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Conditions Within the Indian Territory
Industrial, Social, And Sanitary Condition
It is only possible to estimate the
agricultural and industrial products of The
Five Civilized Tribes by the 'observation of
the special agents and enumerators. The
Indians were very reluctant to give any
information in regard to their land
holdings, the area cultivated, products, or
individual wealth. The whites, generally
temporary residents, were as reluctant to
furnish information as the Indians, not
knowing but that the census 'would lead to
their expulsion from the Indian Territory.
The climate is equable, with little cold
weather, and usually but little snow.
February is considered a spring month. It is
followed by a long and hot summer, with
pleasant nights. About the latitude of
northern Alabama, the whole region is
calculated under proper cultivation to yield
enormous crops of corn, cotton, and fruit.
By careful estimates not less than 360,000
acres are under a kind of cultivation in The
Five Civilized Tribes. Much of the
cultivation is primitive and the acreage
yield small. There is in The Five Tribes an
estimated production of 4,350,000 bushels of
corn, wheat, and oats; 421,000 bushels of
vegetables of all kinds; 35,000 bales of
cotton, and 168,000 tons of hay. The 'total
value of these productions is estimated at
85,756,000. The Five Civilized Tribes have
many horses, mules, cattle, hogs, and sheep.
Sheep are raised for food and the wool is
used for clothing. There is a record of 20
carloads of sheep carried out of the
territory in 1890. The surplus crops and
productions, including cattle, are marketed
in the states adjoining. The cotton crop
generally finds its way to the seacoast by
rail by the way of Ardmore, in the Chickasaw
Nation, or by the Red river.. The
manufactures of The Five Civilized tribes
are nominal. Still they make many woolen
blankets and shawls, a large number of
willow baskets, some maple sugar, gather
wild rice, and take fish from the river.
Home weaving is a feature. The forests
supply 8,000,000 feet of lumber per year,
which is generally consumed by the people.
At Waggoner, in the Creek Nation, there is
a, sawmill engaged in cutting walnut timber,
producing a large number of gunstocks, many
of which are shipped for use in European
armies. The forest also yields considerable
hemlock bark, and large quantities of
firewood are cut and sold.
Live Stock On Ranges, Indian Territory was
included in the second range district for
census purposes: The agents charged with the
investigation of range stock report:
The Indian Territory has been extensively
occupied as a maturing ground for cattle
bred farther south by large companies and
associations of cattlemen, who lease the
lands or grazing privileges from the Indian
tribes, and by fencing larger pastures with
barbed wire dispense with herders. Each year
nearly the entire stock is matured and sent
to market and a new supply of young cattle
from the south placed on the pastures; hence
the percentage of sales is much larger from
the Indian Territory than from any other
area of like extent in the southern portion
of the grazing regions. Range stock, as
shown by the tables, is located in the
Chickasaw, Creek, and Osage reservations and
the Cherokee Outlet or Strip. The large
proportion of 3 and 4 year olds in the
Indian Territory indicates, that the
business is conducted chiefly to mature
rather than to breed cattle. In ordinary
years, when prices are satisfactory, all dry
cows and 4-year olds and most of the 3-year
olds are sent forward to market, and the
pastures are replenished from southern
ranges. The cattle industry in the Indian
Territory has been fairly satisfactory since
1880, excepting the year 1886, succeeding
the great loss by the winter storms of
1885-1886. The business is controlled almost
exclusively by the white men, who are not
citizens of the territory or members of any
Indian tribe, and the presence of the stock
and the men in charge has been in some
instances productive of dissatisfaction
among the Indians. No sheep are held on the
ranges in the Indian Territory.
Coal And Coal Mining, The census
investigations develop the following
regarding coal in the Indian Territory:
(a)
The western or fourth field, which comprises
the only deposits of the carboniferous
measures west of the Mississippi river,
extends across the boundaries of Kansas,
Missouri, and Arkansas into the Indian
Territory, underlying almost the entire
eastern half of that territory. The present
developments of importance are along the
line of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas
railway, in the Choctaw Nation reservation,
and are conducted by the Osage Coal and
Mining Company at McAlester and the Atoka
Mining Company at Lehigh.
The Choctaw Coal and Mining Company is
constructing a line of railroad from the
Arkansas state line, passing through
Oklahoma to the western boundary of the
territory, and southward to Denison, Texas,
intersected by the St. Louis and Kansas
Pacific, the Missouri, Kansas and Texas, the
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe, and the
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific railroads.
