|
A Bill to Reopen the Rolls of the
Choctaw-Chickasaw Tribe
Department of the Interior
Washington, July 2, 1912
Hon. John H. Stephens,
Chairman Committee on Indian Affairs, House
of Representatives.
Sir: I have the honor to acknowledge receipt
of a copy of H. R. 19123, entitled "A bill
to reopen the rolls of the Choctaw-Chickasaw
Tribe and to provide for the awarding the
rights secured to certain persons by the
fourteenth article of the treaty of Dancing
Rabbit Creek, of date September 27, 1830,"
and your letter of March 28, 1912,
requesting report thereon for the
information of the Committee on Indian
Affairs of the House of Representatives.
Sections 1 and 2 of the bill, being closely
related as to points covered, may be
considered together with advantage. These
sections read as follows:
That the Secretary of the Interior is
directed to receive, at any time within six
months after the passage of this act, the
application of any person for enrollment to
the rights of a citizen and member of the
Choctaw-Chickasaw Tribe of Indians claiming
an interest in the lands and funds of the
Choctaw-Chickasaw Tribe by reason of being a
descendant of a member of the Choctaw Tribe
who received, or was entitled to receive,
lands under the terms of Article XIV of the
treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek under date of
September 27, 1830.
Sec. 2. That the Secretary of the Interior
shall be vested with the power to determine
the rights of said claimants upon such
evidence as may be produced by the applicant
without regard to any judgment or decision
heretofore rendered by any court or
Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes or
the Department of the Interior, and without
regard to any condition or disability
heretofore Imposed by any net of Congress:
Provided, That any relevant evidence
admissible either in actions at law or in
equity in the courts of the United States
shall be received by the Secretary of the
Interior as evidence in determining the
rights of said applicants: Provided further.
That any testimony received as evidence and
appearing in the record in the case of the
Choctaw Nation against the United States,
No. 12442, in the Court of Claims, may, if
relevant, be received in evidence.
In order to determine whether it will be
advisable to require the department to
undertake the work outlined in these
sections, a review is necessary of the
pertinent facts concerning the origin of the
claims of the Mississippi Choctaws and the
efforts heretofore made by the Government to
adjudicate the rights of such persons.
These claims are based upon Article XIV of
the treaty of September 27, 1830 (7 Stat,
333, 335), which reads as follows:'
Article XIV. Each Choctaw head of
a family being desirous to remain and become
n citizen of the States shall be permitted
to do so by signifying his intention to the
agent within six months from the
ratification of this treaty, and he or she
shall thereupon be entitled to a reservation
of one section of 040 acres of land, to be
bounded by sectional lines of survey: in
like manner shall be entitled to one-half
that quantity for each unmarried child which
is living with him over 10 years of age; and
to a quarter section to such child as may be
under 10 years of age, to adjoin the
locution of the parent. If they reside upon
said lands, intending to become citizens of
the States, for five years after the
ratification of this treaty, in that case a
grant In fee simple shall issue; said
reservation shall include the present
Improvement of the head of the family or a
portion of it. Persons who claim under this
article shall not lose the privilege of a
Choctaw citizen, but if they ever remove are
not to be entitled to any portion of the
Choctaw annuity.
When the commissioners representing the
United States attempted to negotiate the
treaty of 1830 they encountered much
opposition from many members of the tribe
because of the reluctance of a large number
of the citizens to give up the land which
they had occupied for many years and to
abandon the graves of their ancestors, as
would be necessary in view of the removal of
the tribe to lands west of the Mississippi
River, as provided by the terms of the
treaty. The principal purpose of the
Government in negotiating this treaty was to
induce the Indians to go West, and it
appeared for a time that the efforts of the
commissioners, for the reasons stated, would
be fruitless. However, at the suggestion of
one of their chiefs, Greenwood Leflore.
Article XIV was inserted in the treaty. By
the terms of this article the Indians were
allowed to elect whether they would remain
in Mississippi or remove west. Finding that
they were to have this privilege the
opposition to the treaty vanished, and the
negotiations were completed to the
satisfaction of the Government.
Pursuant to the terms of the treaty, a large
number of Choctaws were transferred to the
country west of the Mississippi, later known
as Indian Territory. These Choctaws and
their descendants now constitute the main
body of what is known as the Choctaw Nation.
The removal of the people was effected by
the United States at various times by
contractors who conducted the several
migrations.
