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Agnes O. Mallory,
Choctaw
Agnes O. Mallory Et Al.
Application for enrollment as Choctaws by
blood.
September 8, 1896. Application submitted
to commission, alleging that claimant was a
daughter of Agnes Foster, who was a daughter
of Jesse Turnbull, a full-blood Choctaw
Indian; that claimant was born in
Mississippi, reared there, and came to and
settled in the Choctaw Nation in 1894, in
which year claimant applied to the Choctaw
Council for enrollment, but no action was
taken.
(See affidavit hereto attached explaining
failure of council to act.) In 1895
claimants removed to Chickasaw Nation and
settled near Comanche, where they have since
resided. Anthony. Robert, and William
Turnbull, her brothers, and Gilbert Trahern,
her half brother, removed to the Choctaw
Nation, and they and their descendants have
always been recognized as citizens of said
Nation. Said application is supported by the
affidavits of Louis Trahern, her nephew, and
an enrolled Choctaw, Rebecca Trahern, F. A.
Reynolds, Thomas Ford, Mrs. A. A. Lombard,
and F. L. Reynolds, all corroborative of the
allegations contained in the petition. Mrs.
Mallory is first cousin of Felicity L.
Reynolds, whose name appears on the finally
approved Choctaw blood roll opposite No.
14319; Mrs. Mallory's mother being Agnes
Turnbull and Mrs. Reynolds's father was
Robert Turnbull, brother of Agnes. That the
children of Felicity L. Reynolds appear on
the final roll of the Choctaws as follows:
James T. Reynolds, roll No. 14320; Hugh A.
Reynolds, roll No. 14322; Alta G. Reynolds,
roll No. 14323: Felicity L. Reynolds, jr.,
roll No. 14324: Earl V. Reynolds, roll No.
14325: William Jackson Reynolds, roll No.
15831.
On page 94, vol. 7, American State papers,
public lands, under the heading " Names of
Indians owning farms." and prepared by the
United States authorities pursuant to the
supplementary articles of the treaty of
1830, appears the name of Samuel Foster,
father of claimant A. O. Mallory, with the
notation, " Number of acres cultivated, 40;
entire number of family, 6; males over 10
years of age, 1: males and females under 10
years. 3; 12 slaves; total number of acres,
060; provided for in supplement." Answer was
filed by nations, and the record shows
application "denied," no finding or decision
appearing in record of case.
1807-8. On February 22, 1897, an appeal was
perfected to the United States Court,
Southern District, Indian Territory.
Additional evidence was offered by
claimants, together with the records before
the commission. No evidence offered by
nations.
A decree was entered admitting the following
persons: Mrs. A. O. Mallory, Mrs. Cassie
Prichard, Booker Mitchell Prichard, Jessie
Prichard, S. F. Sanders, Bessie Octavia
Sanders, Drucilla Sanders, Eva Sanders,
Claude Sanders, Ella Sanders. (Certified
copy of decree hereto attached, marked "
Exhibit A.")
March 23, 1903. Case transferred to the
citizenship court.
November 28, 1904. Decree was entered
decreeing claimants not citizens of the
Choctaw Nation. The decree was entered in
accordance with a decision of the
citizenship court in which the Choctaw blood
and descent of all the claimants is admitted
from scripees under the treaty of 1830, but
it is held that their removal in 1894 was
too late to entitle them to enrollment; that
their rights became extinct by their failure
to remove within a reasonable time after the
treaty of' 1830.
The holding of the citizenship court on this
point was diametrically opposite to the
holding of the United States courts in the
central and southern districts of the Indian
Territory. (Jack Amos et al., Am. Rep. Con.
Ind. Af., 1898, p. 459; E. J. Home, id., p.
465; general summary, id.. 475.)
The holding of the citizenship court in this
case was repudiated by the Assistant
Attorney General for the department in an
elaborate opinion rendered February 19,
1906, in the leading case of James S. Long
et al., wherein, after citing the decisions
of the United States courts on this point,
the Attorney General says:
On the other hand is the case of Mrs. A. O.