This company is engaged in developing a
large area of excellent coal territory,
lying along the route of the projected
railroad, secured by lease from the Choctaw
Nation. This enterprise will constitute one
of the most important in the southwest.
The quality of the coal now being mined
in this territory is excellent for steam and
heating purposes, and is well suited for gas
and coking. The beds from which the product
is obtained range from 3 to 5 feet in
thickness, and comprise the 2 lower veins,
which are here found to be of much greater
thickness and freer from bone and other
impurities than in any other part of the
field. Competent authorities assert that the
coals now being mined in the Indian
Territory are superior to any found west of
the Appalachian field.
The total product in the territory during
the calendar year 1889 was 752,832 short
tons, valued at $1,323,807. The average
number of persons employed during the year
was 1,873; the total wages paid, $927,267.
No report of mining operations in this
territory was made for the Tenth Census.
The coal measure of Indian Territory is
chiefly in the Choctaw Nation, covering an
area of 13,600 square miles of bituminous
coal. Iron, lead, copper, marble, sandstone,
and limestone are found. Salt springs are
also numerous.
Railroads, The following is a statement
of the railroads of the territory:
Miles Of Railroad, Single Track, Lying
Within Indian Territory, June 30, 1890.
Total for territory 1,046.20
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe (Southern
Kansas) 155.56
Atlantic and Pacific 112.05
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific (Chicago,
Kansas and Nebraska) 65.03
Choctaw Coal and Railway Company 39.80
Denison and Washita Valley 9.74
Missouri, Kansas and Texas 256.82
St. Louis and San Francisco 144.20
Kansas and Arkansas Valley 163.00
Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe 100.00
Wages, Para hands are paid about the same
wages as in Texas, Arkansas, or Kansas. The
trades are not well paid, except in the
towns made up of intruders or noncitizens,
or by the railroads or other corporations.
Coal miners receive the wages current in
Missouri.
Commodities Of Life, Provisions and clothing
are about the same in price as in southern
Kansas or western Arkansas. The people
outside of the towns, as rule, live on plain
fare and much in the open air.
The Professions, The professions are as a
rule poorly paid. Lawyers are numerous, bat
the business is of a petty character and not
profitable.
Newspapers
Cherokee Nation, Cherokee Advocate, national
organ, published at Tahlequah, half in
English and half in Cherokee.
Chickasaw Nation, There are 7 newspapers now
published in the Chickasaw Nation, and they
all claim to be independent in politics: the
Chickasaw Chieftain, published at Ardmore;
the Ardmore Courier, published at Ardmore;
the Herald, published at Wynnewood; the
Chickasaw Enterprise, published at Pauls
Valley; Territorial Topics, published at
Purcell; the Register, published at Purcell;
the Minstrel, published at Minco. All of
these papers are supported by the
noncitizens and whites. There is no Indian
paper published in the Chickasaw Nation.
Choctaw Nation, There are 3 newspapers
published in the Choctaw Nation: the Indian
Citizen, a weekly issue, published at Atoka,
devoted to the Indian people and their
interests, has liberal patronage, and a
circulation of 1,320; the same may be said
of the Twin City Topics, a weekly journal,
published at McAlester; the Indian
Missionary, published monthly at Atoka, in
the interest of the Baptist denomination,
the circulation being given as 1,000.
Creek Nation, There are 4 newspapers
published in the Creek Nation: the Indian
Journal (Creek), a weekly, published in
Eufaula, has a circulation of 840; the
Muskogee Phenix (republican and Creek), a
weekly, published in Muscogee, has a
circulation of 1,470; the Brother in lied
(Methodist), a weekly, published in
Muscogee, has a circulation of 1,300; the
Brother in Black (Methodist), a weekly,
published in Muscogee, has an estimated
circulation of 500.
Seminole Nation, There is no paper published
in the Seminole Nation.
Banks, There is one national bank at
Muscogee, Creek Nation, and one at Ardmore,
Chickasaw Nation; there are also some
private banks.
Vital Statistics, The health of the people
of the Indian Territory is good, the death
rate small, and the local diseases are,
those common to the states of Kansas,
Arkansas, and northern Texas. No statistics
of deaths, burials, or marriages could be
obtained. The laws of the several nations
regulate marriages and burials for the
citizens, and the Arkansas laws govern
noncitizens in these particulars. The poor
and unfortunate of The Five Tribes are
fairly well cared for. The noncitizen poor
are cared for by their own people.
Dwellings, The houses of the citizens of The
Five Tribes are built of stone, brick, and
wood. By count 561 dwelling houses were
found in the Seminole Nation and 3,33 in the
Creek Nation. No complete returns were made
of the houses in the other nations.
