|
Applications for Enrollment of Choctaw Newborn, Act of 1905. Volume I.Applications for
Enrollment of Choctaw Newborn, Act of 1905. Volume I. Jeff Bowen. Paperback, 2020, Index, viii + 340 pp. The Applications for Enrollment of Choctaw Newborn, Act of
1905, National Archive film M-1301, Rolls 50-57, are found under the
heading of Applications for Enrollment of the Commission to the Five Civilized
Tribes. These applications contain considerably more information than stated on
the census cards found in series M-1186. Series M-1301 possesses its own
numerical sequence, separate from M-1186. To find each party's roll number
researchers must reference M-1186. The governing 1905 statute (H.R. 17474) defined Choctaw Newborn
as "infant children born prior to September twenty-fifth, nineteen hundred
and two, and who were living on said date, to citizens by blood of the Choctaw
. . ." It also authorized the Department of the Interior to enroll and
make allotments to such children based on applications received on their behalf
no later than May 2, 1905. The Choctaw--as well as the Chickasaw allotments--were likely
some of the most sought after properties in Indian Territory. There was
supposed to be a 25-year restriction on the sale or lease of any Indian lands
so as to ensure that the owners wouldn't be swindled; however, the presence of
huge asphalt and coal deposits in both the Choctaw and Chickasaw Districts
elicited pressure from private interests to purchase the lands. On April 26,
1906, President Roosevelt signed the Five Tribes Bill removing some of the
restrictions from the sale of all inherited land but continuing to prohibit
full-bloods from selling their land for 25 years. Mr. Bowen's faithful transcriptions of the Choctaw applications
provide the names of the applicants and their relatives, as well as the
identities of doctors, lawyers, midwives, and others. NS-2095 |