THE VANISHING RACE
Here is the article courtesy of Cousin Mary ([email protected])
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The following article was written by my (our) grandfather, Guy Augustus
Crossett. He was the editor and publisher of the Caddo Herald from about
1904 until his death in 1948. He wrote this article probably 60 or 70 years
ago or more. It contains a lot of Choctaw history, and it is quite large. I
would appreciate your thoughts on the article, but, remember, I just retyped
it. I am not responsible for the content.
Mary
Pt. 1
A Vanishing Race
By Guy A. Crossett, Caddo, Oklahoma
One of the largest and most intelligent tribes of original American
Indians in the United States today are the Choctaws, who inhabit the
southeastern portion of Oklahoma.
The Choctaws formerly occupied the central and northern portions of
Mississippi. At the time of the war of the American Independence they
numbered about twelve thousand. They early made friends with the white
settlers, and rarely gave serious trouble to their white neighbors. They
were loyal to the United States government.
Aided Jackson
In the war of 1812 the Choctaws furnished a large regiment of soldiers to
the American army, commanded by Andrew Jackson. Their outstanding leader was
a young man named Apushmataha. He was unlettered, but a brilliant leader of
men; strong and wise in council, eloquent and convincing in speech. He made
a journey to the neighboring tribes of Cherokees, Creeks and Chickasaws and
won them over to the cause of the Americans in this campaign. It was during
this campaign that he and Andrew Jackson became fast friends-a friendship
that continued as long as both men lived. He was with Jackson at the Battle
of New Orleans, and his men gave a good account of themselves, being expert
marksmen with their popular weapons, the rifle.
Removal
Apushmataha was appointed by his people to survey the proposed lands
offered in exchange for their ancestral domain. He made the trip on horse
back across Arkansas with a party of tribesmen. Such were his wonderful
gifts that he was able to survey, with his eye only, the new country, marking
the course and number of streams, the woods, the prairies, and look into the
potentialities of the territory as a habitation for his people. It was due
in the main to the report that he brought back that his tribesmen were
willing to move.
While he was in Washington much was made of this chieftain, lofty and
noble in bearing, eloquent in speech, brave in battle. One day President
Jackson asked him of his ancestry.
"Apushmataha has neither father not mother nor kinsman upon the earth."
"How, then, came you into being?"
In the guttural, musical language of his people, accompanied by majestic
gesture, he replied.
"I will tell you, my friend, though to no other man have I revealed this
secret. Once in the great Choctaw Nation there came a storm, in violence
such as no man ever before had seen or heard. The lightning played across
the sky like squirrels in the trees; thunder roared like cannon in battle;
rains descended like rivers swollen; the winds howled like wolves in the
forest. It seemed as if the force of the storm would destroy everything.
Mothers huddled their children to them in the huts to protect against the
ravages of the hurricane. Trees became as tall reeds before the force of the
winds. It was
bedlam. A lull came. Intense quiet was upon the earth for a moment.
Suddenly there came a flash of lightning more vivid that any other. It leapt
across the sky and struck with unerring aim a giant oak that reared its head
high above any other and split it in equal twain. From within this raven oak
there leapt a warrior, in stature perfect, in wisdom profound. It was
Apushmataha."
A cenotaph is erected in Arlington Cemetery to Apushmataha.
By the treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek the Choctaws were to remove to
their new hunting grounds, the Indian Territory. Similar treaties were made
with the Creeks, the Cherokees, the Seminoles and the Chickasaws. The treaty
began in the year 1823. Five years elapsed before all the tribes were
removed. They were given the new country in exchange for their lands in the
southeast.
The trip was made by land and river. Flatboats were used to transport
the women, children and baggage down the Mississippi, up the Red and
Arkansas rivers. Part of them landed at Slate Shoals near Paris, Texas, and
part of them landed at Fort Smith, Arkansas. From these places they spread
over the new nation. Many hardships were endured on the journey; numbers
died from exposure and want. The remnant composed about twelve thousand
people.
