgment but who applied to the commission
prior to December 1, 1905: Samuel Bottoms,
Thomas B. Bottoms, Lonnie Moore, Gracie
Bottoms, Louie Segroves, Bertha May Segroves,
Ethel Lillian Segroves.
Witnesses before Choctaw-Chickasaw
citizenship court in Bottoms case:
Henry Dollerhite, 46 years old, testified as
to acquaintance with and death of Henry and
Elsie Perkins.
J. A. Sexton, aged 63, knew Billy Bottoms in
Cherokee County, Tex., in 1859; also Zack
and Smith Bottoms. Also knew the Hills
there; that he could not understand the
language talked by Billy Bottoms: that
Billy's daughter told him her father was
one-quarter Cherokee, one-quarter white, and
one-half Choctaw; that when he talked with
Billy Bottoms his daughter interpreted for
him; that Billy Bottoms lived with his
daughter, and that his wife was dead: that
Billy Bottoms was an old man and crippled;
that he was about 80 years old; that witness
is not related to Bottoms and has no claim
himself; that Z. T. Bottoms is a son of
Smith Bottoms.
On cross-examination he stated Billy Bottoms
died about the year 1800 or 1861; that he
understood Billy Bottoms came from Alabama
to Texas; that he did not know whether Billy
Bottoms talked Cherokee or Choctaw; that he
never heard Billy Bottoms say anything that
he could understand; that Billy Bottoms's
grandchildren were not permitted to attend
school in Texas because they were Indians.
Redirect: They claimed to be Choctaws. In
response to the court (Judge A.): They
looked like Indians. I could not understand
their language. I have heard Choctaws talk,
but do not know the difference. Billy
Bottoms's daughter said the language was
Choctaw.
Joe Steppick, 64 years old, testified as to
his knowledge of the Hills.
Z. T. Bottoms, 45 years old; lived in the
Chickasaw Nation 19 years; came from Texas:
was born in Cherokee County, Tex.; father
was Smith A. Bottoms; he was part Choctaw
Indian; that Zack and Eldredge Bottoms were
his uncles; last time he saw Zach was in the
Territory 19 years ago; that he died at
White Bead in 1896: mother died in Texas;
did not know grandparents; do not know
degree of Choctaw blood.
No cross-examination.
James Segroves. 33 years of age: testified
that the Hills were descendants of Zack
Bottoms; that Zack Bottoms was his
grandfather; was born in Cherokee County,
Tex.
Cross-examination: I have lived in the
Indian Territory 14 years.
T. J. Blagg 45 years of age; lived in
Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations since 1885;
came from Texas; knew the Hills to be
descendants of the Bottoms; that the Hills
held land in the nations, and were
recognized as citizens.
A. A. Palmer. 44 years old; married into the
Hill family; held farm as Indians.
John Logan, 74 years old; lived in Choctaw
Nation 30 years; no relation to Hills or
Bottoms; knew William Bottoms in Alabama;
Prudence Bottoms, daughter of William
Bottoms, made his father's house her home;
knew her sister Piety; Piety married Ben
Hill; old Billy Bottoms was known as a
Choctaw Indian; he was a cripple; he had the
appearance of a quarter-breed Indian: he
lived near Hacketsburg: Tom Bottoms was
Billy Bottoms's oldest son; Ben Hill and
Kirkland, who married Billy Bottoms's
youngest daughter, moved to Cherokee County,
Tex.; don't know where Billy Bottoms went,
but, he left Alabama.
Cross-examination: Was born in Franklin
County, Ala., in 1830; left Alabama in the
fall of 1852; claimants came before he did;
does not know positively that Billy
Bottoms's wife was descended from
Masholatubbee.
Redirect examination: Prudy Bottoms told him
her mother's name was Ann Masholatubbee, and
Billy Bottoms talked the Indian language.
Joe Freeman, colored, 81 years old. Choctaw
freedman; lived at Doaksville when freed;
knew Billy Bottoms at Doaksville; he was
crippled in his legs; got drunk with his
master, and run horse races; Billy Bottoms
talked Choctaw; witness understands some
Choctaw, but can not talk it: Billy Bottoms
was at Doaksville before the war; witness
counts in Choctaw: knows Choctaw names of
animals; does not know what became of
Bottoms; "he roamed."
Cross-examination: Bottoms would go and
come: was away once two years from first to
last; last time seen about five years-about
ten or fifteen years before the war; never
saw his family; thinks he had one: never
heard names of children and does not know
where they were: understands Bottoms came
from Mississippi; does not know where he
went when he left: heard him say he was a
Choctaw Indian and came from Mississippi;
does not know his age; might have been 40.
Redirect examination: States he does not
undertake to fix Bottom's age: that, he did
not know how old he was.
G. J. Humphrey, 36 years old; states that
his mother was Mary Hill, a sister of Louis
Hill: his mother told him that her mother
was a three-quarter-blood Choctaw.