There were a large number of citizens,
however, who made application to the United
States Indian agent located in Mississippi
for registration under Article XIV, quoted
above. Although a period of six months,
beginning with September 27, 1830, was
allowed for the Indians to make known their
wishes, no provision was made apparently for
the receipt of their applications until the
following year. On May 21, 1831, the Office
of Indian Affairs, then under the Department
of War, forwarded to Col. William Ward, the
local Indian agent, a copy of the Choctaw
treaty as ratified by Congress, with
instructions, which read in part as follows:
You will be careful in keeping a register
of the reservations taken under the
fourteenth article of the treaty: a fair
copy of which to be made, duly certified,
and transmitted for the information of the
department.
Many complaints appear in the records of the
Indian Office concerning the conduct of Col.
Ward in performing the duty devolving upon
him under these instructions. Various
official reports show that he was oftentimes
intoxicated when the Indians applied to him
for their reservations; that he was harsh
and abusive in his treatment of them; and
that after making a few registrations
arbitrarily refused to receive any more
applications and drove the Indians from his
presence. The register which he prepared
bore his certificate of August 24, 1831. It
shows that the first application was
registered April 18, 1831, and the last
August 23, 1831. The names of only 71
persons appear upon this register. This
number represents only a small portion of
the persons who attempted to take advantage
of the provisions of said Article XIV. The
whole number of heads of families who
received land was 143.
Ward's conduct was so plainly contrary to
the provisions of the treaty that Congress
subsequently made provision by acts passed
in 1837 and 1842 for commissions to
investigate the claims of Indians who
alleged their applications were refused. It
appears from the decision of the Supreme
Court in the case of the Choctaw Nation v.
The United States (110 U. S., 1) that 1,346
Choctaw heads of families complied with or
attempted to comply with the provisions of
the treaty, and that as late as 1838 there
were 5,000 Choc-taws still residing in the
State of Mississippi.
The persons found entitled by these
commissions were awarded scrip in lieu of
the land which should have been allotted
them under Article XIV of the treaty of
1830. One-half of this scrip was delivered
to the applicants while residing east of the
Mississippi. The other half was withheld
until such time as they should remove to the
lands west of the Mississippi, or at least
until they should actually embark for such
removal. This scrip gave the applicants the
right to enter public lands in certain
Southern States; later the portion of the
scrip not delivered was commuted by a money
payment.
The great majority of the fourteenth-article
claimants remained in Mississippi. Some of
them, however, drifted into neighboring
States, and others finally made their way
west and joined the main body of the tribe
in Indian Territory. It should be noted in
this connection that by various acts the
Choctaw Council recognized the right of the
absentee Mississippi Choctaws to remove to
the nation and actually invited thorn to do
so.
Those who removed to the Indian Territory
were allowed to settle upon the lands of the
tribe, and some of them were recognized and
enrolled by the tribal authorities, either
by acts of the council or decrees of the
tribal courts. A number of them, however,
appear to have enjoyed the substantial
benefits of Choctaw citizenship, but without
establishing by any legal procedure their
right to enrollment.
The Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes,
having been created for the purpose of
negotiating with those, tribes plans looking
to the allotment of their lands and the
breaking up of the tribal governments,
rendered a report to Congress under date of
January 28, 1808, setting forth what the
commission deemed to be the rights of the
Mississippi Choctaws in the lands occupied
by the main body of the tribe in Indian
Territory. This report appears on page 10 of
the printed report of the Commission to the
Five Civilized Tribes for the year 1898.
After reviewing the history of the
Mississippi Choctaws and certain laws
relating to them, the commission stated its
conclusion as follows:
It follows, therefore, from this
reasoning, as well as from the historical
review already recited and the nature of the
title itself, as well as all stipulations
concerning it in the treaties between the
United States and the Choctaw Nation, that
to avail himself of the "privileges of a
Choctaw citizen" any person claiming to be a
descendant of those Choctaws who were
provided for In the fourteenth article of
the treaty of 1830 must first show the fact
that he is such descendant and has in good
faith joined his brethren in the Territory
with the intent to become one of the
citizens of the nation. Having done so, such
person has a right to be enrolled as a
Choctaw citizen and to claim all the
privileges of such a citizen, except to a
share in the annuities. And that otherwise
he can not claim as a right the "privilege
of a Choctaw citizen."
