Choctaw
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Chief/General Pushmataha, 1824, Smithsonian American Art Museum Chief Peter Pitchlynn, 1834, Smithsonian American Art Museum | |
Total population | |
---|---|
160,000 [1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
United States (Oklahoma, California, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama) | |
Languages | |
English, Choctaw | |
Religion | |
Protestantism, traditional beliefs | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Five Civilized Tribes other Native American groups |
The Choctaws, or Chahtas, Tchaktas, Chocktaw, are a Native American people originally from the Southeastern United States (Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana) of the Muskogean linguistic group. The Choctaws are the third largest tribe in North America, following Navajo and Cherokee. In the 19th century, Choctaws were known as one of the "Five Civilized Tribes" because they had integrated numerous cultural and technological practices of their European American neighbors. In 1831 when the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek was ratified, Choctaws would become the first major non-european ethnic group to become U.S. citizens. They are also remembered for their generosity in providing humanitarian relief during the Great Irish Famine (1845-1849), twenty years in advance of the Red Cross' founding. The Choctaw are of two major distinct groups, the tribe (in Mississippi) and the nation (in Oklahoma).
New World Antiquity
Nearly 12,000 years ago Native Americans or Paleo-indians appeared in the what today is referred to as the South. [2] Paleoindians in the Southeast were fairly generalized hunter-gatherers who pursued a wide range of animals including the megafauna that soon became extinct following the end of the Pleistocene age. [2] Horatio Cushman indicates that the Choctaw witnessed the extinction of mammoths in the Tombigbee River area which suggests that they have been in the Mississippi area for at least 4000-8000 years. Cushman writes "these mighty animals broke off the low limbs of the trees in eating the leaves, and also gnawed the bark off the trees, which, in the course of time, caused them to wither and die; that they roamed in different bands, which engaged in deperatae battles whenever and wherever they met, and thus caused them to rapidly decrease in numbers." [3] It is commonly assumed that Paleoindians were specialized, highly mobile foragers that hunted late Pleistocene fauna such as bison, mastodons, caribou, and mammoths although direct evidence is meager in the Southeast. [2]
Mythical Origins
Antoine du Pratz, in his Histoire de La Louisiane (Paris, 1758) recounted that [archaic spelling] "...when I asked them from whence the Chat-kas came, to express the suddenness of their appearance they replied that they had come out from under the earth." Despite an authorial assumption that this story was intended to "express the suddenness of their appearance" and not a literal creation story, this is perhaps the first European writing to contain the seed of the story. Bernard Romans' 1771 account (Natural History of East and West Florida, New York, 1775) reiterated the story:
- "These people are the only nation from whom I could learn any idea of a traditional account of a first origin; and that is their coming out of a hole in the ground, which they shew between their nation and the Chickasaws; they tell us also that their neighbours were surprised at seeing a people rise at once out of the earth."
As told by both early 19th century as well as contemporary Mississippi Choctaw storytellers, it was either Nanih Waiya or a cave nearby from which the Choctaw people emerged. Another story (Catlin's Smithsonian Report, 1885) linking the Choctaw people to Nanih Waiya explains that the Choctaw were originally inhabitants of a place far to the west:
- "The Choctaws, a great many winters ago, commenced moving from the country where they then lived, which was a great distance to the west of the great river and the mountains of snow, and they were a great many years on their way. A great medicine man led them the whole way, by going before with a red pole, which he stuck in the ground every night where they encamped. This pole was every morning found leaning to the east, and he told them that they must continue to travel to the east until the pole would stand upright in their encampment, and that there the Great Spirit had directed that they should live."
According to the story, it was at Nanih Waiya that the pole finally stood straight. (Nanih Waiya means "leaning hill" in Choctaw.) Nanih Waiya is in Winston County, Mississippi about ten miles (16 km) southeast of Noxapater. Previously a State Park, it has now been returned to the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. Patricia Galloway argues from fragmentary archaeological and cartographic evidence that the Choctaw did not exist as a unified people before the 17th century, and only at that time did various southeastern peoples (remnants of Moundville, Plaquemine, and other Mississippian cultures) coalesce to form a self-consciously Choctaw people. [4] Regardless of the time frame, however, the homeland of the Choctaw or of the peoples from whom the Choctaw nation arose includes Nanih Waiya. The mound and the surrounding area are sacred ground to Choctaws, and are a central point of connection between the Choctaws and their homeland.
Post Columbian Era (1492)
The people, who were to become the Choctaw, were part of the Mississippian culture in the Mississippi river valley. At the time that the Spanish made their first forays inland from the gulf shores, the political centers of the Mississippians were already in decline or gone. The region is best described as a collection of moderately-sized native chiefdoms (such as the Coosa chiefdom on the Coosa River) interspersed with completely autonomous villages and tribal groups. This is what the earliest Spanish explorers encountered, beginning in 1519.