Cross-examination: Have lived in this county
13 years; family through which he claims
came from Mississippi; mother's grandfather
was Billy Bottoms: mother said Billy Bottoms
and son Zack came to Territory with Indians;
that they came from old Choctaw country.
H. F. Murry (for nation), 80 years old, an
intermarried citizen; knew Louis Hill in
1877; Hill claimed to be a Chickasaw; went
before Chickasaw committee and was rejected;
thereafter Louis's father came into the
Territory and said Louis was not Chickasaw
but Choctaw.
Daniel Underwood, about 100 years old; lived
in Choctaw Nation about 98 years; lived in
Choctaw Nation in Mississippi; knew Chief
Musholatubbee, a Choctaw; knew
Musholatubbe's daughter, Barret: knew Ann
Musholatubbee; does not know what relation
she was to Chief Musholatubbee: knew Billy
Bottoms; he had no wife when known by
witness. Billy Bottoms was a Choctaw, nearly
full blood; he came to this country and
lived somewhere on Blue; Billy Bottoms and
Ann Musholatubbee lived together in old
nation; Billy Bottoms was a cripple.
Catherine Franklin, freedwoman, came from
Pontotoc County, Miss., with first Indians
coming; was 16 years old then; knew Billy
Bottoms. He was a Choctaw and had two
daughters, Piety and Prudie: Billy Bottoms
came to nation near Doaksville; thinks Billy
Bottoms's wife died in old nation: her name
was Ann Musholatubbee; she was a Choctaw;
Billy Bottoms was crippled; talked Choctaw.
Marcus L. Ivey testified as to the Hills;
Louis Hill was his uncle.
Minerva Anderson, freedwoman, 79 years old,
born in Mississippi; was a large girl when
she left Mississippi; came to Doaksville,
Ind. T.; knew Bill}' Bottoms at Doaksville,
also his son Zack; some called him
Nocatubbee; he was a Choctaw; he could not
speak plain English; he was lame; his Indian
name was Nocatubbee; the Indians called him
by that name: he was about Doaksville two or
three years; don't know what became of him;
he left because he was charged with killing
a doctor; he raced horses and drank; knew
him between the years 1840 and 1844: he was
middle aged.
Ophelia Kirkland testified as to her
marriage to a Kirkland; lived in Choctaw
Nation 20 years: married at Paoli in 1881.
W. L. Bottoms testified that he is son of Z.
T. Bottoms; lived in Choctaw Nation 18
years.
W. A. Bottoms lived in nation 32 years;
father was Alexander Bottoms; married in
nation in 1898: paid $50 license.
Philip Stephenson. 75 years old, freedman,
born in Mississippi: 4 years old when he
left there; knew Billy Bottoms at Pitchlyn's,
here on Blue; knew him for a period of 12
months about 10 years before the war.
Levina King, 72 years: Choctaw by blood;
born at Shawneetown, Choctaw Nation; knew
Bottoms around Doaksville, also his son
Zack; he was Choctaw, talked Choctaw
language; called Enocatubbee; got into
trouble and died; killed a doctor; knew the
man they killed: brought him to my house; he
was alive and said Billy Bottoms and
Pitchlyn butchered him: Billy Bottoms was
lame; his wife died in Mississippi; knew him
when I was about 9 years old, near Fort
Towson.
Elizabeth Seagroves, 55 years old, daughter
of Zack Bottoms; relates family history;
lived in nations 22 years; knew Billy
Bottoms; he died in Cherokee County, Tex.,
before I was grown: Zack Bottoms died at
Paoli. Chickasaw Nation: Billy Bottoms was
dark, a Choctaw: could hardly talk English;
Billy Bottoms died before the war: don't
remember whether it was in 1859 or not.
Mrs. Z. T. Bottoms testified as to marriage
and kinfolk of her husband: been living in
Territory 19 years; states names of her
children.
Rebecca Morrow; daughter of W. F. Bottoms
and granddaughter of Nelson Bottoms: was
born at Cairo, Ill.; 46 years old.
Samuel M. Seagroves, son of Mrs. Seagroves.
Ezekiel Putnam, husband of Pearl Bottoms.
Robert Hope: have known Z. T. Bottoms for 40
years; knew his father. Smith Bottoms, in
Texas; he was a dark-completed man, and did
not claim to be a white man. I am a cousin
of Tom Bottoms's wife.
M. F. Montgomery. 32 years old daughter of
Lucinda Bottoms.
Thomas L. Ivey: mother was a Hill; relates
family history of the Hills.
Mrs. L. Bottoms, wife of Newton Wesley
Bottoms, a son of William Fletcher Bottoms,
and grandson of Nelson Bottoms.
