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Elizabeth Hignight,
Choctaw
Elizabeth Hignight Et
Al., Choctaw.
Dawes Commission, No. 426. United States
Court, No. 144-A.
Citizenship Court. No.
16-T.
Record
September 9. 1896. Original application
filed for admission to citizenship in the
Choctaw Nation of Elizabeth Hignight; W. II.
Hignight, her husband; Joseph Hignight, her
son: G. T. Hignight, her son; Lula Hignight,
his wife; R. Lettie May Hignight, George
Wesley Hignight, their children; J. H.
Hignight, son of Elizabeth Hignight: Ann
Hignight, his wife; Willie Hignight, Lilly
Hignight, Nannie Hignight, Sarah Hignight,
Lottie Hignight, their children; W. R.
Hignight, son of Elizabeth; Ruthey Hignight,
his wife; Nancy Hignight, their child;
Nannie Watkins (nee Hignight). Of these, W.
H. Hignight, Lula Hignight, Ann Hignight,
and Ruthey Hignight claim by intermarriage.
_____ _____, 1896. Answer of Choctaw Nation
filed.
December 2, 1896. Decision of commission
denying application. From this decision of
the commission appeal was taken to the
United States court, southern district.
Indian Territory, sitting at Ardmore, where
the case was tried upon the testimony taken
by the master. No testimony was offered by
the nations.
March 10. 1896. Decree of United States
court admitting the following-named persons
as citizens of the Choctaw Nation: Mrs.
Elizabeth Hignight, G. T. Hignight. W. R.
Hignight. J. H. Hignight, Joseph Hignight,
R. Lettie May Hignight, George Wesley
Hignight, Willie Hignight, Lillie Hignight,
Sarah Hignight, Lottie Hignight, Nancy
Hignight, as citizens by blood, and W. H.
Hignight, by intermarriage. (Certified copy
of judgment is attached hereto, marked
"Exhibit A.")
December 17. 1902. Decree of citizenship
court vacating decree of United States court
in "test case." Record certified to
citizenship court for trial de novo.
June 20. 1904. Decree of citizenship court
denying application of claimants. The case
was tried upon the evidence adduced before
the commission and before the master. The
record does not show any additional
testimony taken before the citizenship
court. The uncontradicted evidence shows
that Elizabeth Hignight, principal
applicant, through whom all other applicants
claim, was 62 years of age at the time of
her application in 1896; that her father was
Tom Power, a white man and her mother was
Patsey Jane Power (nee West), a full-blood
Choctaw woman: that the father and mother of
Patsey June Power were William West and
Patsey Jane West, recognized full-blood
Choctaw Indians, who lived in the old
Choctaw Nation, Miss.; that Elizabeth
Hignight, principal applicant herein, lived
in the old Choctaw Nation until she was 8
years old, when her parents brought her to
the Indian Territory, and after leaving her
there for a snort time, took her to Tarrant
County, Tex.; that her parents returned to
the Indian Territory in about a year's time,
leaving applicant in Texas "to go to
school;" that Elizabeth Hignight married W.
H. Hignight, a white man, in the year 1860,
and has lived with him ever since: that she
and W. H. Hignight and their children came
to Indian Territory "16 years ago," or about
1880 or 1881, and have lived in the Indian
Territory continuously since that time.
Statement By Counsel
Counsel for claimants respectfully submit
that the following named persons, admitted
by judgment of the United States court, and
their descendants, are entitled to be
enrolled as citizens of the Choctaw Nation:
Mrs. Elizabeth Hignight, G. T Hignight, W.
R. Hignight, J. F, Hignight, Joseph
Hignight, Lillie Hignight, Sarah Hignight,
Lottie Hignight, Nancy Hignight, W. H.
Hignight, Audrie Marie Leverett, Nevada (or
Levada) Hignight, James Bryan Hignight,
Charles R. Hignight, Earl Hignight, Ella May
Hignight.
(Nineteen in all.)
Respectfully submitted.
Ballinger & Lee
Transcript Of
Proceedings
United States Court.
Indian Territory, Southern District, ss:
At a stated term of the United States court
in the Indian Territory, _____ district,
begun and bad in the court rooms at Ardmore,
in the Indian Territory, on the 15th day of
November, in the year of our Lord 1807.
Present: The Hon. Hosea Townsend, judge of
said court.
On the 10th day of March, 1898, being a
regular day of said term of said court,
among the proceedings had were the following
to wit:
Mrs. Elizabeth Hignight et al., plaintiffs,
v. Choctaw Nation, defendant. No. 144.
