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Choctaw in the American Civil War

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Choctaw men shortly after the American Civil War. Their dress typifies the appearance of Choctaw Nation soldiers.

The Choctaw in the American Civil War participated in two major arenas—the Trans-Mississippi and Western Theaters. The Trans-Mississippi had the Choctaw Nation. The Western had the Mississippi Choctaw. The Choctaw Nation had been mostly removed west prior to the War, but the Mississippi Choctaw had remained in the east. Both the Choctaw Nation and the Mississippi Choctaw would ultimately side with the Confederate States of America.

After thirty years of development, the Choctaw Nation had begun to flourish in their new western environment. Their economic system was identical as the American South and based upon slave labor. Their upper class was engaged in the cotton trade with networks reaching as far as New Orleans. Confederate envoy Albert Pike successfully persuaded much of "Indian Country" to side with the newly formed Confederate states. He conducted treaties for the Confederacy and later commanded a combined force of Choctaw, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole troops.

The Mississippi Choctaw led a tougher existence. Through treaty provisions, they elected to stay in Mississippi while the majority of the Indians moved west. By the time of the American Civil War, the Mississippi Choctaw were destitute and lived a sharecropper's existence. The most lucky of them had a patron who were sympathetic to their needs. Mississippi Choctaws were continually petitioning their grievances to U.S. authorities which were mostly ignored. Mississippian John W. Pierce and Alabamian Samuel G. Spann organized the Mississippi Choctaw. They were both wealthy white planters and had experience with the Indians from Mississippi.

Background

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Robert M. Jones was a non-voting delegate in the Confederacy's House of Representatives.

The Choctaw Nation had removed west of the Mississippi River after the signing of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek in 1830. After three decades, the nation had become successful in establishing itself in its new country. They made considerable progress in agriculture and education with most of the farm labor being done by slaves.[1] By 1860, the Choctaw Nation lived in a relatively calm and remote society. Many Indian citizen members had become successful farmers, planters, and business men. Angie Debo, author of The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic, wrote: "Taken as a whole the generation from 1833 to 1861 presents a record of orderly development almost unprecedented in the history of any people."[2]

"The Choctaws alone, of all the Indian nations, have remained perfectly united in their loyalty to this Government. It was said to me by more than one influential and reliable Choctaw during my sojourn in their country that not only had no member of that nation ever gone over to the enemy, but that no Indian had ever done so in whose veins coursed Choctaw blood."

— S.S. Scott to James A. Seddon, January 12, 1863[3]

Tribal members had become successful cotton planters—owning many slaves. The most famous Choctaw planter was Robert M. Jones. He was part Choctaw and had become influential in politics. Jones eventually supported the Confederacy and became a non-voting member in the Confederacy's House of Representatives. Jones was key for steering the Choctaw Nation in an alliance with the Confederacy.

Lincoln and Indian Affairs

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Abraham Lincoln considered Indian affairs a low priority when compared to the secession crisis.[4] Lincoln's administration focused their efforts on American military confrontations of early 1861. They had little time to consider the Indian's role in the coming conflict.[5] However, certain general attitudes protrude and explains the administrations' ambivalence toward the Indian. Lincoln and his polity considered the Indian a "dying race."[6] A U.S. senator once remarked, "It is dying through natural causes growing out of its contact with a superior race inhabiting the same country."[6] As soon as the Civil War began, Lincoln's government abandoned Indian Country. By May 18 of 1861, U.S. military posts were abandoned leaving tribes with "no alternative but to join the South."

Reasons why the Choctaw sided with the Confederacy

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The Choctaw Nation flag carried by troops during the War.

In early February 1861, the Choctaw Nation's General Council instructed their delegates in Washington City to deposit their invested funds in southern banks, if necessary.[7] A few days later, the council elected 12 delegates to meet with the Chickasaw at Boggy Depot, Choctaw Nation.[7] In April, Choctaw officials at Washington City assured Unionist that the Choctaw Nation was to remain neutral. However, by June 1861 the Choctaw Nation had declared itself free and independent and appointed commissioners to make an alliance with the Confederacy.

