Introduction, Choctaw Freedmen

Alice Lee Elliott
1846-1906
Oak Hill Industrial
Academy
Valliant, McCurtain County, Oklahoma

Oak Hill Chapel
"The pleasant books, that
silently among
Our household treasures take familiar
places,
Are to us, as if a living tongue
Spake from the printed leaves, or pictured
faces!"
The aim of the Author in
preparing this volume has been to put in a
form, convenient for preservation and future
reference, a brief historical sketch of the
work and workers connected with the founding
and development of Oak Hill Industrial
Academy, established for the benefit of the
Freedmen of the Choctaw Nation, Indian
Territory, by the Presbyterian Church, U. S.
A., in 1886, when Miss Eliza Hartford became
the first white teacher, to the erection of
Elliott Hall in 1910, and its dedication in
1912; when the name of the institution was
changed to "The Alice Lee Elliott Memorial."
Some who rendered service at
Oak Hill Academy, bestowed upon it their
best work, while superintendent, James F.
McBride and Matron, Adelia M. Eaton, brought
to it a faithful service, that proved to be
the crowning work of their lives.
The occasion of receiving a
new name in 1912, is one that suggests the
eminent propriety of a volume, that will
commemorate the labors of those, whose
self-denying pioneer work was associated
with the former name of the institution.
Another aim has been, to
place as much as possible of the character
building work of the institution, in an
attractive form for profitable perusal by
the youth, in the homes of the pupils and
patrons of the Academy. As an aid in
effecting this result, the volume has been
profusely illustrated with engravings of all
the good photographs of groups of the
students that have come to the hand of the
author; and also of all the teachers of whom
they could be obtained at this time. The
portraits of the ministers and older elders
of the neighboring Churches have been added
to these, to increase its general interest
and value.
In as much as Oak Hill
Industrial Academy was intended to supply
the special educational needs of the young
people in the circuit of Churches ministered
to by Parson Charles W. Stewart, the pioneer
preacher of the Choctaw Freedmen, and
faithful founder of most of the Churches in
the Presbytery of Kiamichi, a memorial
sketch of this worthy soldier of the cross
has been added, that the young people of the
present and future generations may catch the
inspiration of his heroic missionary spirit.
"All who labor wield a
mighty power;
The glorious privilege to do
Is man's most noble dower."
The ministers of the
neighboring Churches, in recent years, have
been so helpfully identified with the work
of the Academy, as special lecturers and
assistants on decision days, and on the
first and last days of the school terms,
they seem to have been members of the Oak
Hill Family. The story of the Academy would
not be complete, without a recognition of
them and their good work. This recognition
has been very gratefully accorded in a brief
history of the Presbytery of Kiamichi and of
the Synod of Canadian.
The period of service
rendered by the author, as superintendent of
the Academy from the beginning of 1905 to
the end of 1912, eight years, was one of
important transitions in the material
development of Indian Territory.
The allotment of lands in
severalty to the Indians and Freedmen was
completed in 1905, and the Territorial
government was transformed into one of
statehood on Jan. 1, 1908. The progress of
their civilization, that made it possible
for the Indians in the Territory to become
owners and occupants of their own homes,
supporters of their own schools and Churches
and to be invested with all the powers and
duties of citizenship, is briefly reviewed
in the introductory chapters.
The author has endeavored to
make this volume one easily read and
understood by the Choctaw Freedmen, in whose
homes it is expected to find a place, and be
read with interest and profit many years.
He has done what he could to
enable as many of you as possible to leave
the impress of your personality on the
world, when your feet no longer move, your
hands no longer build and your lips no
longer utter your sentiments.
The hope is indulged that
every pupil of the Academy, whose portrait
has been given an historic setting in this
volume, will regard that courteous
recognition, as a special call to make the
Bible your guide in life and perform each
daily duty nobly and faithfully, as though
it were your last.
A life on service bent,
A life for love laid down,
A life for others spent,
The Lord will surely crown.
Whilst other denominations
have rendered conspicuous and highly
commendable service in the effort to educate
and evangelize the Indians and Freedmen, in
this volume mention is made only of the work
of the Presbyterian Church. This is due to
the fact the Presbyterian Church, having
begun missionary work among the Choctaws at
a very early date, it was left to pursue it
without a rival, in the particular section
of country and early period of time included
in the scope of this volume.
Such as it is, this volume
is commended to him, whose blessing alone
can make it useful, and make it to fulfill
its mission of comfort and encouragement, to
the children and youth of the Freedmen who
are sincerely endeavoring to solve the
problem of their present and future destiny.
Fonda, Iowa, March 15, 1914.
R. E. F.
Choctaw Freedmen
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Choctaw Freedmen and Oak Hill Industrial
Academy, 1914, Robert Elliott Flickinger
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