Pánfilo de Narváez (1528)
In 1528, Pánfilo de Narváez travelled through what was likely the Mobile Bay area, encountering southeastern American Indians like the Apalachee. A devastating storm, possibly a hurricane, destroyed their vessels leaving them to journey on foot on along the coastline. Only four men survived the expedition: Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, Alonso del Castillo Maldonado, Andrés Dorantes de Carranza and Estevanico. Cabeza de Vaca, whose La Relación chronicle the nine year journey from Florida to California, was a fortune-seeking Spanish nobleman and served as the expedition's treasuer. [5] The Narváez expedition created a sensation paving the way for the journeys of Marcos de Niza, Hernando de Soto, and Francisco Vázquez de Coronado. When Niza returned to New Spain, they told the stories of cities with great riches, like Cíbola. [6]
Hernando de Soto (1540)
During Hernando de Soto’s extensive journeys in 1540 to 1543, he travelled up through present-day Florida and Georgia, and then down into the Alabama-Mississippi area that later was inhabited by the Choctaw. Reading between the lines of his accounts of Native interactions provides a region full of tribes of various sizes and with various degrees of control over neighboring areas.
De Soto had the most well-equipped army at the time. His successes were well-known throughout Spain, and many people from all backgrounds joined his quest for untold riches to be plundered in the New World. However, the brutalities of the De Soto expedition were known by the Choctaw, so they decided to aggressively defend their country. Ferguson states,
- "Hernando De Soto, leading his well-equipped Spanish fortune hunters, made contact with the Choctaws in the year 1540. He had been one of a triumvirate which wrecked and plundered the Inca empire and, as a result, was one of the wealthiest men of his time. His invading army lacked nothing in equipage. In true conquistador style, he took as hostage a chief named Tuscaloosa (Black Warrior), demanding of him carriers and women. The carriers he got at once. The women, Tuscaloosa said, would be waiting in Mabila (Mobile). The chief neglected to mention that he had also summoned his warriors to be waiting in Mabila. On October 18, 1540, De Soto entered the town and received a gracious welcome. The Choctaws feasted with him, danced for him, then attacked him." [7]
The Battle of Maubila was a turning point for the De Soto venture; the battle "broke the back" of the campaign, and they never fully recovered.
The impact of European diseases is unclear. Reports of De Soto’s journeys do not describe illness among his men, although pigs traveling with them often escaped and may have been excellent vectors for dangerous microbes. The two subsequent brief forays into the Southeast by Tristán de Luna y Arellano in 1559 and Juan Pardo in 1565-1567 do not provide any evidence for widespread epidemics. After Pardo, the historical picture ends. There would be no official European contact in the area at all for more than a century, and during that time the group identities of the region completely transformed.
Le Moyne d'Iberville (1699)
The first direct contact recorded between the Choctaw and a European was with Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville in 1699; however, indirect contact no doubt occurred between the Choctaw and British settlers through other tribes, including the Creek and Chickasaw. Illegal fur trading may have led to further unofficial contact. Unfortunately, the archaeological record for this period between 1567 and 1699 is not complete or well-studied, but there are similarities in pottery coloring and burials that suggest the following scenario for the emergence of the distinctive Choctaw culture: the Choctaw region (generally located between the Natchez bluffs to the south and the Yazoo basin to the north) was slowly occupied by Burial Urn people from the Bottle Creek area in the Mobile delta, along with remnants of the Moundville chiefdom that had collapsed some years before. Facing severe depopulation, they fled westward, where they combined with the Plaquemine and a group of “prairie people” living near the area. When precisely this occurred is not entirely clear, but in the space of several generations, a new culture had been born (albeit with a strong Mississippian background).
United States Relations (1776)
George Washington and Henry Knox proposed the cultural transformation of Native Americans. [8] Washington believed that Indians were equals, but believed their society was inferior. Washington formulated a policy to encourage the "civilizing" process, and Jefferson continued it. [9] They presumed that once the Indians adoped the practice of private property, built homes, farmed, educated their children, and embraced Christianity these Native Americans would win acceptance from white Americans. [9] Washington's six-point plan included: impartial justice toward Indians, regulated buying of Indian lands, promotion of commerce, promotion of experiments to 'civilize' or improve Indian society, presidential authority to give “presents”, and providing punishments to those who violated Indian rights. [citation needed] The government appointed agents, like Benjamin Hawkins, to live among the Indians and to teach them, through example and instruction, how to live like whites. [8] The Choctaws bided with Washington's policy as they established schools, adopted yeoman farming practices, converted to Christianity, and built homes like their colonial neighbors.
During the American Revolutionary War, Choctaws, divided over whether to support Britain or Spain (who declared war on Britain in 1779), decided to support the newly formed United States of America. Serveral Choctaw companies joined Washington's army during our Revolutionary war, and served during the entire war ... [3] Ferguson states, "[in] 1775 The American Revolution began a period of new alignments for the Choctaws and other southern Indians. Choctaw scouts served under Washington, Morgan, Wayne and Sullivan." [7] After the Revolutionary War, the Choctaws were reluctant to ally themselves with countries hostile to the U.S. John R. Swanton writes,
- "the Choctaw were never at war with the Americans. A few were induced by Tecumseh to ally themselves with the hostile Creeks, but the Nation as a whole was kept out of anti-American alliances by the influnces of Apushmataha, greatest of all Choctaw chiefs." [10]
Ferguson also writes that in "1783 [was the] End of American Revolution. Franchimastabe, Choctaw head chief, went to Savannah, Georgia to secure American trade." Some Choctaw scouts served with U.S. General Anthony Wayne in the Northwest Indian War.