Choctaw Nation

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Several reasons explain why the Indians sided with the Confederacy: (1) They believed the United States was on the verge of collapse,[8] (2) They were neglected by the United States,[8] (3) William H. Seward, the United States Secretary of State, advocated the seizing of Indian lands,[8][9] (4) Their main agent was an advocate for the South,[8] and (5) Their laws supported slavery.[8]

Mississippi Choctaw

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The Indians in Mississippi had different reasons when siding with the Confederacy. (1) One of their main reasons included neglect. For decades Mississippi Choctaws petitioned the United States for grievances concerning the allocation of land grants provided in Article 14 of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek. A large number of cases was brought before U.S. courts but most went unheard. Some Choctaw may have been enticed to side with the Confederacy as a possible solution to their land grant problems. (2) Another reason included conscription. Although a few Indians volunteered, a majority of Mississippi Choctaw soldiers were conscripted into service. (3) Financial incentives may have been another reason. Fifty dollars bounty was offered to Mississippi Choctaws who enrolled with the Provisional Army of the Confederate States. (4) Some Indians may have wanted prestige within their tribe. Many Indian societies encouraged their warriors to succeed in battle to advance in their social hierarchy which was a requirement if they wanted positions of leadership.

Trans-Mississippi Theater

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Albert Pike allied American Indian nations with the Confederacy.

At the beginning of the American Civil War, Albert Pike was appointed as Confederate envoy to Native Americans. In this capacity he negotiated several treaties, one such treaty was the Treaty with Choctaws and Chickasaws conducted in July 1861. The treaty covered sixty-four terms covering many subjects like Choctaw and Chickasaw nation sovereignty, Confederate States of America citizenship possibilities, and an entitled delegate in the House of Representatives of the Confederate States of America .

Confederate battalions were soon formed in Indian Territory and later in Mississippi. The Choctaws, who were expecting support from the Confederates, got little. Webb Garrison, a Civil War historian, describes their response: when Confederate Brigadier General 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 furnished to any of them."[10]

Douglas H. Cooper was a veteran of several battles before the American Civil War.

First Choctaw and Chickasaw Mounted Rifles

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On August 1 of 1861, President Jefferson Davis was notified that the First Choctaw and Chickasaw Mounted Rifles was prepared for battle.[11] They were under the command of Colonel Douglas H. Cooper. The regiment consisted of six Choctaw companies, three Chickasaw companies, and one "half-breed" company.[12]

The First Choctaw and Chickasaw Mounted Rifles were "tardy" and missed the opportunity to engage at the Battle of Pea Ridge. Historian Annie H. Abel wrote that the Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Creeks, "were both fortunate and unfortunate in thus tardily arriving upon the scene. They had missed the fight but they had also missed the temptation to revert to the savagery that was soon to bring fearful ignominy upon their neighbors."

(Battice's) First Choctaw Battalion Cavalry

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Faunceway Baptiste was a Lieutenant Colonel.

Franceway Battice (Francois Baptiste or Faunceway Baptiste) became lieutenant colonel for the First Choctaw Battalion Cavalry from the Choctaw Nation. Simpson N. Folsom became the major. At one point, the battalion consisted of three companies.[13] When the battalion was dismissed, Battice and Folsom were given their own commands.

(McCurtain's) First Choctaw Battalion Cavalry

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In 1862, Jackson McCurtain became the Lieutenant Colonel of McCurtain's First Choctaw Battalion from the Choctaw Nation (Indian Territory). The First Choctaw Battalion eventually reorganized as the Third Choctaw Regiment. McCurtian's First Choctaw Battalion should not be confused with the 1st Choctaw Battalion that was organized in Mississippi under the leadership of John W. Pierce.

First Choctaw War Regiment

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Franceway Battice (Francois Baptiste or Faunceway Baptiste) led this unit as the First Choctaw Battalion Cavalry which may have had 216 men. Battice resigned in early 1862. After Battice's resignation, the battalion reorganized as the First Choctaw War Regiment.