To the claim as thus defined the Choctaw
Nation has always acceded, and 1ms
manifested in many ways its willingness to
take into its citizenship any one or all of
the Mississippi Choctaws who would leave
their residence and citizenship in that
State and join in good faith their brethren
in the Territory, with participation in all
the privileges of such citizenship, save
only a share In their annuities, for which
an equivalent has been given in the grant of
land and citizenship in Mississippi.
As a result of the report of the Commission
to the Five Civilized Tribes the following
paragraph was inserted in section 21 of the
act of, June 28, 1898 (30 Stat., 495):
And said commission shall have authority
to determine the identity of Choctaw Indians
claiming rights in the Choctaw lauds under
Article XIV of the treaty between the United
States and the Choctaw Nation concluded
September 27, 1830, and to that end may
administer oaths, examine witnesses, and
perform all other nets necessary thereto,
and make report to the Secretary of the
Interior.
It will be observed that this provision of
law authorized only the identification of
Mississippi Choctaws, and that it did not
contain authority for their final enrollment
or for the apportionment to them of any
share of the lands or money of the Choctaw
and Chickasaw Nations. The reports of the
Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes for
several years following this legislation
show that the work of ascertaining the
identity of the Mississippi Choctaws was one
of considerable magnitude and complicated by
many difficulties, principal among which was
the inability of the Mississippi Choctaws to
look after their own interests. Many of the
full bloods were found to be poor and
ignorant. They were suspicious of the
commission and the Government, and it proved
necessary to send interpreters to their
homes. Even then it was impossible in many
cases to get the history of themselves and
their ancestors with any degree of
certainty.
In its annual report for the year 1901, at
page 21, the Commission to the Five
Civilized Tribes commented upon the
character of the task of identifying the
Mississippi Choctaws, stating that to
require a strict compliance with the
fourteenth article of the treaty of 1830 on
the part of ignorant full-blood Indians in
the State of Mississippi would produce but
little, if any, result favorable to them.
There was also among the applicants (who
came from various sections of the country) a
"great army of apparent whites and Negroes."
The work of the commission as to Mississippi
Choctaws prior to the agreement of 1902 is
shown by the table, which follows:
Mississippi Choctaw Applications
| |
Number of Applications heard |
Number of Persons included in such applications |
| Up to and inclusive of June 30,1900 |
481 |
1,665 |
| At Muskogee, Ind. T., from July 1, 1900, to Nov. 30,1900,
inclusive |
641 |
2,098 |
| At Hattiesburg. Miss., Dec. 17 to Dec. 22, 1900, inclusive |
93 |
355 |
| At Atoka, Ind. T., from Jan. 2 to June 30,1901, inclusive |
636 |
1,825 |
| At Meridian. Miss., from Apr. 1 to June 30. 1001, inclusive |
788 |
3,002 |
| At Philadelphia. Neshoba County, Miss., from Apr. 29 lo May 4,
1901. inclusive. |
76 |
229 |
| At Carthage, Leake County, Miss., from May 6 to May 11, 1901.
inclusive |
56 |
203 |
| At Decatur, Newton County, Miss., from May 13 to May 18, 1901,
inclusive |
33 |
101 |
| Heard at Atoka, Ind. T., from July I, 1901, to Oct. 31. 1901,
inclusive |
699 |
2,192 |
| Heard at the general office at Muskogee from Nov. 1,1901, to
June 30,1902, inclusive. |
1,320 |
4,503 |
| Heard at Meridian, Miss., from July 1, 1901, to Oct. 10, 1901,
inclusive. |
415 |
1,393 |
| Heard in field. State of Mississippi, from Oct. 11, 1901. to
Jan. 14,1902, inclusive. |
175 |
464 |
| Heard at Meridian, Miss., from Jan. 15 to Feb. 17, 1902,
inclusive |
216 |
715 |
| Heard in field, State of Mississippi, from Feb. 21 to Apr.