The treaties provided that the tribes were to hold and possess these new
lands "as long as the grass grows and water runs." They also provided a form
of self-government. The constitution was patterned after that of the United
States, and governments within their own borders. Except in matters
affecting the United States their laws were supreme. The tribes could not
make treaties with foreign governments, coin money or establish post offices.
Otherwise they were independent and free states within the Union, though
with no vote in Congress.
Primitive Life
At that early date their mode of living was extremely primitive. They
had led a nomadic and wild life in Mississippi. The Choctaw were accustomed
to exposure and want. Rude log huts formed the habitations. Indian corn was
their only cereal. From it they made various forms of bread. Wild game was
plentiful, fish abounded in the streams; deer and bear fell readily to their
rifles; prairie chickens and quail were so numerous as to become pests at
times, destroying growing crops. Springs and fast flowing streams were
numerous, and it was near these that the huts were built. Rude structures
were of pine logs and split board roofs, rarely, more than one room, with
nothing but the earth for floors. With the passing of years the Choctaws
developed greater skill in the builder's art, and as wealth and prosperity
increased there arose now and then a mansion of true southern colonial
pretensions.
By building near the streams and springs the Choctaws acted upon the
philosophy of one who reasoned: "White man build house on hill; have to carry
water to it. Indian build house near spring-save work."
Trading Posts
Trading Posts soon were established. Then came the white man, who looked
with longing eyes upon this new Eden. He came with his accursed "Firewater,"
with which he corrupted the natives, who were more susceptible to its baneful
influences than any other people. Those who became addicted to its use lost
much of the original purity of character for which they long had been noted,
and became worthless wrecks, useless to them selves or to their nation. At
the same time came the Christian Missionaries, bringing the Bible and
medicine, bringing the story of the Cross, and remedies for bodily ills.
Their influence was marvelous. The Christ was accepted, and his teachings
prevailed to a very large extent.
Liquor Violations
The United States congress passed very strict prohibition laws with
reference to furnishing liquor to Indians anywhere. The courts were
constantly occupied with cases of such law violations. Up to the time of
statehood, however, the national government made every effort to protect its
charges against this baneful foe.
The efforts of the liquor dealers were ingenious and numerous to get past
the vigilance of the officers. Some had been known to bring liquor into the
forbidden territory in gun barrels, in coffins, in vinegar bottles, in padded
clothing. The U.S. jails were constantly filled with persons who had sought
to overrun this law.
Towns soon sprang up, houses of flimsy board construction. Costly houses
were out of the question because no permanent titles could then be secured by
non-citizens. Communication was slow-by wagon, water and horseback. Yet the
traders prospered because they were hardy and enterprising.
Doaksville, in the southeastern part of the nation, was the capital for
many years. It was eighty miles from a railroad. There were no railroads in
the Territory before 1870.
The Choctaw council was composed of a house and senate. It passed laws
needful for the growing interests of the nation. Its laws applied only to
citizens of the nation. United States citizens were tried for law violations
in the U.S. courts.
Towns and Villages
Choctaw laws related to individual conduct, marriage, occupancy of land
and taxation. All land was owned in common. Each Choctaw citizen was
privileged to use all the land he could fence. Unfenced land was used by
anyone who had need of it. One provision of law was that one farm fence
could not come closer that a "hog call" to another farm. This term meant
one-fourth of a mile. It insured at all times in all places plenty of
outside land for grazing purposes-a necessary provision, as much of the
wealth of the Nation consisted of cattle and horses. These roamed the woods
and prairies at will.