First Choctaw Regiment

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Sampson Folsom was a colonel for the First Choctaw Regiment.

The First Choctaw Regiment was organized in early 1862. The unit participated in many skirmishes. It saw action at the first Battle of Newtonia. A total of 31 officers and 686 soldiers served until June 1865. Colonel Sampson Folsom, Lieutenant Colonel David F. Harkins, and Major Sylvester Durant were the leading officers.[14] This regiment has been referred to as the "1st Regiment, Choctaw Mounted Rifles," "First Choctaw (new) Regiment," "First Choctaw Mounted Rifles," and "1st Choctaw Cavalry Regiment."

Second Choctaw Regiment

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In late 1864, the Second Choctaw Regiment was led by Colonel Simpson N. Folsom. This unit later joined Colonel Tandy Walker's Second Indian Cavalry Brigade during a reorganization.[15]

Jackson McCurtain was a member of the First Choctaw and Chickasaw Mounted Rifles, his First Choctaw Battalion Cavalry, and the Third Choctaw Regiment

Third Choctaw Regiment

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In June 1861, Jackson McCurtain enlisted in the First 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 McCurtain's First Choctaw Battalion from the Choctaw Nation, not to be confused with John W. Pierce's 1st Choctaw Battalion in Mississippi.[16] McCurtain's First Choctaw Battalion was reorganized as the Third Choctaw Regiment.

Choctaw Warriors Regiment

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George E. Deneale was the commanding officer of the Choctaw Warriors Regiment (Deneale's Regiment or Choctaw Virginia Regiment).[17] Deneale was from Rockingham, Virginia and served in the Virginia legislature. In early 1862, he recruited in the Choctaw Nation. About 400 Choctaws were enrolled. Deneale envisioned his regiment in the Eastern Theater. It is unlikely the regiment served in the Eastern Theater.

"Tushkahoma, a Choctaw chief, is about starting for Virginia with a regiment of his people, well armed and equipped for the Confederate service. This is only one of several Choctaw regiments in the army. The Choctaws are all true and earnest in the Southern cause."

— The Alabama Beacon, Friday, April 4, 1862[18]

Choctaw Company

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Edmund Pickens, or Okchantubby, was the captain of this company of Choctaws who were likely mounted. Pickens was part Chickasaw.

Choctaw Infantry Company

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John Wilkins was captain of the Choctaw Infantry Company.

Indian Cavalry Division

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Brigadier General Douglas H. Cooper was in command of this division. The division had the First (Indian) Brigade, Second (Indian) Brigade, Seventh Mounted Artillery Battalion, and a couple of unattached units.[19] Brigadier General Stand Watie commanded the first, and Colonel Tandy Walker commanded the second. Watie's unit had Cherokee, Creek, Osage, and Seminole Indians while Walker's unit had Choctaw, Chickasaw and Caddo Indians. The remainder of the division had non-Indian members.

Organization

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Allen Wright's American Indian name was Kiliahote or "Come, let’s make a light" (or "let's kindle a fire"). He became Chief in late 1866 during treaty negotiations.

The Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations were organized into several companies, battalions, and regiments. The Choctaws had three units labeled 1st Choctaw Battalion. Jackson F. McCurtian's 1st Choctaw Battalion was raised in the Choctaw Nation. McCurtain's organization was later re-organized as the Third Choctaw Regiment. Franceway Battice (Francois Baptiste) also raised a unit called the 1st Choctaw Battalion (Cavalry) from the Choctaw Nation. Battice's battalion was later re-organized as the First Choctaw War Regiment. John W. Pierce's 1st Choctaw Battalion was raised in Mississippi and never saw action in the Trans-Mississippi Theater. Pierce's Mississippi Choctaws operated in Mississippi and Louisiana.