W. W. Ivey, brother of Thomas L. Ivey.
William Fletcher Bottoms, 69 years old, son
of Nelson Bottoms; Nelson Bottoms died in
1877 in Arkansas; I married Eliza J. Boyd in
Hardenville, Ill. My father married Sallie
Ann Arnold and moved from Alabama to
Illinois; left Alabama in 1840 or 1841;
remember seeing Billy Bottoms once in
Alabama when I was a child; he had been away
a long time; he did not stay long; father
and I served in the Union Army: Billy
Bottoms went to the Territory and Texas when
he left Alabama: I know this from letters I
have seen; some letters said he was in
Territory and some in Texas; letters
received about 1853 or 1854; I have never
moved to Territory; I live in Jack County,
Tex; I batched there two years; my wife
would not come; letters received from Billy
Bottoms in Territory came before letters
from Texas.
Marcus L. Ivey, brother of two other Ivey
boys just testified.
Robert C. Florence, 55 years: citizen by
marriage; knew Smith Bottoms: knew Zack
Bottoms; lived neighbor to Zack in Cherokee
County, Tex.; Zack Bottoms appeared to be
one-half Choctaw; Smith Bottoms showed
Indian, but not as much as Zack: I have been
living in Territory since 1872; I knew Tom
Bottoms, son of Smith Bottoms; Bottoms have
been holding lands here as citizens for 12
or 15 years; Tom Bottoms sued in Indian
courts; Zack Bottoms was buried on my place
several years ago; Zack Bottoms had all the
general features of an Indian; if I knew
nothing of him, but met him in the road,
would say he was an Indian.
William Kirkland; have lived in the
Chickasaw Nation 24 years; am a brother of
Charles Kirkland. Testified as to marriage
of his sister.
Nancy Ann Steppick, age 46 years,
granddaughter of Piety Hill; lived in
Territory 29 years; married a John Gregory
in Texas: married Steppick in Territory
under Choctaw laws by Choctaw judge; knew
Zack Bottoms; he appeared to be an Indian;
Zack Bottoms talked Choctaw; I had permits
issued six or seven years: sent children to
schools in Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations.
Joseph Kirkland, son of William Kirkland:
lived in Territory 24 years: knew Zack
Bottoms; he appeared to be an Indian.
William Henry Bottoms, son of W. F. Bottoms,
grandson of Nelson Bottoms: held a place
eight or nine years before admitted by
court.
William W. Hill, 70 years old, lives in
Cooke County, Tex.; lived in Cherokee
County, Tex.. 14 years: knew Billy Bottoms,
Zack Bottoms, Smith Bottoms, and Eldredge
Bottoms; lived within 4 miles of Billy
Bottoms; he lived with his children; his
wife was not living; knew his daughters
Prudence and Piety; Billy Bottoms was old, a
cripple, and could not talk good English; he
looked to be an Indian or mixed blood;
appeared to be three-quarters Indian; he
talked Indian language. I have no interest
in this case. Billy Hill killed my brother:
they were not related.
Seth Bottoms. 80 years old; lived in Brinn,
Ala.: fathers name William Bottoms: mother
was Ann Witt: father's mother married in
Jefferson County. Tenn. I am oldest child,
born in 1824: I was born in Monroe County,
Miss. My understanding is my father was born
in Virginia; father had a family Bible. I
don't know what became of it; never heard
father claim to be a Choctaw; he never had
any other name; it seems to me I have heard
he had Choctaw blood. I never heard father
say where he came from; I never heard father
say he married in Tennessee. Daniel Witt
said he was my mother's brother: he might
have been a half brother.
Family Bible, filed in the record as
evidence, shows: Thomas, born April 13,
1807: Piety, born January 16, 1809; Zack
born September 20, 1812.
There are other names following those, but
the writing is illegible.
Riley S. Bottoms, 63 years of age. Am
postmaster at Knowles. Ala.; am a grandson
of William Bottoms; have seen grandfather:
never heard him claim to be a Choctaw;
grandmother died in Monroe County. Miss.:
about all I now about grandfather and
grandmother I learned from Uncle Seth.
Nancy Rudolph, 58 years old, lives at
Knowles, Ala.; sister of Riley Bottoms. "I
reckon I have heard my mother say
grandmother's name was Annie Witt."
Wiley Wooten, 80 years old, lives in
Franklin County. Ala.; lived there all my
life except two years in Mississippi: knew a
Mr. Bottoms in Marion County, Ala.: his
Indian name was Nockatubbee: was called by
both names. I knew three of his children,
Thomas. Seth, and Eagle; his first name was
William. When Bottoms left Alabama his son
Zack went with him; don't know where he came
from to Marion County; I was 7 or 8 years
old: Seth Bottoms and I are about the same
age. Bottoms looks somewhat like an Indian.
Mrs. M. E. Hays, 51 years of age, lived in
Brinn, Ala. My father is Seth Bottoms. He
died the 25th of this month; he lived with
me for three years. For the last year his
mind has been mighty feeble; some clays he
would have a good mind and some days he
would not. I do not believe he could make an
accurate statement.
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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