Marriages
Marriage was largely common law. A man and woman agreed before witnesses
to become man and wife, and this was legal. Later, license to marry became
necessary. The ceremony was performed either by ministers of the gospel or
county judges. There were many native preachers. It is related of one who
liked his ease as well as the next. That one day he was called upon to marry
a young couple, who come to his home, which was near a creek. The couple was
on the other side of the creek, and this creek had swollen from recent rains
until they could neither cross to him, nor he to them. He solved the puzzle
by saying: "Throw me two silver dollars across the creek." This being done,
he said: "You take this woman for your wife?" "OK" "You take this man for
your husband?" "OK" "Then, I say you're man and wife. Goodbye." And they
lived happily ever afterward.
Taxes
No direct taxes were levied upon the people. Owning no land, there could
be no land tax. Improvements were scant, so little revenue was to be
expected from that source; so other means of securing money to run their
government must be found. The white man became a fruitful source of revenue.
If he brought cattle into Indian country, he was required to pay .50 cents
per head per year for the privilege of his cattle grazing on the bountiful
grass. To cut hay, he must pay .50 cents per ton. If he was a trader or
merchant, he must pay one and one-half percent on the amount of goods
introduced as royalty. A lawyer must pay $10. a year, so also a doctor and
an editor; a royalty of .25c per ton must be paid for each ton of coal mined
in the Territory. If a citizen owned a farm, he must pay $5 per year for
each tenant farmer. Each laborer must pay $2.50 per year. Some Choctaw
citizens, in time, acquired numerous farms, so this permit tax, which fell
upon him, became somewhat burdensome.
The penalty for non-payment of permits by citizens was a fine or
whipping, adjudged by district courts. The penalty for non-payments of fees
by non-citizens was deportation by Indian policemen under order of the
district courts. Many subterfuges were resorted to in order to evade the
full payment of taxes. As the towns grew, the payment of the merchandise tax
was quite burdensome. Quite a few merchants would exhibit false invoices to
the collector, and pay upon a mere fraction of the goods introduced.
Sometimes the collectors were in collusion with the merchant in this evasion.
One incident is recalled of a young lawyer of McAlester who refused to
pay the tax of $10 a year. His deportation was ordered. He was taken by a
policeman to Denison, 90 miles away, it being the nearest point outside the
Nation. He came back to McAlester on the same train, as did the policeman.
The next day he was taken back to Denison. Likewise, he came back. This
happened six successive days. The policeman got tired of paying his two
railway fares each day for himself and prisoner, so he and the court
concluded it would be cheaper to let the lawyer stay than to be out $8
everyday for railway fare. There happened to be no way of preventing the
return of a man thus deported. Finally, this law came into little use.
Timid ones paid, but the bolder spirits stayed without paying.
Pt. 2
Had No Jails
The Choctaws were noted for being true to a pledged word. Bonds were
never required in criminal cases. The word of the accused was sufficient
assurance that he would appear at the court, though it might mean death.
Concrete cases are of record where the condemned man appeared on the exact
hour to receive the bullet from the firing squad. Only 30 days interval was
allowed between the finding of the one guilty and the infliction of
punishment. This gave the accused time to make an effort to secure pardon
from the governor, or to put his worldly affairs in shape. Jails were not
known among the Choctaws. If a convicted man refused to give his word, he
was chained to a tree to await the time, a guard being set over him. The
rifle was the usual method of meeting death penalty. A firing squad of ten
men were appointed, only two guns being loaded with bullets, so that no one
might know whose bullet caused the death.
Clothing
Early in the century the Choctaws adopted, to a large extent, the white
man's clothing, though some few remained dressed in skins and blankets. Some
of the younger bloods compared favorably with their white brothers in looks
and dress. The young women were beautiful, retiring in disposition, and pure
in character. Married life brought terrible hardships upon them, however,
and the toll thus taken left them uncomely. The drudgery of their primitive
lives is almost unbelievable. The larger part of the farm work, the
households work and the care of the children was shifted to them, while the
men occupied themselves with hunting, fishing, and politics. Among the more
wealthy and better conditioned Choctaws this drudgery was taken from the
women and given to Negro slaves or servants. These women retained their good
looks until past middle age.