Education
Education receives much care and attention
at the hands of the people and authorities
of The Five Civilized Tribes. In some of
them, as shown by the reports of the special
agents, the freedmen and others of Negro
descent are not properly considered in
school matters. The schoolbooks used are in
the English language.
Cherokee Nation, The schools of the
Cherokee Nation are justly a source of pride
to all of the citizens, One-half of the
revenue derived from the funds in the hands
of the United States, invested in 5 per cent
government bonds, is devoted to their
support. These schools are: the Cherokee
orphan asylum, the national male and female
seminaries, and 100 primary schools
scattered throughout the different judicial
districts of the nation in proportion to the
population, the highest number in any
district being 15 and the lowest 7. The
expenditure of the nation for educational
purposes among the primary schools is
confined to books and tuition, each locality
being- required to famish the house and keep
it in repair as well as to furnish fuel and
water. It is required also that the locality
furnish a minimum number of pupils (13), and
on failure of a school to show that average
attendance per month, the school is
discontinued and some other neighborhood has
an. opportunity to furnish the required
number of pupils.
The general management of the schools of the
nation has heretofore been vested in a
national board of education consisting of 3
members, who are appointed by the principal
chief and confirmed by the senate. They
serve for 3 years and get an annual salary
of $600 each. They are entrusted with the
duty of hiring the teachers, the law
requiring them to give preference to natives
and graduates of the seminaries, the
purchase and distribution of books and other
supplies, and the general supervision of the
schools, each member having a separate part
of the nation under his special care.
The orphan asylum, as well as each seminary,
is under the charge of a. superintendent,
and has a steward, matron, and the usual
number of employees, in addition to the
principal and a corps of teachers. The
asylum and each of the seminaries is capable
of accommodating from 150 to 200 pupils, and
a provision is made for the board and
clothing of a certain number of pupils,
about 50, as well as the tuition and books
of all. Those who are able to pay are
charged $2 per week for board, lodging,
laundry, and tuition.
The primary teachers are paid a minimum
salary of $30 per month for an attendance of
15 pupils. This monthly salary may be
increased $1 per month for each additional
pupil that attends up to $50 per month, the
maximum salary allowed for 35 pupils, but it
can not be further increased, though if the
number is large enough, in the opinion of
the board, to justify it, 2 teachers may be
allowed. In the latter case each teacher
receives the same amount of salary, making
the maximum cost of the school for tuition
$100 per month.
Each teacher is required to render a monthly
report to the board of education, as well as
a term report at' the end of each term.
There are.2 terms during the year, the
spring term continuing through February,
March, April, May, and June, and the fall
term running through September, October,
November, and December. Each school has a
board of directors, consisting of 3 members,
appointed by the national board of
education.
Schoolbooks are issued by the national board
of education on a requisition signed by the
teacher. There does not seem to be any limit
or any responsibility in regard to this
matter of issuing or drawing books and
supplies. The first teacher applying is
served first and the later ones go away many
times with nothing. The next term or the
next year is likely to find the wide-awake
teacher on hand early again, while the
slow-going teacher goes away with slate
pencils and foolscap and whatever else
happens to be left by the more fortunate and
active ones.
Buildings for the male and female seminaries
were erected in 1848. The male seminary was
located about 2 miles from Tahlequah, while
the female seminary was in another
direction, about 4 miles from Tahlequah, and
2dd or 3 miles from the male seminary. The
buildings were exactly alike, each room
being furnished with a large fireplace and
each building having a porch extending along
3 sides of it 2 stories high and supported
by 25 circular brick columns. In 1871 a
large addition was built to each, making
them still precisely alike and probably
doubling their capacity. The female seminary
took fire and burned to the ground one
Sunday afternoon in April 1887, during the
spring term. While little was saved from the
flames, no lives were lost. The pupils were
sent to their homes, a special session of
the national council was called, and an
appropriation Made to erect another
building: It was decided to put the new
building near the town of Tahlequah, which
it overlooks from an eminence in the
suburbs. It is a beautiful structure, in
modern style of architecture, with all the
approved modern conveniences. It will
accommodate over 200 pupils. The male
seminary has been overhauled and put in good
condition also, and with its large
fireplaces, huge chimneys, great porches,
and numerous columns, it offers a contrast
to the modern building erected for the
girls. A score of the columns of the old
female seminary still stand as melancholy
monuments of its former days.
The cost of the system of education as now
carried ou aggregates about $80,000 per
year.
The Cherokees have schools for their Negro
children, including a high school.