Although there were many treaties with other European nations, only nine treaties were signed between the Choctaws and the United States between the years of 1786 and 1830. Ferguson writes, "nine treaties were signed during a forty-four-year period, from 1786 to 1830. I shall stress the amounts of Choctaw land involved in these treaties, even though they included agreements relating to other matters, because land was the Indians' most valuable resource." The nine treaties are Treaty of Hopewell (1786), Treaty of Fort Adams (1801), Treaty of Fort Confederation (1802), Treaty of Hoe Buckintoopa (1803), Treaty of Mount Dexter (1805), Treaty of Fort St. Stephens (1816), Treaty of Doak's Stand (1820), Treaty of Washington City (1825), and Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek (1830). [11]
Hopewell (1786)
On January 3, 1786, the Treaty of Hopewell was signed near the Keowee, near Seneca Old Town, now known as Hopewell South Carolina. U.S. representatives Benjamin Hawkins, Andrew Pickens, and Joseph Martin were present to meet the Choctaw Nation. The Treaty establish U.S. Choctaw relations as described in Article 11:
"The hatchet shall be forever buried, and the peace given by the United States of America, and friendship re-established between the said states on the one part, and all the Choctaw nation on the other part, shall be universal; and the contracting parties shall use their utmost endeavors to maintain the peace given as aforesaid, and friend ship re-established."[12]
This treaty was the first attempt by the U.S. to establish hegemony over the Choctaw and it required the return of escaped slaves, turning over of any Choctaws whom had been convicted of crimes by the U.S., establish borderlines between the U.S. and Choctaw Nation, and the return any property which had been captured during the Revolutionary War. [13]
War of 1812
Early in 1811, Tecumseh came to garner support for his British-backed attempt to recover lands from the United States settlers. As chief for the Six Towns district, Pushmataha strongly resisted such a plan, pointing out that the Choctaw and their neighbors the Chickasaw had always lived in peace with Americans, had learned valuable skills and technologies, and had received honest treatment and fair trade. [14] The joint Choctaw-Chickasaw council then voted against alliance with Tecumseh. On Tecumseh's departure, Pushmataha accused him of tyranny over his own Shawnee tribe and other tribes, and warned him that he would fight against those who fought the United States. [15]
With the outbreak of war, Pushmataha led the Choctaws in alliance with America, arguing in favor of opposing the Creek alliance with Britain after the massacre at Fort Mims[16]. He arrived at St. Stephens, Alabama in mid-1813 with an offer of alliance and recruitment. He was escorted to Mobile to speak with General Flournoy, then commanding the district. Flournoy initially declined Pushmataha's offer, offending the chief. However, Flournoy's staff quickly convinced him to reverse his decision, and a courier with a message accepting the offer of alliance caught up with Pushmataha at St. Stephens.[17]
Returning to Choctaw territory, Pushmataha raised a company of 500 Choctaw warriors with a rousing speech, and was commissioned (as either a Lieutenant Colonel or a Brigadier General) in the United States Army at St. Stephens. After observing that the officers and their wives would promenade along the Alabama River, Pushmataha summoned his own wife to St. Stephens and also took part in this custom, helping to elevate women's status in his tribe.
Under General Claiborne, whom they joined in mid-November, Pushmataha and 150 Choctaw warriors took part in an attack on Creek forces at Kantachi, or Econochaca, Alabama, on 23 December 1813. [18] [17] With this victory, Choctaws began to volunteer in greater numbers from the other two districts of the tribe. By February 1814, a larger band of Choctaws under Pushmataha had joined General Andrew Jackson's force for the sweeping of the Creek territories near Pensacola. Many of these departed after the final defeat of the Creek at Horseshoe Bend. By the Battle of New Orleans, only a few Choctaws remained with the army; however, they were the only Native American tribe represented in the battle. Some sources say Pushmataha was among them, while others disagree.
Doak's Stand (1820)
In October of 1820, Andrew Jackson and Thomas Hinds were sent as commissioners that represented the United States to conduct a treaty that would surrender a portion of Choctaw country in Mississippi. They met with tribal representatives at Doak's Stand on the Natchez Trace. They met with chiefs, mingos, and headsmen like Colonel Silas Dinsmore and Chief Pushmataha. The convention began on October 10 with a talk by Sharp Knife, the nickname of Jackson, to more than 500 Choctaws. Pushmataha accused Jackson of deceiving them of the quality of land west of the Mississippi. Pushmataha responded to Jackson's retort with "I know the country well ... The grass is everywhere very short ... There are but few beavers, and the honey and fruit are rare things." Jackson finally resorted to threats to pressure the Choctaw to sign a treaty. He shouted "Many of your nation are already beyond the Mississippi, and others are every year removing .... If you refuse ... the nation will be destroyed." On October 18th the Treaty of Doak's Stand was signed. [19]
Delegation to Washington City (1824)
Apuckshunubbee, Pushmataha, and Mosholatubbee, who were the principle leaders of the Choctaws, went to Washington City, which Washington, D.C. was called in the 1800s, to discuss encroaching settlement and sought for the expulsion of settlers or seek financial compensation. [3] The group also consisted of Talking Warrior, Red Fort, Nittahkachee, Col. Robert Cole and David Folsom, both half breed Indians, Captain Daniel McCurtain, and Major John Pitchlynn, the U.S. Interpreter. [20]
The proposed route to Washington was to travel the Natchez trace to Nashville, then to Lexington, Kentucky, onward to Maysville, Kentucky, across the Ohio River (called the Spaylaywitheepi by the Shawnee) northward to Chillicothe, Ohio, (former principal town of the Shawnee), then finally east over the “National Highway” to Washington City. [20]
Pushmataha met with President James Monroe, and gave a speech to Secretary of War John C. Calhoun reminding him of the now-longstanding alliances between the United States and the Choctaws. He said, "[I] can say and tell the truth that no Choctaw ever drew his bow against the United States ... My nation has given of their country until it is very small. We are in trouble" (Hewitt 1995:51-52).