Native Foods
The Choctaw women were adept at preparing foods from the articles at
hand. Schooled to forest life, used to a plentiful lack, they worked wonders
with corn and meat. A kind of hominy was made of rudely cracked corn, called
"to falla." Dry corn was beaten into a wooden mortar until the husks were
loose. Reed fans were operated by hand during this process to blow away the
husks. After all the husks were blown away the meal was put in iron pots and
cooked about four hours. It was eaten either fresh or stake, hot or cold,
and was very nourishing. Some liked "tom fuller" sour; so it was set by a
fire overnight, with fresh water poured over it.
Pashofa
Pashofa was another popular form of food. A large quantity of dried
Indian corn, a bushel or more, was cracked in a mortar until of the fineness
of meal. This was cooked with sufficient water in a rude pot until about
half done. A shoat or calf was killed and all the meat cut very fine with
knives-sausage mills were unknown. The meal was taken out and dried, then
thoroughly pounded into the meat, there being equal quantities of meal and
meat. This mixture was put in a pot, salt and sufficient water were added,
and cooked until done. This was usually made in very large quantities, and
was served cold in horn spoons or wooden dishes. Its keeping qualities were
good, being good a month after cooking. This meat was an almost regular dish
in every home, and it was used as an inducement to get folks to attend the
"Pashofa dance."
Remembering that the Choctaw women had no access to the usual condiments
of the present day housewife, we marvel at their ingenuity in preparing foods
from nature's gifts. They had little salt, little sugar, no pepper, no
cinnamon, no endives, and no cheese, none of the thousand and one things our
mothers now have with which to make our foods palatable.
Walusha
Walusha was the principal dessert. Wild grapes were gathered and boiled
in a pot to get the juice. The juice was strained through a cloth and mixed
with a dumpling made of corn meal. Sugar or cane syrup was added. It was
cooked until done, then served in horn spoons. This was a delicious and
savory dish, much prized by all who were privileged to eat it. Sometimes
this Walusha would ferment, and need for other stimulant was eliminated for
the time. It had a "kick."
Bahar
Bahar was a delectable condiment. It was made by beating hickory nuts
and walnuts to a pulp in a stone or wooden mortar. To this was added cracked
parched corn flour. This was sifted to take away the husks, sugar was added,
and the ingredients stirred until thoroughly mixed. Cold water was added
until the mass became the consistency of thick dough. It was served in horn
of shell spoons, and was considered the "piece de resistance" of a meal.
Abunaka
Abunaka was the hard tack of the Nation. It was used to take on long
hunts, and was a reserve food against the arrival of unexpected company. It
was made by the quantity of corn desired being soaked overnight in just
enough water to cover it, to loosen the husks. Ashes of dried bean hulls
were sifted, and the ashes with dried beans were boiled until the beans were
done. Stiff dough was made of the corn after it had been thoroughly beaten.
The beans remained whole. These were mixed in about equal quantities of meal
and beans and wrapped in corn shucks, tied with hickory withes and put in a
pot of water and boiled about an hour. This bread remained in the husks
until ready to be eaten. It kept indefinitely, being as good a year after
being made as it was the day it was cooked.
Infidelity
Not much ceremony was made over marriage. The rite was simply: "You take
her?" "You take him?" Both answered affirmatively formed a knot that rarely
was broken save by death. Divorce was little known.
Little infidelity ever was known among the Choctaws. On the rare
occasion if a girl went wrong, upon the establishment of her guilt, her
punishment was administered by her father, who would severely beat her, shave
her head bare, and turn her out of house and home. Thenceforward her name
was never mentioned by anyone.
Burial Customs
Upon the death of a member of the family, no religious rites were
performed. The men had food, guns and knives buried with them; the women,
their personal adornments of beads and trinkets. The grave was dug under the
house in which the family lived. Later this custom was changed by reason of
board floors, and the grave was dug in the yard, near the house, and a small
house built over it. The idea was that rain should never fall upon a grave.
