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Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830 Ryan L. Spring, GIS/GPS Specialist Historic Preservation Department Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma

Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

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Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830. Ryan L. Spring, GIS/GPS Specialist Historic Preservation Department Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. Topics. Choctaw People: Society & Government 1801: Early Indian Policy 1812: Allies of the United States 1817: Removal Policy & Choctaw Education - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Choctaw People:Indian Policy 1801-1830

Ryan L. Spring, GIS/GPS SpecialistHistoric Preservation Department

Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma

Page 2: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Topics

• Choctaw People: Society & Government• 1801: Early Indian Policy• 1812: Allies of the United States• 1817: Removal Policy & Choctaw Education• 1820: Doaks’ Stand and Washington City• 1830: Chukfi ahihla bok: Chahta ohoyo micha

in bvshpo

Page 3: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830
Page 4: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Choctaw Society

Matriarchal Society• Society centered around the

Women.• Kinship based on the

mother’s Moiety & Clan• Boys raised by the mother’s

uncle• Revenge Law

– Punishment

Moieties (iksa)• Kashapa Okla (Divided People)

– Kush iksa (Reed Clan)– Law Okla (?)– Lulak Okla (probably Fire People)– Limoklasha/Itimoklasha (There

People are There)• Okla Inholahta (Beloved

People)– Chufan iksa (Beloved People)– Isketani (Small people)– Chitto (Big people)– Shakchi Okla (Crawfish People)

Page 5: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Givers of Life

• Foundation of the Community

• Property Owners• Agricultural producers• Domestic – Pottery– Basketry– Cooking– Clothing

Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia 24450

Bushnell 1909

Page 6: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Takers of Life

• Hunters• Protected the

Community• Played Stickball• Interacted with Other

Groups• Did the Heaviest Work• Served as Orators &

Historians

Bushnell 1909

Page 7: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Choctaw Government

• Choctaw Government– Three Districts

• Okla FalayaChief Apukshunnubbee

• Ahepvt OklaChief Mushulatubbe

• Okla HannaliChief Pushmataha

– Village• Chief

– Council– Squirrel Chief– War Chief

District

Takers of Life

Community

Givers of Life

Page 8: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830
Page 9: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830
Page 10: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Topics

• Choctaw People: Society & Government• 1801: Early Indian Policy• 1812: Allies of the United States• 1817: Removal Policy & Choctaw Education• 1820: Doaks’ Stand and Washington City• 1830: Chukfi ahihla bok: Chahta ohoyo micha

in bvshpo

Page 11: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Creation of Indian Policy

• 1801: Thomas Jefferson Elected President

• Cultural Imperialism– American Culture– Assimilation

New York Historic Society 1805

Page 12: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Trade, Debts, and Treaties• 1801 Treaty of Fort Adams

– Natchez Trace– Protect Mississippi

• 1802 Treaty of Fort Confederation– Protect the Mississippi

• 1803 Treaty of Hoe Buckintoopa– Defense of Mobile

• 1805 Treat of Mount Dexter

Page 13: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Yakni Awehli (The Taking of Land)

After DeRosier 1970:29

Page 14: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Topics

• Choctaw People: Society & Government• 1801: Early Indian Policy• 1812: Allies of the United States• 1817: Removal Policy & Choctaw Education• 1820: Doaks’ Stand and Washington City• 1830: Chukfi ahihla bok: Chahta ohoyo micha

in bvshpo

Page 15: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Changes in Choctaw Society

• Pressure from Settlers• Changes in Choctaw Society– Mixed Bloods– Men: Property & Trade

• Allies of the United States

Page 16: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

War of 1812: The First Choctaw War• United States is at war with Great Britain. Tensions peak

between Muscogee people and whites.

• Summer 1813: Muscogee Chiefs (Red Sticks) hold council with Choctaw Chiefs to decide on the issue of war against the United States. Choctaw Chiefs decline and settle for neutrality.