While here was in the capitol Pushmataha sat for a portrait by Charles Bird King in his Army uniform; it hung in the Smithsonian Institution until 1865.
Pushmataha also met with the Marquis de Lafayette, who was also visiting Washington, D.C. for the last time. He said, "Nearly fifty snows have melted since you drew your sword with Washington and fought the enemies of the United States ... Our hearts have longed to see you" (Hewitt 1995:52).
Apuckshunubbee died in Maysville, Kentucky; and Pushmataha died in Washington. Apuckshunubbee was reported to have died from a broken neck caused by a fall from a hotel balcony (Cushman 1899:274). Other historians say he fell from a cliff. White writes,
"according to the report in the Maysville Eagle, Apuckshunnubbe, the great Medal Chief, after supping at Captain Langhorne’s on Wednesday last, in the evening attempted to go to the river, missed his way, and was precipitated over the abutment of the road and received so severe contusions to his head and other injuries, as to render his recovery hopeless. He lingered until Friday night, in a perfectly senseless condition, when his soul winged to the presence of the Great Spirit." [20]
Pushmataha died of the croup even though the croup usually is a respiratory disease which afflicts infants and young children. The deaths of these two leaders effectively crippled the Choctaw Nation. Within six years the Choctaw were forced to cede their last remaining country in Mississippi to the United States.
Dancing Rabbit Creek (1830)
On August 25, 1830 the Choctaws were suppose to meet with Andrew Jackson in Franklin, Tennessee; but Greenwood Leflore informed John Eaton that this warriors were fiercely opposed to attending. [21] President Jackson was angered. Jackson appointed Secretary of War John H. Eaton and General John Coffee as commissioners to represent him to meet the Choctaws where the rabbits gather to dance.
The commissioners met with the chiefs and headmen on September 15, 1830 at Dancing Rabbit Creek. [21] In carnival like atmosphere, the policy of removal was explained to a massive audience of 6000 men, women and children. [21] The Choctaws would now face migration or submit to U.S. law as citizens. [21] The treaty would sign away the remaining traditional homeland to the United States. A provision in the treaty made removal more palatable. Choctaws who eventually choose to remain in their ancient home country signed up for a collective 500 square miles. Article 14 of that treaty stated:
- "ART. XIV. Each Choctaw head of a family being desirous to remain and become a 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 six hundred and forty 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 ten years of age; and a quarter section to such child as may be under 10 years of age, to adjoin the location 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." [11]
On September 27, 1830 the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek was signed. It was one of the largest ever signed between the U.S. Government and American Indians without being instigated by warfare. The treaty was the first to be ratified by the U.S. Senate on February 25, 1831 to implement removal policy. [21] More importantly, the treaty signed away the remaining traditional homelands and open it up for official settlement. Article 14 of that treaty allowed for Choctaws to remain in the state of Mississippi and to become the first major non-European ethnic group to become U.S. citizens. [22]
The Choctaw at this crucial time became two distinct groups-- the Nation in Oklahoma and the Tribe in Mississippi. The nation retained its autonomy to regulate itself, but the tribe left in Mississippi had to submit to state and U.S. laws.
Removal Era (1831)
After ceding nearly 11 million acres the Choctaw were to emigrate in three stages; the first in the fall of 1831, the second in 1832 and the last in 1833. [23] The Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek was ratified by the U.S. Senate on February 25, 1831, and the President was anxious to make it a model of removal. Cite error: A <ref>
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Choctaws, who were "forcibly removed" to the Indian territory, were organized as the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. Those who signed under article 14 of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek would later form the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians in 1945. Approximately 5000 Choctaws remained in Mississippi in 1831 after the initial removal efforts. [24] For the next ten years they were objects of increasing legal conflict. The Choctaws describe their situation in 1849, "we have had our habitations torn down and burned, our fences destroyed, cattle turned into our fields and we ourselves have been scourged, manacled, fettered and otherwise personally abused, until by such treatment some of our best men have died." [24] The removals continued well into the early 20th century. In 1903, three-hundred Mississippi Choctaws were persuaded to remove to the Nation in Oklahoma. [7] The removals became infamously known as the "Trail of Tears."