13,1902, inclusive |
161 |
464 |
| Heard at Meridian, Miss., from Apr. 14 to Apr. 30. 1902,
inclusive |
170 |
584 |
| Total |
5,950 |
19,791 |
In adjudicating these cases under the act
of June 28, 1898, the question determined in
each instance was whether the applicant or
any of his ancestors complied or attempted
to comply with Article XIV of the treaty of
1880. The applicants were not held to the
rigid requirement that they must prove
descent from an ancestor who actually
received a patent to lands in Mississippi
under said article. The rule adopted was
sufficiently broad to permit of the
identification of persons whose ancestors
were awarded scrip in lieu of patents. The
rights of the applicants were also
considered where their allegations were
confined only to an attempted compliance on
the j>art of their ancestors with Article
XIV. It should be stated, however, in this
connection, that the applicants as a rule
were unable to prove, as a matter of fact,
their descent from any person who received
or was entitled to receive the benefits of
said article. A few persons were identified
as descendants of patentees, but in a great
majority of the cases the applicants either
had no right whatever to identification or
were so ignorant of their family history
that they were wholly unable to sustain
their claim of right.
The commissioner to the Five Civilized
Tribes stated in his report for the year
ended June 30, 1906, that it became apparent
that the ignorant full blood, for whom
Congress had intended to provide, had no
record of his ancestry and could not prove
his rights tinder the law and if required to
do so would fail to receive the benefits of
the legislation. Accordingly, in order that
this might not happen, the following
provision was embodied in the act of July 1,
1902 (sec. 41, 32 Stat., 641):
The application of no person for
identification as a Mississippi Choctaw
shall he received by said commission after
six months subsequent to the date of the
final ratification of this agreement, and in
the disposition of such applications all
full-blood Mississippi Choctaw Indians and
the descendants of any Mississippi Choctaw
Indians, whether of full or mixed blood, who
receive a patent to land under the said
fourteenth article of said treaty of 1830
who had not moved to and made bona fide
settlement in the Choctaw- Chickasaw country
prior to June 28, 1898, shall be deemed to
be Mississippi Choctaws, entitled to
benefits under Article XIV of the said
treaty of September 27, 1830, and to
identification as such by said commission,
but this direction or provision shall be
deemed to be only a rule of evidence and
shall not be invoked by or operate to the
advantage of any applicant who Is not a
Mississippi Choctaw of the full blood, or
who is not the descendant of a Mississippi
Choctaw who received a patent to land under
said treaty, or who is otherwise barred from
the right of citizenship in the Choctaw
Nation.
Under this act it will be observed, first,
that the right to make applications was
given for a period of six months-that is to
say, for six months following September 25,
1902; second, that descendants of actual
beneficiaries under Article XIV,
irrespective of their degree of Indian
blood, were to be recognized as Mississippi
Choctaws; and, third, that a rule of
evidence was prescribed, to be accepted in
lieu of proof of ancestry, according any
full blood the rights of a Mississippi
Choctaw.
In the administration of this act, a
question arose as to whether, in case of the
identification of a full-blood parent as a
Mississippi Choctaw, the decision in his
favor would inure to the benefit of children
born to him of mixed Indian blood. An
example of this kind is to be found in the
case of the family of Calvin McMillan. (M.
C. R-, 4215.) The census card in this case
shows that the wife only, Mollie McMillan,
was identified. In this family there were 11
members, all of whom were alleged to be
full-blood Indians but only one of whom was
identified.
By letter of March 17, 1903, prepared under
supervision of Mr. Van Devanter, then
Assistant Attorney General, the Secretary of
the Interior held that the mixed-blood
children of full bloods were entitled to
identification under said section 41. This
decision was overruled, however, by the
opinion of the Attorney General of June 10,
1903, wherein he held that the rights
conferred upon such Mississippi Choctaws
were in the nature of gifts, and therefore
that the act should be strictly construed to
the exclusion of all except full bloods
where Indian blood was the only evidence
relied upon.
A second question, which arose, was as to
whether, under said section 41, persons of
mixed blood claiming identification through
proof of ancestry were required to establish
their descent from an actual patentee or
might also submit proof of descent from
persons who attempted to comply with the
treaty. The view was adopted that it was not
intended by the agreement to disturb the
rule theretofore followed by the Commission
to the Five Civilized Tribes permitting
applicants to submit proof of their descent
from persons entitled to the benefits of
Article XIV who did not receive patents
thereunder. However, as before stated, only
very few persons of mixed blood were able to
furnish the necessary facts to establish
their ancestry.
Following the agreement of 1902 came the
acts of March 3, 1905, and April 26, 1906,
authorizing the enrollment of new-born
citizens of the Choctaw and Chickasaw
tribes. Under these acts a number of
children whose parents had been found
entitled to enrollment by the Secretary of
the Interior were added to the final rolls
of the Choctaw Nation.