  • First Choctaw and Chickasaw Mounted Rifles
    • Field & Staff: Colonel Douglas H. Cooper, Lieutenant Colonel James Riley, Lieutenant Colonel Tandy Walker, Major Willis J. Jones, Major Mitchell LeFlore, Major Stephen Loering, T. M. Colley (Surgeon), F. W. Miner (A.Q.M.), Douglas H. Cooper Jr. (Adjutant), and William Cass (Chaplain)
    • Companies: Company A (Captain Adam Nail), Company B (Captain Thomas H. Benton), Company C (Captain Willis Jones), Company D (Captain Peter Matubbee), Company E (Captain John Levi), Company F (Lieutenant Mitchell McCurtain), Company G (Captain Jackson McCurtain), Company H (Captain Joseph R. Hall), Company I (Captain E. Dewnt), and Company K (Captain Ish kate ne homma)
    • Total: 1,400 men[20]
  • First Choctaw Battalion Cavalry
    • Lieutenant Colonel Franceway Battice (Francois Baptiste or Faunceway Baptiste), Major Simpson N. Folsom
  • First Choctaw Battalion Cavalry
  • First Choctaw War Regiment (formed from Battice's 1st Choctaw Battalion Cavalry)
    • Lieutenant Colonel Franceway Battice (Francois Baptiste or Faunceway Baptiste)
Tandy Walker was acting-governor for the Choctaw Nation from 1858 to 1859[21] and served as a colonel for the Second Indian Brigade during the War.
  • First Choctaw Regiment
    • Field & Staff: Colonel Sampson Folsom, Lieutenant Colonel David F. Harkins, and Major Sylvester Durant
    • Companies: Company A (Captain Fla tubbee), Company B (Captain John Gibson), Company C (Captain Alfred Wade), Company D (Captain Martin Folsom), Company E (Captain Reson Jones), Company F (Captain Ok la bi), Company G (Captain Coleman E. Nelson), Company H (Captain Joseph Moor), Company I (Captain Sinta Nowa or Walking Snake), and Company K (Captain Edmond Gardner)
  • Second Choctaw Regiment (formed from Battice's 1st Choctaw Battalion Cavalry)(organizational life: 1862-June 1865)
    • Colonel Simpson N. Folsom
  • Third Choctaw Regiment (formed from McCurtain's 1st Choctaw Battalion Cavalry)
    • Field & Staff: Colonel Jackson McCurtain, Lieutenant Colonel Tom Lewis, Ellis W. Folsom (Adjutant)
  • Choctaw Warriors Regiment (Deneale's Regiment)
    • Field & Staff: Colonel George E. Deneale
    • Companies: Company A (Captain Washington Hudson), Company B (Captain J. E. Hamilton), Company C (Captain Jack Shoat), Company D (Captain Ho Tubbee), and Company E (Lieutenant George Speaker)
  • Choctaw Company
    • Captain Edmund Pickens or Okchantubby
  • Wilkins' Company (Choctaw Infantry)
    • Captain John Wilkins
The Caddo chief George Washington was also known as Shoetat or "Little Boy."
  • Indian Cavalry Division
    • Field & Staff: Brigadier General Douglas H. Cooper
    • First (Indian) Brigade
    • Second (Indian) Brigade
      • Field & Staff: Colonel Tandy Walker
        • 1st Chickasaw Battalion (Lieutenant Colonel Lemuel M. Reynolds), 1st Choctaw Battalion (Lieutenant Colonel Jackson McCurtain), 1st Choctaw and Chickasaw Battalion (Lieutenant Colonel James Riley), 2nd Choctaw (Colonel Simpson N. Folsom), and a reserve Caddo Squadron (Captain George Washington)
    • Seventh Mounted Artillery Battalion
      • Field & Staff: Captain W. Butler Krumbharr
        • Dashinell's (Texas) Battery (Captain George R. Dashiell), Krumbhaars (Texas) Battery (Lieutenant W. M. Stafford), and Howell's (Texas) Battery (Captain Sylvanus Howell)
    • Unattached
      • 20th Texas (Major John R. Johnson), and the 1st Battalion Texas Sharpshooters (Major James Burnet)

Battles, skirmishes, and other actions

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Western Theater

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In 1861, a Mississippi citizen attempted to raise a volunteer Choctaw company for the Confederacy. The Newton Record, a newspaper based in central Mississippi, reported in 1903 that "many Choctaws volunteered" in 1861.