Great Irish Famine Aid (1847)
Midway through the Great Irish Famine (1845–1849), a group of Choctaws collected $710 and sent it to help starving Irish men, women and children. [25] See Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma.
American Civil War (1861-1865)
Peter Pitchlynn was in Washington City in 1861 when the war started and immediately left hoping to escape the evils of the expected strife. He was there to address national affairs of the Choctaws but immediately returned home. But the Choctaws ... were not permitted to occupy neutral grounds, but were forced into the fratricidal strife, some on the one side and some the other, but to the inconceivable injury of all. [3]
Soon confederate battalions where formed in Oklahoma and later in Mississippi in support of the southern cause. The Choctaws who were expecting support from the confederates got little. Garrison describes their response, when Confederate Brig. Gen. Albert Pike authorized the raising of regiments during the fall of 1860, Creeks, Choctaws, and Cherokees responded with considerable enthusiasm. Their zeal for the Confederate cause, however, began to evaporate when they found that neither arms nor pay had been arranged for them. A disgusted officer later acknowledged that "with the exception of a partial supply for the Choctaw regiment, no tents, clothing, or camp and garrison equippage was furnised to any of them." [26]
In Oklahoma, Jackson McCurtain, who would later become a district chief, was elected as representative from Sugar Loaf County to the National Council in October 1859. On June 22, 1861 he enlisted in the First Regiment of Choctaw and Chickasaw Mounted Rifles. He was commissioned Captain of Company G under the command of Colonel Douglas H. Cooper of the Confederate Army. In 1862 he became a Lieutenant Colonel of the First Choctaw Battalion. [27]
General Arnold Spann organized the first battalion of Choctaws in Mississippi in February 1863. [28] Their most significant event was not conducted on a battlefield but as a rescue mission. After a disastrous train wreck, referred to as the Chunky Creek Train Wreck of 1863, near Hickory, Mississippi the Choctaw Battalion, who was just organized days earlier, led rescue and recovery efforts. Spann describe the horrific scene, "the engineer was under military orders, and his long train of cars was filled with Confederate soldiers, who, like the engineer, were animated with but one impulse-to Vicksburg! to victory or death! Onward rushed the engineer. All passed over except the hindmost car. The bridge had swerved out of plumb, and into the raging waters with nearly one hundred soldiers the rear car was precipitated. "Help!" was the cry, but there was no help." [29] Boggan writes of the rescue, "help came quicker than expected. The First Battalion of Choctaw Indians, under the command of Major S. G. Spann, was based at a Confederate military training camp near the crash scene. Led by Jack Amos and Elder Williams, the Indians rushed to the scene, stripped, and plunged into the flooded creek. Many of the passengers were rescued due to their heroic acts." [30] Kidwell writes, "in an act of heroism in Mississippi, Choctaws rescued twenty three survivors and retrieved ninety bodies when a Confederate troop train plunged off a bridge and fell into the Chunky River." [28]
Maj. S. G. Spann, Commander of Dabney H. Maury Camp of Meridian, Mississippi., wrote about the deeds of the Choctaw years after the Civil War had ended,
- "many earnest friends and comrades insist that the Choctaw Indian as a Confederate soldier should receive his proper place on the scroll of events during the American Civil War. This task having been so nearly ignored, I send some reminiscences that will be an exponent of the extraordinary merit of the Choctaw Indian on the American Continent. My connection with the Choctaw Indians was brought about incidentally: Maj. J.W. Pearce, of Hazelhurst, Miss., organized a battalion of Choctaw Indians, of Kemper, DeKalb, Neshoba, Jasper, Scott, and Newton Counties, Miss., known as "First Battalion of Choctaw Indians, Confederate army." [29]
Mississippi Choctaws were captured in Ponchatoula, Louisiana and serveral died in a Union prison in New York. [28] Spann describes the incident, "[Maj. J.W. Pearce] established two camps--a recruiting camp in Newton County and a drill camp at Tangipahoa--just beyond the State boundary line in Louisiana in the fall of 1862. New Orleans at that time was in the hands of the Federal Gen. B.F. Butler. Without notice a reconnoitering party of the enemy raided the camp, and captured over two dozen Indians and several noncommissioned white officers and carried them to New Orleans. All the officers and several of the Indians escaped and returned to the Newton County camp; but all the balance of the captured Indians were carried to New York, and were daily paraded in the public parks as curiosities for the sport of sight-seers." [29]
Choctaw Freedmen (1866)
Prior to removal the Choctaws had been exposed to Africans in their native homeland of Mississippi. [31] Estevanico, part of the Pánfilo de Narváez expedition, became the first documented person born in Africa known to have set foot in what is now the southern United States. Slavery was apart of European culture which the Choctaws adapted. [31] Moshulatubbee had slaves as did many of the Europeans who married into the Choctaw nation, with the Folsoms and LeFlores among the larger slave owners. [31] Slavery remained in the Choctaw Nation until 1866. Former slaves of the Choctaw Nation would be called the Choctaw Freedmen. The only family of distinct free status in the Choctaw Nation at the time of removal was the Beams family. [31]
Territory Transition to Statehood (1900)
By the early twentieth century, the Choctaw had lost much of their sovereignty and tribal rights in preparation for the Indian Territory becoming the state of Oklahoma in 1907. See Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma.