The term "identification" as used in
connection with the Mississippi Choctaw
work, refers to the preliminary decision of
the Secretary of the Interior holding
applicants to be entitled to the benefits
growing out of Article XIV of the treaty of
1830 and the, later acts looking to their
removal to the Indian Territory. However,
the identification of an applicant was not
in any case a guaranty that he would
ultimately succeed to the benefits of
Choctaw citizenship. By the terms of section
41 of the act of July 1, 1902 (32 Stat,,
641), " identified " Mississippi Choctaws
were allowed six months after the date of
their identification to remove to the
Choctaw-Chickasaw country and make
settlement there. If they failed to remove,
they lost the benefits of their
identification.
It was further provided by the same section
that upon proof of their settlement in the
Choctaw Nation, which proof was to be
submitted within one year after the date of
their identification, they should be
"enrolled" by the Commission to the Five
Civilized Tribes as Mississippi Choctaws
entitled to allotment, as provided for other
citizens of the tribes, subject to special
provisions relating to Mississippi Choctaws,
such enrollment to be final when approved by
the Secretary of the Interior.
By section 42 of the same act it was
provided that when any Mississippi Choctaw
had in good faith continuously resided upon
the lands of the Choctaw and Chickasaw
country for a period of three years, he
should "upon due proof of such continuous
bona fide residence," receive a patent for
his lands. Section 44 of the same act also
provided that if within four years after
enrollment any Mississippi Choctaw, or his
heirs or representatives in case of his
death, failed to make proof of continuous
bona fide residence for the period so
prescribed, or up to the time of the death
of such Mississippi Choctaw, in case of his
death after enrollment, he and his heirs and
representatives, if he be dead, should be
deemed to have acquired no interest in the
land set apart to him and the same should
be, sold at public auction for cash.
These requirements made it impossible for
many ignorant and indigent full bloods to
take advantage of the preliminary decisions
of the commission and of the department
identifying them. It is true that some
effort was made by the Government to assist
such persons in removing to the Indian
Territory. The Eleventh Annual Report of the
Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, the
same being for the fiscal year ending June
30, 1904, contains on page 19 a statement by
the commission upon this point. This
statement is to the effect that those
identified as Mississippi Choctaws were
chiefly indigent full bloods who formerly
resided in Mississippi and were without
means of removing to Indian Territory, and
that Congress, in order that they might
receive the benefits of identification,
appropriated $20,000 to be used in defraying
expenses incident to their removal. The
expenditure of this appropriation was placed
under the direction of the commission, and
on July 24, 1903, a special agent was
designated to undertake the work. Circulars
setting forth the purpose of the Government
were distributed in the full-blood
settlements in Mississippi, Alabama, and
Louisiana, and the special agent of the
Government proceeded to Meridian for the
purpose of mobilizing those of the Indians
who desired to avail themselves of the aid
offered by the Government. August 13, 1903,
a special train carrying 264 full bloods
arrived at Atoka in the Indian Territory.
Arrangements had been made, for their
subsistence at a camp 3 miles south or Atoka
until such time as they could be placed upon
their respective allotments. Twenty-six
additional identified full-blood Mississippi
Choctaws were removed on October 9, 1903, to
Fort Towson, making a total of 290
transported under the direction of the
commission. The entire appropriation was
expended in the removal of these Indians and
for their subsistence after removal.
The number transported by the Government
(290) was only a small portion of the number
identified as Mississippi Choctaws by the
commission under the acts of June 28, 1898,
and July 1, 1902 said number being 2,534.
Arrangements were also made by private
parties for the transportation of
Mississippi Choctaws. By reason of alleged
expenditures in connection with the removal
of such persons, suit was subsequently
authorized by Congress to be instituted in
the Court of Claims, and all Mississippi
Choctaw lands are now held by the allottees
under the cloud of an alleged lien which the
claimants contend attached to such lands
under the act giving the court jurisdiction,
it being further contended that the lien
extends also to the funds in the Treasury of
the United States to the credit of such
Mississippi Choctaws.
Under the laws of Congress the contracts
looking to the sale or encumbrance in any
way of Mississippi Choctaw lands prior to
allotment were made invalid, with the result
that it was impossible to provide such
persons in advance with a fund to meet their
expenses, even with the approval of the
department.