"In 1861 a great many Choctaws volunteered for the confederate service, and served with great honor to themselves in the different commands … which operated in the southwest. They made brave soldiers and good fighters. Several of these old braves are still alive, among them being Jack Amos, the confederate scout, who now is tottering on the brink of the grave, but living in the hope that he will live and have the strength to attend the reunion in the spring at New Orleans, and for the last time to see the “Stars and Bars” float in the air in front of the survivors of his old regiment."

— The Newton Record, Thursday, January 1, 1903[22]

In the summer of 1862, eighty-two Mississippians filed a petition to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus. The petitioners urged the conscription of the Indians. In that petition, John Harrison, a white planter, was noted to have enrolled about two companies of the Indians. Harrison's Indian companies likely merged with John W. Pierce's unit. John W. Pierce and Samuel G. Spann, both of whom were white planters, organized the Mississippi Choctaw as Confederates starting in 1862.

Pierce and Spann created two distinct & separate units that had common members. The Indian troop's first mission was to track down deserters—most found in Jones County;[23] however, S. G. Spann was aware of their potential for scouting and use of guerrilla warfare. Pierce's troops were conscripted for tracking deserters in Jones County and surrounding areas, but Pierce's Indian troops were soon found in battles in Louisiana along the New Orleans, Jackson and Great Northern Railroad.

1st Choctaw Battalion

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Jack Amos, whose American Indian name was Eahantatubbee or "He Who Goes Out And Kills," was a Confederate soldier from the state of Mississippi.

President Jefferson Davis endorsed the 1st Choctaw Battalion in February 1863.[24] They were under the command of Major John W. Pierce,[24] served in the department of Lieutenant General John C. Pemberton, and were placed in Brigadier General John Adams's 4th District.[25] The battalion was headquartered at Newton Station, Mississippi.[24] Only two companies were mustered - companies A and B. A total of 101 men were mustered in March, 1863.[24] The battalion formed in February and disbanded in May 1863. Members would later transfer to Spann's command in late August 1863.[24]

After the Chunky Creek Train Wreck happened in February 1863, the Choctaw soldiers, who were recruited days/weeks earlier, led rescue and recovery efforts.[24] Spann wrote many years later that "the passengers were rescued due to their heroic acts."[26][27]

As the war progressed, Indian troops were sent to Louisiana as reinforcements to Colonel Horace H. Miller's command at Ponchatoula in March 1863.[24][28] The newspapers of the time gave the "Indian troops" credit for pushing back the Yankees during the Battle of Ponchatoula.[24][28] After the battle, a large number of the Indians deserted due to non-payment for their services. During or after Grierson's Raid in April/May 1863, more of the Indian members of the 1st Choctaw Battalion likely fled.

During a federal offensive, soldiers, both white and Indian, of the 1st Choctaw Battalion were captured near Ponchatoula, Louisiana, and the Indian prisoners were soon shipped via steamship to Castle Williams near New York City. The Indian prisoners were displayed for the entertainment of New Yorkers at Madison Park. At least two Indian prisoners died while they were incarcerated at the Union prison on Governors Island.[27] Spann describes the incident, "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 around two dozen Indians and one commissioned white officer and carried them to New Orleans. Some of 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]

The 1st Choctaw Battalion was ordered to disband on May 9, 1863.[24][30] After a number of 1st Choctaw Battalion members were captured near Ponchatoula on May 13 of 1863, the troops petitioned government officials at Richmond to transfer to Spann's Battalion of Independent Scouts.[24]

Spann's independent scouts

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Samuel G. Spann wrote about the history of his Confederate Indians in several newspaper accounts.