Code Talkers (1917)
In the closing days of World War I, A group of Choctaws serving in the U.S. Army used their native language as a secret code. [32] [33] The Choctaws were the forerunners to Native Americans from various nations, most notably the Navajo, who were used as telephone[32] and radio operators, or code talkers, during World War II. Captian Lawrence, who was a company commander, overheard Solomon Louis and Mitchell Bobb conversing in the Choctaw language. He asked them if they were more Choctaws and found out there were eight men in the battalion. [34]
Eventually fourteen Choctaw Indian men in the Army's Thirty-Sixth Division, trained to use their language, helped the American Expeditionary Force win several key battles in the Meuse-Argonne Campaign in France, the final big German push of the war. Within 24 hours after the Choctaw language was pressed into service, the tide of the battle had turned, and in less than 72 hours the Germans were retreating and the Allies were on full attack. [34]
The Code Talker Recognition Act (HR 4597 and S 1035) will recognize these veterans, and those of all tribes, who were often until recently ignored for their service performed for the United States. [35] The fourteen Choctaw Code Talkers were Albert Billy, Mitchell Bobb, Victor Brown, Ben Caterby, James Edwards, Tobias Frazer, Ben Hampton, Solomon Louis, Pete Maytubby, Jeff Nelson, Joseph Oklahombi, Robert Taylor, Calvin Wilson, and Walter Veach. [34]
World War II (1941)
World War II was a significant turning point for Choctaws and Native Americans in general. Mississippi Choctaws were not U.S. citizens and didn't have other amenities citizens have. A Mississippi Choctaw veteran stated, "indians were not supposed to go in the military back then ... the military was mainly for whites. My category was white instead of Indian. I don't know why they did that. Even though Indians weren't citizens of this country, couldn't register to vote, didn't have a draft card or anything, they took us anyway." [36]
Van Barfoot, a Choctaw from Mississippi, who was a Second Lieutenant and Sgt. in the U.S. Army, 157th Infantry, 45th Infantry Division received the Medal of Honor. See Van T. Barfoot.
Post War Era (1945)
In 1945 Mississippi land in Neshoba county and surrounding counties was set aside as a federal indian reservation. There are eight communities of reservation land: Bogue Chitto, Bogue Homa, Conehatta, Crystal Ridge, Pearl River, Red Water, Tucker, and Standing Pine. The Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 allowed the Choctaws to become official on April 20, 1945. See Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians.
Termination (1953)
Indian termination policy was a policy that the United States Congress legislated in 1953 so as to assimilate the Native American communities with mainstream America. In 1959, the Choctaw Termination Act was passed. [citation needed] Unless repealed by the federal government, the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma would effectively be terminated as a sovereign nation as of August 25, 1970. [citation needed]
Civil Rights Era (1964)
The Choctaws witnessed the social forces that brought Freedom Summer to their ancient homeland. The Civil Rights Era produced significant social change for the Choctaws in Mississippi. The Choctaws, who for 150 years had been neither white nor black, were left where they had always been. [37] See Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians.
Self-determination (1975)
The Seventies were a crucial and defining decade for the Choctaw. To a large degree, the Choctaw repudiated the Indian activism associated with the Seventies, and sought a local, grassroots solution to reclaim their cultural identity and sovereignty as a nation. 1975 also marked the year that the United States Congress passed the landmark Indian Self-determination and Education Act. This law revolutionized the relationship between Indian Nations and the federal government. See Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians.
Gaming Era (1987)
In 1987 the U.S. Supreme Court recognized that federally recognized Native American tribes could operate gaming facilities free from state regulation. U.S. Congress soon enacted the 1988 Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA), which sets the terms for how Native American tribes are permitted to operate Vegas style casinos. In 1992 Governor Kirk Fordice finally gave permission, after a long wait under the Ray Mabus administration, for the Mississippi Band of Choctaw to develop a Class III gaming casino and resort.
Casinos and Resorts(1994)
The Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians (MBCI) has one of the largest casinos located near Philadelphia, Mississippi. The Silver Star Casino opened its doors in 1994. The Golden Moon Casino opened in 2002. The casinos are collectivelly known as the Pearl River Resort. The Choctaw Nation in Oklahoma also operates the Choctaw Casino and Resort, a popular gaming destination in Durant (near the Oklahoma-Texas border) for residents of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.
Abramoff-Reed scandal (2001)
Jack Abramoff and Michael Scanlon inflated and divided profits from $15 million in payment from the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. See Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians and Jack Abramoff Indian lobbying scandal.
Return of Nanih Waiya (2006)
After nearly two hundred years, Nanih Waiya was returned. Nanih Waiya was a state park of Mississippi until the Mississippi Legislature State Bill 2803 officially returned control to Choctaws in 2006.
Reservations
Reservations can be found in Alabama-(MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians), Louisiana-(Jena Band of Choctaw Indians; United Houma Nation; Choctaw-Apache of Ebarb; Bayou Lacombe Choctaw; Clifton Choctaw), Mississippi-(Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians), and Oklahoma-(Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma). Other population centers include California and Chicago.