Mallory et al., November 28, 1904, wherein a
Choctaw born in 1843 In Mississippi, living
there until 1894, removed to the nation and
thereafter resided therein. The
Choctaw-Chickasaw citizenship court held
that the treaty of 1830 imposed an
obligation to remove from the State upon all
who did not claim benefit of the fourteenth
article, and that such removal must have
been "within a reasonable time." What was a
reasonable time was not defined, but it was
held that removal in 1894 was not within a
reasonable time, and enrollment was denied.
Judicial constructions are thus at variance,
and of the two the first appears the better
reason and supported by the historic facts.
There was no law of Congress requiring
settlement in the nations prior to June 28,
1898, and this was four years after
claimants removed.
List of claimants adjudged citizens of the
Choctaw Nation by United States court, and
children born to them prior to March 4,
1906; Mrs. A. O. Mallory, Mrs. Cassie
Prichard, Booker Mitchell Prichard, Jessie
Prichard, S. F. Sanders, Bessie Octavio
Sanders, Drucilla Sanders, Eva Sanders,
Claude Sanders, Ella Sanders, Ruth Sanders,
Lucila Sanders, Jesse II. Sanders.
Respectfully submitted.
Ballinger & Lee, Attorneys for Claimants.
Transcript Of
Proceedings
United States Court,
Indian Territory, Southern District, ss:
At a stated term of the United States Court
in the Indian Territory, Southern District,
begun and had in the court rooms at Ardmore,
in the Indian Territory, on the 15th day of
November, in the year of our Lord one
thousand eight hundred and ninety-seven.
Present, the Hon. Hosen Townsend. Judge of
said court.
On the 20th day of January 1898, being a
regular day of said term of said court,
among the proceedings had were the
following, to wit: Mrs. A. O. Mallory v.
Choctaw Nation.
On this the 20th day of January 1898, came
regularly on to he heard the above-entitled
cause on the application, evidence,
exhibits, master's report, exceptions to the
master's report, and the entire record in
the cause; and the court having heard the
evidence and being well and truly advised in
the premises, finds that Mrs. Cassie
Prichard, Mrs. A. O. Mallory, Booker
Mitchell Prichard, Jessie Prichard, S. K.
Saunders, Bessie Octavio Saunders, Drucilla
Saunders, Eva Saunders, Claude Saunders, and
Ella Saunders are all Choctaw Indians by
blood and are entitled to be enrolled as
such.
And that Mrs. Fannie Saunders is entitled to
be enrolled as a member of the Choctaw Tribe
of Indians by intermarriage with S. F.
Saunders.
It is therefore by the court considered,
ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the
above-named applicants, to wit: Mrs. A. O.
Mallory, Mrs. Cassie Prichard, Booker
Mitchell Prichard, Jessie Prichard, S. F.
Saunders, Mrs. Fannie Saunders, Bessie
Octavio Saunders, Drucilla Saunders, Eva
Saunders, Claude Saunders, and Ella Saunders
be and they are hereby, admitted and
enrolled as members of the Choctaw Nation
and as members of the Choctaw Tribe of
Indians, with all the rights, privileges,
and immunities pertaining to such relation.
It is further ordered that the clerk of this
court certify a true copy of this decree to
the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes
and that such commission enroll the
above-named parties as members of the
Choctaw Tribe of Indians.
Hosea Townsend, Judge. United States Court,
Indian Territory, Southern District, ss:
I, C. M. Campbell, clerk of the United
States court within and for the district and
Territory aforesaid, do hereby certify that
the foregoing orders are truly taken and
correctly copied from court journals of said
court as the same appears to me.
In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my
hand and affixed the seal of said court at
Ardmore, this 4th day of May, A. D. 1898.
C. M. Campbell, Clerk.
By _______ ______, Deputy.