In addition to the system of schools already
described there are quite a number of
schools carried on in the Cherokee Nation by
the different mission school boards of the
country. These are doing effective work in
educating the young and are a great power in
molding the nature of the youth as well as
restraining the adult population, and go a
great way in giving moral and religious tone
to the Cherokees. Of these schools, those
supported by the Presbyterians are the most
numerous, though the Baptists, the
Congregationalists, and the Southern
Methodists are represented. Of those under
the charge of the Presbyterians, one is
located at Tahlequah, one at Park Hill, one
at Elm Springs, and one at Pleasant Hill.
The Baptists have a school at Tahlequah and
the Congregationalists and
Southern-Methodists each have one at Vinita.

Cherokee, Creek and Seminole School
Children, Muskogee, Indian Territory, 1890
The pupils in the Cherokee public schools
June 1, 1800, were, 4,439
Cherokee Children in mission schools June1,
1890, 445
Aggregate in all schools in the Cherokee
Nation, 4,884
Chickasaw Nation, No provision is
made in the Chickasaw Nation for the
education of the children of the Negroes.
The Chickasaw legislature provides for 5
boarding academies, as follows: male, at
Tishomingo, 60 pupils; male, at Wapanucka,
60 pupils; female, at Stonewall, 40 pupils;
female, at Bloomfield, 45 pupils; male and
female orphan school, 60 pupils; total in
boarding academies, 265 sent to school in
the states, 35; aggregate in all boarding
schools, 300. Besides the boarding pupils
thus provided for, there are 15 schools
known as neighborhood schools. Thirty-five
students were sent to institutions in Texas
for higher education in 1890. The
superintendent of public instruction is
elected by the legislature. He has the
management and general control of all
national schools and school buildings in the
nation. His term of office is 4 years,
unless sooner removed for misdemeanor in
office. Section 3 of the act of October 9,
1876, provides that the standard of school
books shall be of uniform character and of
the southern series, and no other books
shall be used or taught in the Chickasaw
Nation. Any person decoying a scholar from
school against the wishes of a parent or
guardian is liable to a flue not exceeding
$50, or imprisonment not exceeding 3 months,
at the discretion of the court.
There are a number of denominational
schools, including a large and prosperous
Catholic school at Purcell, in Pontotoc
County.
Choctaw Nation, The school property
of the Choctaw Nation is valued at $200,000.
There are 4 boarding schools, besides
several mission or denominational schools,
and 174 neighborhood or public schools.
Their yearly expenditure for schools is
$83,000. Some Negro schools are provided,
estimated to be about 20 per cent of the
whole number of neighborhood or public
schools.
The academies and boarding schools are:
Spencer academy, 120 pupils; New Hope
seminary, 130 pupils; Wheelock orphan
asylum, 60 pupils; Armstrong orphan asylum,
60 pupils.
Creek Nation, The Creek public school
system consists of 36 neighborhood schools,
for the support of which $76,488.40 is
annually appropriated by the council out of
the moneys received from the United States.
The school year is divided into 2 terms of 4
months each. Both Indians and Negroes are
educated. The schools bear evidence of a
commendable effort on the part of the
progressive element of the nation to elevate
their people to a higher standard of
knowledge and civilization, but either for
want of intelligent management or proper
support they are only indifferently
successful. Against this is arrayed the
combined influence of traditional
superstition, ignorance, and conceit that
are as yet deep seated in the minds of no
inconsiderable portion of this tribe. This
element takes little interest in the cause
of education, and if their children spend
the day in hunting instead of at school the
parents are as well satisfied, particularly
if the young sportsmen have been successful
in quest of game.
Education with these Indians is purely
optional, and statistics show that more than
two-thirds of the children of school age do
not attend school. The English language is
not generally spoken, except among the
educated people. The Indian youth is
imitative and learns mechanically, and
instances are common where they acquire the
art of reading English fluently and at the
same time do not understand a word they
read. The council of 1890 created a board of
public instruction composed of 3 progressive
citizens of the nation; from whose
management bettor results are expected. The
mission and contract schools are well
attended and as a rule are in a flourishing
condition. There are 10 of these
institutions located in the Creek Nation
under the auspices of religious
denominations.