Culture
Choctaw culture has greatly evolved over the centuries combining mostly European-American influences; however, interaction with Spain, France, and England greatly shaped it as well. They were known for their rapid incorporation of modernity, developing a written language, transitioning to yeoman farming methods, and accepting European-American and African-Americans into their society. See Choctaw Culture.
Influential Choctaw leaders
- Tuscaloosa ("Dark Warrior") retaliated against Hernando de Soto at the Battle of Mabilia.
- Apuckshunubbee Chief of his district in Mississippi. One of the three great Choctaw Leaders for which the districts in Indian Territory were named. He died in Kentucky on his way to Washington D.C. to negotiate for the tribe in 1824. One of the three arrows on the Choctaw Nation seal represents his deeds.
- Pushmataha (Apushmataha) was a Choctaw Chief in Mississippi from 1764 to 1824. He negotiated treaties with the United States and fought on the American's side in the War of 1812. He died in Washington D.C. in 1824 and is buried in the Congressional Cemetery in Washington D.C. Represented by one of the 3 arrows on the Choctaw Nation seal. A district in Indian Territory was named for him.
- Mosholatubbee or ("He Who Puts Out and Kills") was also a Chief in Mississippi before the removal era. He went to Washington D.C. to negotiate for the tribe in 1824 and was the only leader to return. Represented by one of the arrows on the Choctaw Nation seal. A district in Indian Territory was named for him.
- Greenwood LeFlore A District Chief of the Choctaws in Mississippi. LeFlore County in Oklahoma is named for him.
- Thomas LeFlore (b.1792) Apuckshunubbee District Chief in I.T.,(1834-1838,1842-1850) he lived in the District Chief's House at Swink,OK for 16 years. He died(1859) and is buried at Wheelock where he built his second home. The House at Swink,OK is the oldest house still on its original site in the State of OK and is open to the public 10-4pm.
- George W. Harkins was a District Choctaw Chief I.T.(1850-1857) prior to the Civil War, and author of the "Farewell Letter to the American People".
- Peter Pitchlynn Hat-choo-tuck-nee or ("The Snapping Turtle") This Principal Chief was a highly influential leader during the removal era and long after. He represented the tribe in Washington D.C. for some years and is buried in the Congressional Cemetery there. His Mother Sophia Folsom Pitchlynn has the oldest known date on a tombstone in the state. A cousin Frances Folsom(1864-1947) married President Grover Cleveland in the White House.
- Phillip Martin, Chief of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians from 1979-2007. Encouraged outside investment and reduced unemployment to nearly 0% on the reservation.
See also
- Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma
- Choctaw Culture
- Contemporary groups: Cherokee, Chickasaw, Creek.
- Jessica Biel
- Choctaw Nation Mississippi River Clan
- Brett Favre (partial lineage)
- African Americans with Native Heritage
- Native American tribe
- Native American
- MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians
Citations
- ^ "American Indian, Alaska Native Tables from the Statistical Abstract of the United States" (PDF). Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2004-2005 (124th ed.). US Census Bureau. Retrieved 2007-09-20.
- ^ a b c
Prentice, Guy (2003). "Pushmataha, Choctaw Indian Chief" (HTML). Southeast Chronicles. Retrieved Feb 11, 2008.
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Cushman, Horatio. History of the Choctaw, Chickasaw and Natchez Indians. University of Oklahoma Press.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Galloway, Choctaw Genesis 1500-1700.
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de Vaca, Cabeza. Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca: Chronicle of the Narváez Expedition. Penguin Classics.
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Duncan, David. "Cuba Bled Dry". Hernando de Soto: A Savage Quest in the Americas. Crown Publishers, Inc.
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Ferguson, Bob (1997). "Chronology" (HTML). Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. Retrieved Feb 5, 2008.
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Perdue, Theda. "Chapter 2 "Both White and Red"". Mixed Blood Indians: Racial Construction in the Early South. The University of Georgia Press.
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Remini, Robert. ""Brothers, Listen ... You Must Submit"". Andrew Jackson. History Book Club.
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Swanton, John. Source Material for the Social and Ceremonial Life of the Choctaw Indians. The University of Alabama Press.
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Ferguson, Bob (2001). "Treaties" (HTML). Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. Retrieved Feb 6, 2008.
{{cite web}}
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and|last=
specified (help) - ^ Indian Affairs: Laws and Treaties (Text of the 1786 Choctaw Treaty).
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"Removal" (HTML). Toli at UGA: the Flying Rats. Retrieved Feb 19, 2008.
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Jones, Charile (Nov 1987). "Sharing Choctaw History" (HTML). Univeristy of Minnesota. Retrieved Feb 5, 2008.
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Junaluska, Arthur (1976). "Chief Pushmataha - Response to Tecumseh" (mp3). Great American Indian Speeches, Vol. 1 (Phonographic Disc). Caedmon. Retrieved 2006-11-29.
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Lincecum, Gideon. Life of Apushimataha. Mississippi Historical Society Publications 9: 415-485.
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Lossing, Benson J. "XXXIV: War Against the Creek Indians.". Pictorial Field-Book of the War of 1812. New York: Harper & Brothers. Retrieved 2006-11-30.
