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Affidavit of W. J.
Thompson, Exhibit A½
Exhibit Affidavit of W. J Thompson of November 21, 1908, of Pauls Valley,
Oklahoma
My father, Giles Thompson. In 1824 married a half-breed Indian, the daughter of
Noah Wall. in 1830 my father assisted in making the treaty of Dancing Rabbit,
and his name appears in the supplemental treaty of Dancing Rabbit as a
beneficiary thereunder. His name also appears on the roll of 1830 the same as
any other Indian. My father came to this country in 1832 or the spring of 1833.
Some time in 1840 he settled at Boggy Depot in the Choctaw Nation and opened up
the salt works. My father was given a grant by the Choctaw Council to operate
those works and no one could come within a square mile of them. He operated
those works for many years.
My father was recognized as any other Indian; used to be a member of the
council. In 1875 he came to the Chickasaw Nation, or removed there from the
Choctaw Nation. There was a census taken in 1874 In the Choctaw Nation, just
before father left Unit nation, by Sheriff S. Gardner, and my father's name
appeared on that census and all of his family except myself, as I was not born
at that time: was not born until July 14, 1876.
In 1870 father moved to the Chickasaw Nation, where I was born In 1S7C,. In 1876
I was born on the farm. My father died in 1S77 and the Chickasaw courts
administered on his estate and the seal of the Chickasaw Nation is on the
administrator. My father made a will, and in that will he gave me the farm that
I was born on. He willed all of the children personal property find other farms.
My mother was administrator of the will.
The papers in this case are in Muskogee and I think they are with the Dawes
Commission, but it is possible that they are with the citizenship court.
After the death of my father I lived on the farm for many years and owned it and
controlled It the same as any other citizen. I had other farms in the country
and I improved them the same as any other citizen in the country. Permits were
issued to my renters on my farms.
I attended school in the Choctaw Nation at Atoka the same as other Indian
citizens, and had to pay no tuition.
About 1880, I believe, my sister. Myrtle Thompson, now Randolph, married white
man and the Choctaw authorities issued him a license for $50 to marry her; and
about the year 1883 my sister, Minnie Thompson, married William Wheat and was
issued a national license, at least that is my understanding of the matter.
Both Wheat and Randolph were accorded rights the same as other citizens and
improved farms and were issued permits. We were Choctaws, and father moved to
the Chickasaw Nation in 1875. My brother and I were small, and not being
citizens by birth of the Chickasaw Nation did not take the same interest in
citizenship affairs as we would probably have done had we continued to reside at
our home in the Choctaw Nation. I myself was not of age until 1897.
Through my mother, Ellen Wall, and my stepfather, Samuel C. Wall, we brought
suit In the Indian court for the possession of a certain tract of land which we
claimed as Indian citizens, and a decision was rendered at one of the places
holding court at that time, either at Tishomingo or Oakland, in our favor.
We also brought suit in the Choctaw Nation on a note given by an Indian citizen
for certain cattle, the amount which was claimed being about $14,000, including
the interest. I first attempted to file a suit in the United States court, but
Judge Clayton refused to take jurisdiction; his action in the matter was based
upon the ground that he had no jurisdiction because both of the parties were
Indian citizens. Subsequently the case was filed in the court of Judge John
Harrison, who was an Indian judge of Atoka County, Choctaw Nation.
The latter court assumed jurisdiction and the case was tried therein.
The papers should be with the records of that court at this time. My mother,
Ellen Wall, was a party to that suit.
We made application to the Dawes Commission for enrollment in 1896 and our
petition was denied. We took an appeal to the United Stales court and the
decision of the commission was reversed. Subsequently, supposing that we must go
to the citizenship court, we transferred our case to that court where a decision
adverse to us was rendered. Still later, on February 19, 1907, an opinion was
rendered by Attorney General Bonaparte holding that the Judgment of the
citizenship court was final. Two sentences in the opinion should be noted. One
of them is as follows:
"Indeed, as I have suggested, the applicants themselves, having voluntarily
submitted to the Jurisdiction to the commission, might be fairly held estopped
to now deny it."
The other sentence of the opinion of Mr. Bonaparte is as follows:
"Whatever their intrinsic merits, these claims have been finally decided
adversely to the claimants by the Judgment of the citizenship court."
This opinion is followed by the opinion of Cyrus H. Kingsberry and his sister.
Lucy E. Littlepage, the offspring of white parents, both of which were adopted
by an act of the Choctaw Council. In the latter case the applicants didn't go
before the citizenship court. Their names were found upon the tribal Choctaw
roll of 1885. The opinion was in their favor and they were placed upon the
finally approved rolls.