Nuyaka mission, Nuyaka, Presbyterian board
of home missions
Wealaka mission (a), Wealaka, Presbyterian
board of home missions
Presbyterian school for girls, Muscogee,
Presbyterian board of home missions
Presbyterian school, Red Fork, Presbyterian
board of home missions
Presbyterian school, Tulsa, Presbyterian
board of borne missions
Harrell Institute, Muscogee, Methodist
Episcopal Church, South
Indian University, Bacome, American Baptist
home missions
Levering Mission, Wetumka, American Baptist
Home missions
Tallahassee Manual Labor School for
Freedmen, Muscogee, American Baptist Home
missions
Methodist Episcopal School, Tulsa, Methodist
Episcopal Church
Of the several institutions scheduled above,
the Nuyaka mission, Nuyaka, Presbyterian
school for girls, and Harrell institute,
Muscogee; Indian university, Bacome, and the
denominational schools at Red Fork and Tulsa
are equal in appointments and instruction to
the standard of similar institutions in the
states.
Seminole Nation, The public school
system consists of 4 neighborhood schools,
with an annual public school fund of $7,500.
Two of these public schools are set apart
for the education of Negro children, and
have an average attendance of 47 pupils, as
against 34 for the two Indian schools. About
three-fourths of the children of school age
do not attend school.
There are 2 denominational contract schools
(missions) as follows: Wewoka mission,
Wewoka, Presbyterian, capacity 50, average
attendance 50, number who have been
accommodated 58; Seminole female academy,
Sasakwa, Baptist, capacity 50, average
attendance 30, number who have been
accommodated 39.
Revenues Of The Five Civilized Tribes
The interest on trust funds in the bands of
the United States, receipts from licenses,
permits, rents from leased lands, and
intruder permits are the main sources of
revenue of the governments of The Five
Civilized Tribes. In some of The Five Tribes
no publication is made of receipts and
disbursements.
There are no taxes, director otherwise, paid
by citizens of the nations, and there is no
listing or appraising of real or personal
property for taxation. It is a land without
taxation. The citizens are thus content with
almost any government, and power is easy to
maintain. As lands are held in common, the
improvements only and personal property
being liable to levy and sale, an assessment
would be valueless. No estimate, therefore,
can be made of property values in these
nations.
An idea of the methods prevailing in The
Five Tribes in revenue matters can be had
from the following from the fourth annual
message of J. B, Mayes, principal chief of
The Cherokee Nation, 1890: (b)
An appointment of a revenue officer and a
proper handling of our revenue would
certainly procure funds sufficient to meet
largely the expenses of our government. Our
revenue system is a poor one and badly
managed. A per cent is taken out of it by
the clerks, sheriffs, and solicitors, and
after it is turned in the treasurer takes
out his10 per cent, which leaves the nation
but little. A government with the resources
of the Cherokee Nation is certainly poorly
managed to get only the pitiful sum now
received.
The total amount of trust funds arising from
sales of lands under treaties with and the
laws of the United States, the property of
The Five Civilized Tribes, is $7,984,132.76
and the annual interest on this, paid by the
United States, is $413,219.01, apportioned
as follows:
Total, $7,984,132.75 Principal, $413,219.01
Interest
Cherokee, 2,625,842.37, Principal,
$137,460.33 Interest
Chickasaw, $1,306,895.65 Principal,
$68,404.95 Interest
Choctaw, $549,504.74 Principal, $32,344.73
95 Interest
Creek, $2,000,000.00 Principal, $100,000.00
Interest
Seminole, $1,500,000.00 Principal,
$75,000.00
The interest on the principal of these funds
is placed by the United States semiannually
with the United States assistant treasurer
at St. Louis, Missouri, to the credit of the
treasurer of each nation, and the
expenditure of these funds is entirely under
the control of the nation and its council.
The above $413,219.01 received from the
United States each year, together with fees
from licenses and permits, enables the
several tribes or nations to exist without
levying a tax upon the people.
Condition of the Indian by State, 1890
(a) Report on. Mineral
Industries in the United States' at the
Eleventh Census, 1890, pages 375, 376.
(b) The following extract
from the message of Governor William L.
Byrd, of the Chickasaw Nation, September 4,
1891, is an illustration of the method of
reporting the finances of The Five Tribes:
"The receipts of the treasury for the fiscal
year are $221,508.90, and the disbursements
have been $145,048.78, leaving balance in
the treasury of $76,520.12."
Trust Funds Of The Five Civilized Tribes
Notes About the Book:
Source: Report on Indians Taxed and Indians not Taxed in the United States, Except
Alaska at the Eleventh Census: 1890, Department of the Interior, Government
Printing Office, Washington DC., 1894
A
Report to the Secretary of War of the United
States on Indian Affairs, by Rev. Jedidiah
Morse, 1822, Printed by S. Converse
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. Several spellings have been used for the same
tribe of Indians.
This site includes some historical materials that may imply negative
stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place.
These items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
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