The families continued to live in the houses the same as before. No haunting
specters bothered them.
Indian Cry
The "Indian Cry" was a ceremony performed in each community once each
year. At a specified time, the whole neighborhood would assemble under a
rude arbor. The names of all in that community who had died during the time
were announced. A short sketch of each was given by the native preacher.
Both his good and bad qualities were mentioned with equal truth, and the
preacher had no hesitancy in telling the people where he thought the deceased
had gone hence. After his sermon, relatives would break out crying, mourning
for their dead. Sometimes the mourning lasted 4 or 5 hours, depending upon
the physical endurance of the bereaved. After it was over; after this "cry"
was finished, there was no more mourning for the dead.
Pashofa Dance
The Pashofa Dance was a ceremony used when a member of the tribe was
sick. It was done to invoke the departure on the Spirit of Disease called
Shulop. Upon invitation, the people of a neighborhood assembled at the home
of the sick person. This person was isolated in a room, where none were
allowed but the Medicine Man. A striped pole of black and white was erected
in the yard, and none were allowed past this pole. The Medicine Man would
indulge in various incantations, while the crowd outside would imitate him,
dancing around in numberless and fatiguing gyrations. At noon the Pashofa
would be served to the hungry guests. This was made in a large pot in the
yard, and, when the horn spoons were passed, the crowd did not wait for the
Pashofa to cool, but plunged in with their spoons, eating until the food was
gone or they were gorged. Only water was served. After eating, the dance
would be resumed until physical exhaustion compelled them to quit.
The Medicine Man, as a last rite, would fill his mouth several times with
a mixture he brought with him, then spews it upon the form of the sick
person. If any person, during the dance, went inside the prohibited
territory, the Spirit of Shulop was supposed to enter him.
Pt. 3
Christian Religion
The Choctaws took a keen interest in the religion brought to them by the
Missionaries. Their own preachers soon became a great aid to the
missionaries, so that camp meetings were frequent. Church houses were few,
only rude huts being erected. The principal services were conducted in the
homes and under arbors made of brush. The Indian was stoical and
undemonstrative, but there is no doubt but that the power affected them
greatly. Mourners were called for at each service, and those who "hit the
sawdust trail" seemed to be sincere in it. The Negro slaves were allowed to
attend many of these meetings, and their nature being entirely different,
they made up in shouting what their Indian masters lacked.
Singing
To teach a song to the Choctaw it was necessary for the missionary or his
assistant to sing it over time after time, perhaps a dozen. Not a sound out
of the congregation. But later, if he called upon the congregation to sing,
they would do it perfectly, each voice taking his true tone from the organ.
A remarkable thing was that none but the men sang. The women throughout were
silent. About the home, or elsewhere, when the men were present, the women
were silent.
Debt-Paying
The Choctaws were punctilious about paying a debt. They might be a long
time about it, but if ever the money was in hand, the debt was paid. A
doctor had loaned a young fellow $60. From time to time, he had asked the
youth about paying, but could get nothing but a grunt in response. Finally,
the doctor gave the debt up as lost. One morning, twenty years later, upon
opening his door, he saw this young man, now middle-aged, upon his doorstep.
"Here's your $60." No greeting, no interest, no thanks.
Court-County
Court was held in each county each first Monday. These courts attracted
almost every citizen in the county whether they had any business with them or
not. The principal business was selling stray animals, and settling estates
of deceased members. It was a time that bootleggers also came and plied
their trade. If the bootlegger had no whisky, he did not scruple to sell tea
of coffee for the genuine article. One was known to sell 40 quarts of tea in
fruit jars at $2 per quart. Had he been caught, he might not have lived to
gloat over his ill-gotten gains. Going to court, going to a Pashofa dance,
going to camp meeting, going to an "Indian Cry" were the principal
"amusements" of the people.
