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Five Civilized Tribe Survivors of the War of
Rebellion
In compliance with the census law, efforts were made to obtain the names,
service, and organizations of surviving soldiers of the War of the Rebellion, or
the names of the widows of the same. At the breaking out of the rebellion The
Five Civilized Tribes entered into treaties with the Confederate States, and it
was claimed they forfeited treaty rights with the United States. It was
difficult to obtain information on any of these points. Ex-soldiers were
reluctant to answer and widows refused. Some years ago in Indian Territory there
was a good deal of trouble over matters connected with the bounty and pay of
some of the Indian soldiers who served in the Union army. It was the subject of
congressional investigation and music; the Indian ex-soldiers cautious afterward
as to questions they answered, or signatures to papers. This cause, added to the
natural caution of the Indian as to the purpose or intentions of the white men,
resulted in the enrollment of but few Indian soldiers on the special schedules.
The archives of the War Department show the number of men and organizations
raised in the Indian Territory among The Five Civilized Tribes of Indians for
the Union and Confederate States armies during the late war to have comprised
three regiments of Indian home guards in the service of the United States during
the date war, viz:
Total 5,238
First regiment, strength during service 1,848
Second regiment, strength during service 1,901
Third regiment, strength during service 1,489
and some 20 organizations in the Confederate States army, the particulars of
which are Oven in the letters in the appended note. (a)
The deaths among these from all causes, killed wounded, or diseased, was 1,018.
The Indian brigade in the Union army was engaged in 28 battles or affairs,
besides many skirmishes.
In a report from the Quartermaster General's office, called "The Roll of Honor",
issued in 1884, under the title, "The National Cemetery at Fort Gibson", the
number of burials is given at 2,427, of which but 215 are marked as known and
2,212 unknown. Of the 215 marked as known about 150 are of Indian soldiers of
the Indian Union regiments. (b)
Condition of the Indian by State, 1890
(a) The letters received
from the War Department in reply to a.
request, for a, verification of the number
of men and the organizations raised among
these Indians were as follows:
War Department, Adjutant General's Office,
Washington, February 16, 1899.
SIR:
In answer to your favor of the 14th, instant
it gives me pleasure to submit a list of
Indian organizations that served in the
Confederate slates army, viz:
First Cherokee Cavalry Battalion, Major
Benj. W. Meyer.
First Cherokee Cavalry Battalion, Major J.
M. Bryan.
First Cherokee Mounted Rifles (also called
Second. See Drew's Cherokee Mounted Rifles).
First Cherokee Mounted Rifles, Colonel Stand
Watie.
First Chickasaw Cavalry Battalion,
Lieutenant Colonel Joseph D. Harris.
First Chickasaw Cavalry Regiment, Colonel
William L. Bunter.
First Choctaw Cavalry Battalion (afterward
First Choctaw War Regiment) Lieutenant
Colonel Francoway Battice.
First Choctaw Battalion (afterward Third
Choctaw Regiment), Lieutenant Colonel
Jackson McCurtain.
First Choctaw and Chickasaw Mounted Rifles,
Colonel Douglas H. Cooper.
First Choctaw Cavalry War Regiment (in 1864
known as Second Choctaw Regiment), Colonel
Simpson N. Folsom.
First Choctaw Cavalry Regiment, Colonel
Sampson Folsom.
First Seminole Cavalry Battalion (afterward
First Seminole Regiment), Lieutenant Colonel
John Jumper.
First Creek Cavalry Battalion, Lieutenant
Colonel Chilly McIntosh.
First Creek Regiment, Colonel Daniel 1N.
McIntosh.
Second Cherokee Mounted Rifles, Colonel
William P. Adair.
Second Creek Regiment, Colonel Chilly
McIntosh.
Third Choctaw Regiment (formerly First
Choctaw Battalion), Colonels. Jackson
McCurtain. Cherokee Battalion, Major Moses
C. Frye, Major Joseph A. Scales.
Chickasaw Cavalry Battalion, Lieutenant
Colonel Martin Sheco.
Drew's Cherokee Mounted Rifles (called First
and Second), Colonel John Drew.
Osage Battalion, Major Arm Broke.
Respectfully,
H. C. CORBIN,
Assistant Adjutant General.
To JAMES H. WARDLE, Esq.,
Acting Superintendent of Census.
Record And Pension Office, War Department,
Washington City, March 6, 1894.
Sir:
Referring to your letter of the 17th ultimo,
relative to the number of Indians from the
Indian territory in the military service of
the United States during the late war, I and
directed by the Secretary of War to inform
you that there were 3 regiments of these
troops (home guards), numbering from
organization to muster out:
First regiment, 1,848
Officers, 64
Enlisted men, 1,784
Second Regiment, 1, 901
Officers, 66
Enlisted men, 1,835
Third regiment, 1,489
Officers, 52
Enlisted men, 1,437
Aggregate, 5,238
Officers, 182
Officers, 5,056
These Indian regiments were officered by
both white men and Indians, probably two
thirds of them being of the former class,
and for that reason the members of Officers
and enlisted men have been given separately.
From an official statement prepared by this
department in 1872 it appears that the First
regiment, was composed principally of Creek
Indians, the Second of Osages and Cherokees,
and the Third of Creeks and Cherokees.
The number of Indians from the Indian
Territory, if any, enlisted in organizations
bearing state designations can not be
ascertained.
The foregoing, figures are given in lieu of
those contained in the statistical table
published by this department under date July
13, 1885, and those given in a letter from
this department of October 30, 1891.
Very respectfully,
F. C. AINSWORTH,
Colonel United States Army, Chief Record and
Pension Office.
To The Acting Superintendent Of The Census.
(b) For an account of the
Indians brigade in the year 1563, see
"Memoirs of the Rebellion no the Border,
1863", by Wiley Britton, late Sixth Kansas
cavalry, Chicago. Cushing, Thomas & Co.
publishers, 1882.
For a history of the Indian troops from The
Five Civilized Tribes of Indium Territory in
the Union army, see it report made by S. S.
Burdett, M. C., in the House of
Representatives, June 8, 1872, entitled
"Alleged frauds against certain Indian
soldiers ".
An account of the condition of The Five
Civilized Tribes in 1861 and 1862 and their
sympathy with the Confederacy or service in
its army can be found in 2 reports from 'the
committee on foreign missions made to the
general assembly of the Presbyterian Church
in the Confederate states of America one at
Augusta, Georgia., December 4, 1861, and the
other at Montgomery, Alabama, May 1, 1862.
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.
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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
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Condition of the Indian by State, 1890
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