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Report of Secretary Adams, July 17, 1912
Department Of The Interior,
Washington, July 17,1912
Hon. John H. Stephens, Chairman Committee of Indian Affairs,
House of Representatives.
Sir: By your reference I am in receipt of a copy of H. R. 22334, entitled "A
bill providing for the final disposition of the affairs of the Five Civilized
Tribes, and for other purposes," with request for report thereon.
Sections 1 and 2 of the bill relate to the subject of enrollment of certain
classes of persons whose names were omitted from the rolls approved by the
Secretary of the Interior on or before March 4, 1907. The first of these classes
embraces the so called list of 52, which was a list prepared in the office of
the Commissioner to the Five Civilized Tribes and transmitted to the department
by letter of November 15, 1907, copy of which was forwarded to the committees of
Congress by Secretary Ballinger February 12, 1910.
The second of these classes includes the so-called Pollock list, which was
transmitted to your committee with my letter of February 19, 1912, wherein I
advised you that the persons included in said list apparently have
qualifications which entitle them to enrollment in one or another of the Five
Civilized Tribes, but whose names do not appear upon the final rolls.
Both of these lists are made up of the names of persons who have a strong claim
of right to enrollment. In this connection, permit me to refer to my report of
April 22, 1912, relating to the general subject of enrollment in the Five
Civilized Tribes. Therein I referred to five classes of persons and reported
specifically as to each class. Classes I and II referred to in said report
include, together with other names, the two classes mentioned above, for the
adjudication of whose rights provision is made in said bill.
The third class mentioned in the bill includes "all persons whose enrollment on
the final approved rolls of the Five Civilized Tribes was directed by the
Secretary of the Interior within six months prior to March 4, 1907, but whose
names do not appear on said final approved rolls, but who had no hearing or
opportunity to be heard to show that said final order or decision in their favor
should not be ignored or annulled.'' It is presumed that the class last referred
to was intended to include those persons who claim that injustice was done them
during the last few weeks preceding the close of the enrollment work by reason
of the hurry incident to that period and the application to their cases of
certain opinions rendered by the Attorney General.
I am advised, however, that the bill as drafted might not include more than one
family, or at most two or three families, who claim to have lost their rights
for the reasons stated.
In this connection I desire to refer you further to my said report of April 22,
1912. Class IV, mentioned on page 6 of that report, deals at length with this
class of persons. In the pages that follow I explained the origin of the
so-called u jurisdictional cases,'' and showed that there were about 131 cases
of that class decided within the period from February 9 to March 4, 1907. These
cases, together with others where the basis of complaint was mainly the hurry
and confusion incident to that period, included approximately 1,724.
Reference is made in the latter part of section 1 of the bill to Mississippi
Choctaw Indians, but I am advised that the measure as drafted would probably not
include any such Indians, or at most only a limited number of them. The
difficulty in their cases was not that decisions had been rendered in their
favor by the department and afterwards rescinded without notice, but that after
having been decided by the Secretary to be entitled to identification as
Mississippi Choctaws, they were not afforded the usual length of time for
removal to the Choctaw-Chickasaw country. This class of persons is also dealt
with in my said report of April 22, 1912, as "Class III." The discussion
concerning them begins at page 5 of said report. The class there referred to
included approximately 10 families who were actually found to be entitled to
identification as Mississippi Choctaws. That report did not deal at length with
the subject of the claims of Mississippi Choctaws, but in a subsequent report
dated July 2, 1912, relating to FI. R. 19213, the history of the Mississippi
Choctaw claims was fully stated and the most meritorious classes pointed out.
Having set forth my views at length and given all the information available in
said reports of April 22 and July 2, I deem it unnecessary to enter into an
extended examination or discussion of the enrollment question in this report.
With respect to section 3 of the bill, which deals with the sale of the
remaining unallotted lands of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations. I am of opinion
that these provisions, although meriting careful consideration, are not
absolutely necessary, inasmuch as the subject is covered by existing law, in
accordance with which the work of disposing of those lands is rapidly
progressing.
Section 4 of the bill provides that the Secretary of the Interior, under rules
and regulations to be prescribed by him, is authorized to make a per capita
distribution once each fiscal year among the legally enrolled members of the
Choctaw and Chickasaw Tribes of Indians, freedmen excepted, of any funds
belonging to said tribes held in trust by the United States Government or any
department or bureau thereof, including such funds as may hereafter be credited
to said tribes. The department favors this provision, deeming authority of this
kind not only for the benefit of the Indians personally, but also essential as a
means of settling the tribal estates. Respectfully,
Samuel Adams, First Assistant Secretary.
Approved, July 18, 1912.
Walter L. Fisher,
Secretary.
Department Of The Interior.
Washington, July IS, 1912.
My Dear Sir: I am transmitting herewith, with my approval, a report on H. H.
22334, entitled "A bill providing for the final disposition of the affairs of
the Five Civilized Tribes, and for other purposes," signed by First Assistant
Secretary Adams. This report was prepared and signed by Mr. Adams because of the
fact that the matter had been originally taken up with him by you at the
informal request of yourself and other members of the Committee on Indian
Affairs, expressed at a personal conference at the department. In compliance
with this request Mr. Adams prepared and transmitted to you the extended letter
of April 22, 1912, and the subsequent letter of July 2, 1912, to which reference
is made in the accompanying report.
Yours, very truly,
Walter L. Fisher, Secretary.
Hon. John H. Stephens,
Chairman Committee on Indian Affairs,
House of Representatives
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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