Handwork Skill
By doing the greatest part of the work, the Choctaw women soon acquired
great skill in fashioning articles, from leather, clay, wood, and horn. They
became expert cloth makers. The men fashioned weapons of steel and flint.
The arrival of traders with their manufactured goods put an end to much of
this art. Thus, today much of the original ingenuity of the Indian is lost
because of disuse and lack of necessity. He has succumbed to the lure of
letting someone else make his goods.
Sometimes a Choctaw man would marry an energetic woman of Irish or
Swedish extraction. Then he went to work. His wife saw to that. He took
less interest in politics and fishing, and more in the development of his
farms. And soon he became prosperous, for the soil was rich and responded
bountifully with its yields. Other families profited by such examples, and in
later years, the Choctaws became good farmers, raised good stock, and
acquired competencies equal to the white man.
Caddo Indians
About the year 1840, a roving band of Caddo Indians came from western
plains unbidden to the Choctaw Eden; came to hunt and to fish and to stay as
long as pleased them. They were unwelcome. The country belonged to the
Choctaws. Had not their Great White Father given it to them? The Choctaws
proposed to keep it and to defend their homes against intruders. In the
Caddo band were perhaps 500 people, some women and children. It looked as if
they intended to make quite a stay of it. No other way proving successful,
the Choctaws invoked the aid on their Lighthorsemen to get rid of their
unwelcome visitors. For about a year guerrilla warfare ensued, until, in a
pitched battle, the Caddos were exterminated. Not one lived to carry back
the news of their disaster.
Language
The Choctaw language is guttural. It sounds good to the ear.
Missionaries translated the Bible into this language, using the English
Letters. With schools established, the natives learned to read both in their
own and the English languages. The language contains no curse words. The
strongest epithet one could call an enemy in Choctaw would be "a long eared
mule." The Choctaw soon learned, however, the art of swearing fluently in
English, and so never troubled himself to get the words in his own dialect.
The English was sufficiently expressive. This he often mixed with his native
tongue.
The Choctaw had a habit of using the word "it" where it did not belong, such
as "he went it to town." It is related of one Choctaw who had been to a
county fair, who upon arriving home gave this succinct account of his
experience: "I went it to fair; paid it four bits to see it farmer boy ride
it calf."
The Choctaw language abounds in the use of the letter "K," and almost every
sentence ends in "shke" or "oke." Meaning is added to or taken from
sentences by the tone in which uttered. It is a difficult language to
express properly in writing or printing. A few words and their English
meaning might be of interest:
Ishkulle in money, tanch is corn, panola is cotton, nippe is meat, nashoba is
wolf, bok is creek, Chito is large or big, sketana is little or small,
sabunna is I want, oka is re, homa is man, okeh is yes, kayo is no.
The Choctaw was parsimonious in the use of words. His comments always were
short. He did not use many words in buying and selling. The laws and
newspapers were printed in both languages in the early days. Now the Choctaw
is seldom used. It is a beautiful language about to go the way of all the
earth.
Pt. 4
Modern Inventions
The Choctaw exhibited a great interest in the new inventions of the white
man. A doctor making his calls used the first bicycle brought to this
country. A native was heard to observe upon seeing him: "Huh! White
Medicine Man heap big lazy; him sit down to walk." Later the automobile took
his eye. It was wonderful. He liked the sensation of riding swiftly. Many
sold their farms to get one. One young fellow, having secured a large
payment for an oil lease, bought a big car. He came back to the car agency
the next day, battered and bandaged, but still in the ring. Holding out a
roll of bills, he said; "Me buy big car, get it quart of cat whisky, go it
down road like hell, see it bridge, move it our of road to let it bridge
pass. Bam! Car gone, gimme 'nother one."
The Choctaw was a philosopher in his way. He rarely gathered corn into his
crib, except in small lots, his idea being expressed by one who said: "Thief
can't steal much corn in field. In crib, he get it all."