The report of the Commissioner to the Five
Civilized Tribes for the year ending June
30, 1907, shows, on page 12, that 24,634
persons applied to the Commission to the
Five Civilized Tribes for identification as
Mississippi Choctaws under the acts of June
28, 1898 and July 1, 1902; that of this
number 2,534 were identified as Mississippi
Choctaws and that, of the number so
identified 1,072 persons failed to remove to
the Indian Territory and submit proof of
their removal and settlement within the time
required by law. In this connection the
commissioner stated that several reasons
might be given for the failure of the
identified persons to take advantage of
their opportunity to submit proof of such
removal and settlement: that many of them
did not appreciate the value of allotments
in the Choctaw-Chickasaw country; that few
Mississippi Choctaws made more than a bare
living in their former homes and hence had
no means for transportation; that some who
were transported by individuals became sick
under ill-treatment and died the first
winter; and that those who survived advised
their friends and relatives remaining in
Mississippi and Alabama of their experience,
which discouraged them from making an
attempt at removing.
It further appears from this report that
under the newborn acts of March 3, 1905, and
April 26, 1906, applications were made for
the enrollment of 372 children of
Mississippi Choctaws; that 198 of such
children were enrolled and the applications
of 174 rejected or dismissed.
The final results, as shown on page 13 of
said report, were as follows:
Enrollment of
Mississippi Choctaws.
| Enrolled under
acts of June 28, 1898, and July
1, 1902 |
1,415 |
| Enrolled under
act of Mar. 3, 1905 |
11 |
| Enrolled under
act of Apr. 26, 1906 |
187 |
|
Total |
1,643 |
I wish to refer in this connection to my
letter of April 22, 1912, relating to the
general subject of enrollment, wherein I
pointed out under the heading of "Class III"
that there were approximately 10 cases where
families of Mississippi Choctaws were
identified by the department within the last
six months prior to March 4, 1907-some of
whom were identified within the last few
days prior to said date- and that they were
consequently deprived of the usual period of
time allowed other Mississippi Choctaws
under the agreement of 1902 for removal to
the Choctaw-Chickasaw country. These 10
families are in a class by themselves,
because, notwithstanding formal adjudication
of their rights, they were prevented by the
abrupt closing of the enrollment work from
taking advantage of the decisions, which had
been rendered in their favor.
I am advised that if the work of
reinvestigating and readjudicating the
claims of Mississippi Choctaws be undertaken
along the broad lines outlined in the bill
introduced by Mr. Harrison, the work can not
be accomplished within the time prescribed
therein; that if the applicants are required
to establish that they or some one of their
ancestors were beneficiaries under Article
XIV of the treaty of 1830, a vast amount of
evidence will necessarily have to be taken
covering the family history of the
applicants for more, than 80 years; and that
this work would be a repetition of work
which has already been accomplished and in
the great majority of cases would be of no
benefit whatever to the applicants.
Experience has shown that in those cases
where there would seem to be the most merit,
judging by the physical appearance of the
applicants, such applicants were least able
to establish the facts concerning their
ancestry. The great difficulty, which such
persons encounter, is due to their frequent
change of residence, the breaking up of
family ties, and the substitution of English
for Indian names.
If Congress shall be of the opinion that any
legislation whatever is needed for the
relief of Mississippi Choctaws, either at
the expense of the United States or the
Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, the
meritorious cases, with few exceptions, can
be selected from existing records of this
department now in the custody of the
Commissioner to the Five Civilized Tribes,
at Muskogee. Okla. As to the 10 families
referred to above, it is unnecessary for me
to discuss the matter of their enrollment
herein, inasmuch as I have reported fully as
to them in said report of April 22, 1912.
With respect to the 1,070 persons who were
identified as Mississippi Choctaws, but who
failed to prove the facts of removal and
settlement in the Choctaw and Chickasaw
country, it may be said that irrespective of
their unfortunate condition of poverty and
ignorance, there is grave question whether
there is any just ground, legal or
equitable, for holding the Choctaw and
Chickasaw Nations responsible for their
failure to comply with the law. In fact, it
may be urged by the tribes that
responsibility, if any rested upon the
United States instead. As to the mixed-blood
children of full-blood parents who were
identified as Mississippi Choctaws under the
rule of evidence prescribed by section 41 of
the act of July 1, 1902, which excused them
from proof of ancestry, it would seem that
the propriety of further action looking to
their enrollment would be dependent largely
upon whether the benefits of the agreement
of 1902 were in the nature of gifts to the
full bloods.