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Access Genealogy Indian Tribal Records. "Pushmataha, Choctaw Indian Chief" (HTML). Access Genealogy. Retrieved Feb 5, 2008.
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Remini, Robert. "Expansion and Removal". Andrew Jackson. History Book Club.
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White, Earl. "Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma" (HTML). Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. Retrieved Feb 5, 2008.
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Remini, Robert. ""Brothers, Listen ... You Must Submit"". Andrew Jackson. History Book Club.
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Kappler, Charles (1904). "INDIAN AFFAIRS: LAWS AND TREATIES Vol. II, Treaties" (HTML). Government Printing Office. Retrieved Feb 19, 2008.
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Remini, Robert. ""Brothers, Listen ... You Must Submit"". Andrew Jackson. History Book Club.
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Walter, Williams. "Three Efforts at Development among the Choctaws of Mississippi". Southeastern Indians: Since the Removal Era. Athens, Georgia: Univeristy of Georgia Press.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Ward, Mike (1992). "Irish Repay Choctaw Famine Gift: March Traces Trail of Tears in Trek for Somalian Relief". American-Stateman Capitol. Retrieved 2007-09-20.
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Garrison, Webb. "Padday Some Day". More Civil War Curiosities. Rutledge Hill Press.
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"Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma: 1880 - Jackson F. McCurtain" (HTML). 1880. Retrieved Feb 8, 2008.
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Kidwell, Clara. "The Choctaws in Mississippi after 1830". Choctaws and Missionaries in Mississippi. Univeristy of Oklahoma.
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Spann, S. G. (December 1905). "Choctaw Indians As Confederate Soldiers" (HTML). Retrieved Feb 6, 2008.
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Boggan, Greg (February 6, 2005). "The Chunky Creek Train Wreck of 1863" (HTML). Retrieved Feb 8, 2008.
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"The Choctaw Freedmen of Oklahoma" (HTML). Retrieved Feb 14, 2008.
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- ^ "Germans Confused by Choctaw Code Talkers" (article), BISHINIK, August 1986: 2.
- ^ a b c
"Choctaw Code Talkers of World War II" (HTML). Retrieved Feb 13, 2008.
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Williams, Rudi (2002). "Indians Fight America's Wars Because 'This is Our Country, Too,' Choctaw Says" (HTML). Department of Defense. Retrieved Feb 8, 2008.
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Campbell, Will. Providence. Atlanta, Georgia: Long Street Press.
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Bibliography
- Bartram, William. Travels Through...Country of the Chactaws..., Philadelphia: printed by James & Johnson, 1791.
- Bushnell, David I. Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 48: The Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb, St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1909.
- Byington, Cyrus. Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 46: A Dictionary of the Choctaw Language. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1915.
- Carson, James Taylor. Searching for the Bright Path: The Mississippi Choctaws from Prehistory to Removal. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1999.
- Clarke, Hewitt. Thunder At Meridian, Lone Star Press, Spring, Texas, 1995.
- Galloway, Patricia (1998). Choctaw Genesis 1500-1700 Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-7070-4.
- Haag, Marcia and Henry Willis. Choctaw Language & Culture: Chahta Anumpa. Norman, Okla: University of Oklahoma Press, 2001.
- Jimmie, Randy and Jimmie, Leonard. NANIH WAIYA Magazine, 1974, Vol I, Number 3.
- Lincecum, Gideon. Pushmataha: A Choctaw Leader and His People. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2004.
- Mould, Tom. Choctaw Tales. Jackson, Miss: University Press of Mississippi, 2004.
- O'Brien, Greg. Choctaws in a Revolutionary Age, 1750-1830. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2002.
- O'Brien, Greg. "Mushulatubbee and Choctaw Removal: Chiefs Confront a Changing World." http://mshistory.k12.ms.us/index.php?id=12 2001.
- O'Brien, Greg. "Pushmatha: Choctaw Warrior, Diplomat, and Chief." http://mshistory.k12.ms.us/index.php?id=14 2001.
- Pesantubbee, Michelene E. Choctaw Women in a Chaotic World: The Clash of Cultures in the Colonial Southeast. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico, 2005.
- Tingle, Tim. Walking the Choctaw Road. El Paso, Tex: Cinco Puntos Press, 2003.
- Mississippi Choctaw Reservation and Off-Reservation Trust Land, Mississippi United States Census Bureau
Video links
External links
- Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians (official site)
- Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma (official site)
- Jena Band of Choctaw Indians (official site)
- Mowa Choctaw
- "Choctaw" entry at Encyclopedia of North American Indians
- Pearl River Resort
- Choctaw Indian Fair
- Mushulatubbee and Choctaw Removal
- Choctaw Chief Pushmataha
- Mississippi Legislature returns Nanih Waiya
- Paintings by George Catlin
- Irish "Repay" Choctaw Famine Gift
- U.S. Congressional Gold Medal Nominee Chief Phillip Martin
- Code Talkers Instrumental to Ending WWI
- William Bartram, "Travels Through...Country of the Chactaws...", 1791, UNC webpage: UNC-WBartram.
- Phillip Martin appears to have lost re-election
- Martin loses re-election
- Nanih Waiya Article
- Choctaw Nation Health Services Authority
- Choctaw Freedmen