While my case was pending I went to Tishomingo and I talked with Mr. Cornish,
attorney for the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations. I asked him where I could find
the records pertaining to my citizenship and he said at Tuskahoma and I went and
got the national secretary, Mr. Wilson, and be showed me through the vault and I
examined the records there, which were very few, but was told that Mr. Cornish
had them with him at South McAlester. I left Tishomingo and went to South
McAlester to the office of Mansfield, McMurray & Coraish and told the num in
charge of the office that Mr. Cornish had sent me to look through the records of
the Choctaw Nation. He looked surprised at first and I told him who I was and he
then took me to a room at one side of the office which was partly filled with
boxes and I went through a great many of those records and opened box after box
and found records pertaining to national affairs, some of them pertaining to the
net proceed money. I looked further and found that some records entitled an act
of the Choctaw Council together with the date, all in writing. In searching
through those papers I found a roll made in 1874 by Sheriff S. Gardner, of Blue
County, and also rolls of other counties, and in this roll of Blue County of
1874 I found the name of my father, Giles Thompson, and all our family except
myself, as I was not born at that time as heretofore stated. I also found in
searching over those records a large book about 8 or 10 inches wide and about 18
to 20 inches in length and it had a list of names, among which I found a list of
persons entitled, as heirs of Giles Thompson, to receive money from the Choctaw
Nation. I also saw the name of Samuel C. Wall as the heir of Noah Wall in the
same book. I brought the census roll of 1874 and those books with me to Klowa
where my nephew. Mr. Ward, was then senator, and told him what I had done and he
said it would be all right.
On my way home on the train taking the records with me I met Mr. Cornish and I
told him that I went to Tuskahoma but found no records there pertaining to
citizenship, and that I went to his office and told his help there that he had
sent me over and that I had found the records there, and Mr. Cornish was very
angry, turned very white, and said to me that he was surprised that the men in
his office had permitted me to go through the records and that I was the only
person who had ever gone through those records regarding citizenship. I told him
I didn't think that I had done anything wrong, but that I thought I was entitled
to see the records pertaining to my father's citizenship in this country and
that that was all I wanted, and that if I was not entitled to citizenship I did
not want it; all I wanted was a fair trial and I thought that he should allow me
that. So we talked for some time and I told him that I didn't think that he
should be mad at me and he said that he was not so mad at me as he was at his
help in his office. Mr. Johnston was on the train with me and Mr. Cornish got up
and went over and sat down with him and I went on to Tuskahoma to see my
attorney. Mr. O. W. Patchell. and I showed him the rolls and books and told him;
what I had done. Mr. Cornish was very angry upon learning what I had done and he
remarked that this put him in a very embarrassing position. Afterwards Mr.
Patchell and I had a talk with Mr. Cornish in Tuskahoma and he made the same
statement about the books that he had to me; that is that it put him in a very
embarrassing position for me to go to Tuskahoma and then for me to go to his
office at South McAlester and find the records there in place of Tuskahoma. Mr.
Patchell and I told Mr. Cornish that all we cared about the books and records
was for the information in them concerning my father and that we thought they
should be made a part of the record and he then agreed to have the national
secretary to certify to those records, and, accordingly, we turned them over to
him. I don't think that Mr. Cornish over carried out his promise. This occurred
in September or October of 1904, as nearly as I can remember.
I desire to add that, although I have been denied enrollment as a citizen of the
Indian Nation, notwithstanding that I am the son of Giles Thompson, it is a fact
that my father's slaves have been enrolled as freedmen upon the grounds that
their former master, who was my father, was a citizen of the Choctaw Nation.
I can not understand why this should be.
I wish also to state that I talked to Judge Weaver after the decision was handed
down in his office at Tishomingo, and he told me he thought I was as much
entitled to citizenship as any Indian in the Territory, and that he was sorry
that the judges did not agree with him, and he used these words: I can't for the
life of me see after the attorneys of the nations admitting that your father,
Giles Thompson, appeared upon the 1830 roll and the treaty of 1830, how they
could cut you out, and I hope you can get it reopened in a higher court.
My half brothers and sisters, children of my father and his first wife, who was
an Indian, and the descendants of such brothers and sisters, have all been
enrolled and land has been allotted to them.
I, William J. Thompson, being duly sworn, state upon my oath that the statements
appearing above ou this and the preceding five pages are true as to all matters
which I have referred to as coming within my personal knowledge, and that all
the other statements on said pages are true to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
William J. Thompson.
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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