Slave Holders
At the outbreak of the war between states, Choctaws were slaveholders; hence
their sympathies were with the Confederacy. They made a treaty with
Confederate commissioners, which confirmed them in the holding of their
slaves and the new country.
In return they supplied a large contingent of soldiers for the Southern army,
also much supplies, wagons, clothing, shot and cartridges. They were
familiar with firearms, and the army life suited them. After the war was
over and the Confederacy collapsed, new treaties had to be made with the
United States government, by which much of their original freedom was lost.
The slaves were freed, and these became members of the tribe, though not on
equal footing. Later upon allotting the lands, the slaves got about
one-fourth as much as their Indian masters.
Vigilantes
In the years following the Civil War there was much unrest, much
thieving, much law breaking, so much so that the law-abiding people, to
protect themselves, were compelled to take strong measures. Vigilantes were
organized among the better citizens. These vigilantes held secret meetings,
their member ship was secret, but when they operated, there was much less
cattle thieving, property became safe. The vigilantes were very careful to
find the right man before meting punishment, but many individuals of shady
reputations made themselves scarce during the time. They ceased to frequent
the haunts of men. Nobody knows where they are buried. One instance is
recalled wherein a certain man was condemned by the vigilante council to
death for thievery. The lot to kill him fell to a young man who believed in
his innocence. He asked the council for thirty days' time to investigate
further. This was granted. In two weeks the young man went before the
secret council with evidence that established beyond doubt the innocence of
the condemned man. He was spared. He never knew that he was on trial. As
the need for the vigilantes vanished, so did the vigilantes. No instances
are known of where any injustices were committed by them in the Choctaw
nation.
First Railroad
A railroad was built through the Choctaw country in 1870. A few towns
sprang up; Caddo became the terminal of the road, and from this place wagon
trains transported supplies to the western forts and to north Texas. It was
no strange sight to see these trains, miles and miles in extent, come into
town, load and depart. Those were lively times.
On one occasion a carload of barreled whisky was stored in the station
house for several days, awaiting arrival for trains to take it to Bonham and
Paris. The storehouse was about three feet off the ground. Somebody,
hearing of this stored happiness, spread the news. One night unknown parties
entered under this house and with augurs bored
Holes through the floor and several barrels, emptying the liquor into tubs.
Nobody ever knew who did it, but suspicion pointed strongly to quite a number
who suddenly had become quite happy and prosperous.
World War
With the coming of the World war, the Choctaws had become educated in the
schools, had taken their places with their white brothers as citizens on an
equal footing. Their tribal government had dissolved, and they were all
equal citizens of Oklahoma and the United States. In every line of business
they were to be found. Eloquent preachers, shrewd lawyers, keen businessmen,
trained schoolteachers; all professions found them occupying places of
usefulness and honor. One had become a United States senator and prominently
mentioned as the democratic nominee for president in 1920; two others were
congressman; another had been Speaker of the House of Representatives in
Oklahoma.
Many Choctaws, by volunteering and by selection became soldiers in the
World war. The records are full of valiant deeds. War crosses without
number were issued to them. But the duties of camp life proved irksome to
them. The Indian liked action; he did not like drill and camp duties. He
could never get used to the constant saluting. One was arrested, charged
with not saluting an officer. His defense was, "I tell it captain howdy once
today. That's nuff."
A Vanishing Race
By nature, the Choctaws were roving, loved the field and forest, the
great outdoors. He liked the dew, the big wide places; he built his houses
far apart. He communed with his God, Chiowa, he called Him, in His vaulted
domes; he felt the pull of the Great Spirit in the outdoors. Not many full
bloods are left. He had mixed his blood with the white, until they truly are
a vanishing race. He has taken on white man's ways; he has accepted his God;
he has taken his language; he has built homes like his white brothers. He is
no longer pure American in his blood. Now he lives like the white man. He
has as many characteristics as there are people. He has taken on the good
and the bad. He is simply now like the average American white man.
Guy A. Crossett
Caddo, Oklahoma