Section 3 of the bill provides that
claimants may be represented by attorneys,
whose fees shall be fixed in accordance with
any contract now or hereafter made between
the applicant and said attorney, and that
such contract shall govern the amount of
such fee, provided that the Secretary of the
Interior may limit the percentage of
compensation in each case and that the
contract shall be enforceable for no greater
sum than that fixed by the Secretary of the
Interior.
In connection with this section, it may be
said that the records of the department show
the Mississippi Choctaws have been to an
unusual extent the victims of numerous
extortionate contracts, which were,
doubtless obtained in some instances through
misrepresentation of facts and in some cases
by persons falsely representing themselves
to be Government agents. I am therefore of
opinion that if any legislation whatever be
enacted for the purposes indicated by the
bill, conditions even more stringent than
those set forth in section 3 should be
provided with reference to such contracts.
Persons desiring to negotiate with the
Indians should be known to be of reputable
character. They should be required to obtain
permission first from the Department of the
Interior to negotiate with the claimants.
They should be limited by law as to the
maximum amount to be paid under such
contracts and a penalty should be provided
for taking any contract or attempting to
enforce any agreement made in violation of
law.
Section 4 of the bill provides that
the Secretary of the Interior shall have
prepared and make a schedule or roll of all
persons entitled under the act, within eight
months after its passage, and within said
eight months award them the full rights of
citizens and members of the
Choctaw-Chickasaw Tribe. It seems almost
needless to say that if the investigation
and reexamination be made in the wholesale
fashion proposed by the bill, it would be,
as indicated in a previous connection, a
physical impossibility to accomplish the
work within this time.
Sections 5 and 6 of the bill would
appear to be appropriate provisions in the
event that such a bill should be enacted.
Section 7 provides among other things that
depositions may be taken in support of said
applications in any place in the United
States upon notice to the Attorney General
and the Secretary of the Interior, and that
the procedure as to notice and taking of
depositions shall be as in ordinary cases
before the United States courts. If this
section should be enacted, it would be
absolutely impossible for the
representatives of the tribes to be
represented at all hearings, and to subject
the witnesses to cross-examination and
furnish the rebuttal evidence which would be
necessary to a proper examination of the
cases.
The latter part of section 7 provides
that the expense of taking depositions on
the part of claimants shall be paid by the
applicants in the first instance, but shall
be taxed as costs in each case where the
applicant is successful and said costs shall
be charged to the funds of said tribe in the
United States Treasury. If this clause be
enacted, a burden will be placed upon the
tribes not imposed upon them with respect to
many thousands of unsuccessful applicants
heretofore denied enrollment.
Section 8 provides a time limit of
six months for the submission of
applications. If the bill be enacted, some
such provision as this should be included
therein, although it is questionable whether
Indians of the full blood as well as those
of mixed blood whose habits, customs, and
language are substantially those of the full
bloods should be so limited without any
provision whatever for some one to act as
their representative under authority of the
Government.
Section 9 of the bill provides that
the tribal organization of the
Choctaw-Chickasaw Tribe shall be abolished
and the title to all tribal lands and moneys
yet undistributed be vested in the United
States as trustee. This provision is not
necessarily a part of an enrollment bill,
and should, in my opinion, be made the
subject of a separate measure, providing
Congress is satisfied that the time has now
arrived for the abolishment of the tribal
organization.
I wish to suggest that the term
"Choctaw-Chickasaw Tribe" as used in various
places in the bill, is not in harmony with
the history or organization of said tribes.
The Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations are
entirely independent in their organization.
It is true that prior to allotment they did
own in common all of the lands embraced
within the Choctaw-Chickasaw country, but
they did not constitute a single tribe.
In view of the facts stated above, I am of
opinion, that the bill should not be enacted
into law.
Copy of the decision of the Secretary of the
Interior of March 17, 1903, relating to the
identification of mixed-blood children of
Mississippi Choctaws, is enclosed for your
consideration. The opinion of the Attorney
General of June 19, 1903 relating to the
same subject appears on page 689 of Volume
XXIV of the printed opinions of the Attorney
General.
Respectfully,
Samuel Adams, First Assistant Secretary
Five Civilized
Tribes in Oklahoma
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. Several spellings have been used for the same
tribe of Indians.
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