Decree
On this the 10th day of March A. D. 1898,
the above-entitled action came before the
court by motion of plaintiff's attorneys,
who appeared in open court and asked for a
confirmation of the master's report herein,
filed on the 29th day of January, A. D.
1898, and for Judgment directing that the
applicants be enrolled as citizens of the
Choctaw Tribe of Indians, as recommended by
the master in the report aforesaid, which
report was in words as follows:
Mrs. Elizabeth Hignight
et al.. plaintiffs, v. Choctaw Nation,
defendant.
No. 144.
Report Of Master In Chancery
"This case came before me, John Hinkle,
master in chancery for this court, by an
order of court referring the same, the same
taken on the 22d day of December. A. D.
1898, in open court.
"I find that this cause was filed by the
applicants. Mrs. Elizabeth Hignight et al.,
before the Commission to the Five Civilized
Tribes from the United States in due time
and In compliance with the laws regulating
the same and was by said commission
rejected.
"That these applicants, plaintiffs herein,
appealed said action to the United States
court at Ardmore. Ind. T., in due time and
complied with the law governing appeals in
like cases.
"From the evidence herein produced I find
that Mrs. Elizabeth Hignight and her
children by her husband, W. H. Hignight,
viz, G. T. Hignight, W. R. Hignight, J. H.
Hignight, and Joseph Hignight; and R. Lettie
May Hignight and George Wesley Hignight,
grandchildren of Mrs. Elizabeth Hignight and
children of G. T. Hignight: Willie Hignight,
Lilly Hignight, Sarah Hignight, and Lottie
Hignight, grandchildren of Mrs. Elizabeth
Hignight and children of J. H. Hignight;
Nancy Hignight, grandchild of Mrs. Elizabeth
Hignight and child of W. R. Hignight, are
each and every one Choctaw Indians by blood,
and recommend that they be enrolled as such;
and that W. H. Hignight, husband
aforementioned of Mrs. Elizabeth Hignight,
is a citizen of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians
by intermarriage, they having married
September 9, 1860 as required by law, and I
recommend that he be enrolled as such. I
therefore recommend that each and all of the
parties above mentioned be enrolled as
members of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians with
all the privileges, benefits, and Immunities
belonging to members of said tribe who are
now enrolled as such.
"I further recommend that Lula Hignight,
wife of G. T. Hignight; Annie, wife of T. H.
Hignight; and Ruthie Hignight, wife of W. R.
Hignight, be denied the right of citizenship
and be not enrolled as citizens of said
nation, they not having complied with the
laws in force regulating marriage in the
Choctaw Nation at the time they were married
to their husbands aforementioned.
"This January 29, 1898.
" John Hinkle, Master in Chancery."
It appearing to the court that there are no
exceptions filed herein by the defendant,
after having due time in which to file same,
and after the expiration of the time
governing the filing of exceptions to
reports in like cases, and It further
appearing that the finding of said master in
chancery is supported by the evidence, and,
in compliance with the laws governing in
this case, It is therefore ordered, decreed,
and adjudged that said report of the master
In chancery be in all things confirmed. And
it is further ordered, decreed, and adjudged
that Mrs. Elizabeth Hignight and her
children and grandchildren, to wit: G. T.
Hignight, W. R. Hignight, J. H. Hignight and
Joseph Hignight, her children: and her
grandchildren, to wit: R. Lettie May
Hignight, George Wesley Hignight, Willie
Hignight, Lilly Hignight, Sarah Hignight,
Lottie Hignight and Nancy Hignight each and
every one be enrolled as citizens of the
Choctaw Tribe of Indians by blood: and that
W. H. Hignight be enrolled as a citizen of
the Choctaw Tribe of Indians by
intermarriage. And that the clerk of this
court furnish a certified copy of this
decree to the Dawes Commission and that the
plaintiffs herein have judgment against the
Choctaw Nation for all costs herein incurred
and expended, for which let execution issue.
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 above and 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.
I Seal.] C. M. Campbell.
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
Simanóle Tribes of Indians, and the
disposition of the land of said tribes, and
that the above and foregoing is n true and
correct copy of a certified copy of a decree
of court rendered on March 10, 1898, in the
matter of the enrollment of Mrs. Elizabeth
Hignight et al. as members of the Choctaw
Nation.
J. Geo. Wright. Commissioner to the Five
Civilized Tribes
By . H. Angell, Clerk in charge of Choctaw
records.
Muskogee, Okla., November 1, 1910
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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