This is to certify that I am the officer
having custody of the records pertaining to
the enrollment of the members of the
Choctaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee, Creek, and
Seminole Tribes of Indians, and the
disposition of the land of said tribes, and
that the above and foregoing is a true and
correct copy of a certified copy of the
order of the court, dated January 20, 1898,
in the case of Mrs. A. O. Mallory et al. v.
The Choctaw Nation.
J. Geo. Wright,
Commissioner to the Fire Civilized Tribes.
By W. H. Angell,
Clerk in charge of Choctaw records.
State or Oklahoma, Stephens County, ss:
Personally appeared before me, the
undersigned authority, Samuel F. Saunders,
and his mother, Agnes O. Mallory, to me
personally known, and upon their oaths
state:
That they are the identical persons who
applied to the Commission to the Five
Civilized Tribes on September 8, 1896, for
enrollment as Choctaws, and are the
identical persons mentioned in the decree of
the United States Court, Southern District,
Indian Territory, sitting at Ardmore, and
entered on the 20th day of May, 1898; that
upon their removal from Mississippi in 1894
affiants applied in person, during the month
of September, to the Choctaw Council,
sitting at Tuskahoma, Choctaw Nation, for
recognition as members of the Choctaw
Nation, of themselves and their families,
including all those persons mentioned in
said court judgment; that simultaneously
application was made for the admission of
Louis Trahern, son of Gilbert Trahern, who
was half brother of affiant Agnes O.
Mallory, and his mother. Agnes Turnbull,
being the mother of affiant Agnes O.
Mallory, and from whom affiants derived
their Choctaw blood; that there were a large
number of similar applications pending
before the council, and that the council
continued in session until the appropriation
for the payment of the salaries of the
members of the council was exhausted; that
on the last day the council was in session
the application of Louis Trahern was
favorably acted upon, and he was duly
admitted as a member of the Choctaw Tribe;
that Immediately thereafter the council
adjourned, and before reaching the next case
on the list, which was the case of affiants;
that when the council met the following
year, 1895, affiants were notified to appear
and present their evidence; that when this
notice was received affiant Samuel F.
Saunders, who was attending to the matter
for his family and his mother's family, was
seriously ill, and was advised by his
physician that his health would not permit
his going to Tuskahoma; that the attending
physician made affidavit to the above fact,
which was transmitted to the Choctaw
Council: that no action was taken on the
application of affiants at that session of
the council; that in 1896 the Dawes
Commission was created, and affiants were
advised by their then attorneys, Potter &
Thomas, of Ardmore, Ind. T., that the Dawes
Commission then had jurisdiction of their
case, and that the Choctaw Council no longer
had authority to admit affiants; that
following the advice of their attorneys they
applied to the Dawes Commission for
enrollment.
Affiants further state that from the time of
their arrival in the Choctaw Nation in 1894
they were recognized by the Choctaws as
members of the tribe; that they bought
improvements from Indians, owned, improved,
and cultivated farms, and that their rights
so to do was never questioned by the Choctaw
or Chickasaw authorities; that affiants
purchased improvements in the Chickasaw
Nation in 1895 of the value of more than
$6,000, purchasing said improvements from
one Jim Weaver, a recognized and enrolled
Chickasaw Indian; that they continued in
peaceable and undisturbed possession of said
property until after the decree of the
citizenship court on November 28, 1904; that
there after attempts were made to dispossess
affiants; that these attempts were resisted
in the courts, and that affiants are today
in possession of part of said property.
Affiants further state that the father of
affiant A. O. Mallory, Samuel Foster, was a
member of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians in
1830, and was one of the reserves under the
treaty of that year; that he is the
identical person mention on page 94, volume
7, American State Papers, Public Lands; that
he had four children-one boy and three girls
of whom affiant A. O. Mallory was one of
said girls.
Agnes O. Mallory.
Samuel F. Saunders.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3d
day of October 1910.
[seal.] John T. Chelf,
Notary Public. My commission expires January
26, 1911.
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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