• Fall 1813: War erupts, Red Sticks begin to attack American settlements. Fort Mims is attacked. Choctaw villages attacked.

• Choctaw Chiefs meet with the United States. Pushmataha is granted a field commission as Lt. Colonel in the US Army under Andrew Jackson.

• Winter 1813: Pushmataha and his warriors join Jackson’s Army. They defeat the Red Sticks at Battle of Holy Ground. 1814 Pushmataha enlist more warriors for Jackson’s Pensacola Campaign. Choctaw Troops go unpaid.

• January 1815: Pushmataha’s warriors under Jugeat help defeat the British at the Battle of New Orleans.

Page 17: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

1816: Treaty of Choctaw Trading House

• Allies of the United States• 1816: Choctaw eagerly ceded a small amount

of lands east of the Tombigbee with their new Ally.

Page 18: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Yakni Awehli (The Taking of Land)

After DeRosier 1970:29

Page 19: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Topics

• Choctaw People: Society & Government• 1801: Early Indian Policy• 1812: Allies of the United States• 1817: Removal Policy & Choctaw Education• 1820: Doaks’ Stand and Washington City• 1830: Chukfi ahihla bok: Chahta ohoyo micha

in bvshpo

Page 20: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Calhoun-Monroe Indian Policy

• Cultural Imperialism– Indian Territory– Removal

Page 21: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Choctaw Adaptation: Education

• Educate the Youth– Missionaries– Schools

• Choctaws “Sharp Businessmen”

Page 22: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Topics

• Choctaw People: Society & Government• 1801: Early Indian Policy• 1812: Allies of the United States• 1817: Removal Policy & Choctaw Education• 1820: Doaks’ Stand and Washington City• 1830: Chukfi ahihla bok: Chahta ohoyo micha

in bvshpo

Page 23: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Treaty of Doak’s Stand• Rumors of Removal• Indian Commissioner • Bribery, exaggeration,

threat of the settlers, and loss of friendship.

• Treaty Signed– Goods & Supplies– Education– No more lands to be

ceeded– Lighthorsemen

Page 24: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

1825 Treaty of Washington City

• Arkansans Protest• Pushmataha &

Apukshunnubbee• Treaty Signed– Warriors paid– Continued Friendship

Page 25: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Topics

• Choctaw People: Society & Government• 1801: Early Indian Policy• 1812: Allies of the United States• 1817: Removal Policy & Choctaw Education• 1820: Doaks’ Stand and Washington City• 1830: Chukfi ahihla bok: Chahta ohoyo micha

in bvshpo

Page 26: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

1830: Chukfi ahihla bok: Chahta ohoyo micha in bvshpo

• Lands Ceded– 34,000 sq mi

• Sept 22nd– Killihota

• Choctaws 59, Killihota 1

• Sept 23rd

– Rejected– Threats: State would seize lands, US Military would

destroy resistance, Choctaws taken by force to the West.

• Sept 24th

– Greenwood Leflore• Article 14

• Sept 25th– Voted down– Okla Falaya: 2/3 voted down

• Sept 27th

– Rejected– Threats: cease relations, lands given away to other

Tribes, forced into labor and military conscription, state taxes, children destitute, Choctaws would be utterly destroyed

Treaty Signed• 17,000 sq mi• Friendship• Removals Scheduled 1831,

1832, 1833– Transportation , Supplies, &

Reimbursements• Choctaw Nation would remain

Autonomous• Protection by the United States• Choctaw who fought in

Revolution and Northwest Indian War receive annuity.

Page 27: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Yakni Awehli (The Taking of Land)

After DeRosier 1970:29

Page 28: Choctaw People: Indian Policy 1801-1830

Recommended BooksThe Removal of the

Choctaw IndiansDeRosier

Choctaws and Missionaries in

Mississippi, 1818-1918Clara Sue Kidwell

Indian RemovalGrant Foreman