Samuel G. Spann was a Dallas County, Alabama planter when the War began.[31] In the first year of the war, he was a private in William Boyles' Dragoons.[31] After a year, he provided a substitute and joined General William J. Hardee's command as an aide.[31] Spann was likely commissioned as a captain at the time.

In 1862, Spann contacted several Mississippi Choctaw Indian settlements to recruit for his new command.[32] He likely met with tribal headmen: Incoshubba, Oneshehatta, Tonubba, Meashomba, Tomashuba, and Luockhoma.[33] While Spann was waiting for the Indians to recover from the measles, Spann joined Hardee for the campaign into Kentucky in the fall of 1862. Spann participated in the Battle of Perryville.

Spann's headquarters were at Mobile, Alabama. Spann also had a recruiting camp in Newton County, Mississippi. As scouts in Spann's battalion, the Mississippi Choctaws served in the Tuscaloosa, Alabama area in fall 1863. Their likely role was to track conscripts for Brigadier General Gideon J. Pillow. Although Spann's Battalion of Independent Scouts was disbanded on November 6 of 1863, Spann continued service with his battalion of Choctaw Indians.

Organization

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Mississippi Choctaws were enrolled in two separate and distinct battalions that had common members. The 1st Choctaw Battalion was based at Newton Station, Mississippi. Spann's Independent Scouts were at Mobile, Alabama. They later moved their headquarters to Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Spann's Independent Scouts were re-organized as Alabama's 18th Confederate Cavalry with only two companies remaining. All commissioned officers were white. The Indians had some non-commissioned officers, but most were privates. Captain John Harrison and his men fled to Jones County, Mississippi by April 1864.

  • 1st Choctaw Battalion (organizational life: February 1863-May 1863)
    • Field & Staff: Major John W. Pierce, Captain Nathan W. Slay (Adjutant), Captain Edward B. Scanlan (A.Q.M.), Sergeant William H. Dunlap (Q.M.), and Dr. Albert H. Puckett (Surgeon)
    • Companies: Company A (Captain Nathan W. Slay, Captain Simon F. Williams) and Company B (Captain Benjamin F. Duckworth)
    • Total: 101 men
  • Spann's Independent Scouts (organizational life: April 1863-November 1863)
    • Field & Staff: Major Samuel G. Spann, Lieutenant Edward M. Keith (Drill Master), Captain John C. Ransom (A.Q.M.), Captain William H. Jemison (A.Q.M.), and Sergeant William H. Dunlap (Q.M.)
    • Companies: Company A (Captain John C. Moore), Company B (Captain James M. Tindel), Company C (Captain Malcolm M. Burke), and Company D (Captain John G. Harrison)
  • Alabama's 18th Confederate Cavalry (organizational life: November 1863-June 1865)
    • Field & Staff: Major Samuel G. Spann
    • Companies: Company (Captain John C. Moore) and Company (Captain John G. Harrison)

Battles, skirmishes, and other actions

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Aftermath

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Peter P. Pitchlynn, whose American Indian name was Hatchootucknee or "Snapping Turtle," surrendered to the Union on behalf of the Choctaw Nation.

After years of warfare, the Choctaws in the Trans-Mississippi Theater become discouraged, and their support for the Confederacy waned.[34] Lieutenant Colonel Jackson McCurtain anticipated a disastrous division within the nation, so he wrote to Brigadier General John McNeil hoping to make peace.[34] McCurtain felt it would be impossible "to turn over" all Choctaws "at the same time."[34] However, given enough time, he felt that a surrender would succeed.

However, the Choctaw Nation was still dedicated to the Confederacy. A few citizens had become loyal to the Union and declared a new governor for the Choctaw Nation. They wanted recognition from the United States government, but the Union would not recognize their efforts at appeasement because the nation was "still de facto rebel."[35] The Choctaws continued their support for the Confederacy until its collapse.

Trans-Mississippi Theater

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On June 19, 1865, Principal Chief Peter P. Pitchlynn surrendered the military at Doaksville, Choctaw Nation.[36] The Choctaws laid down their arms, and the Union took control of the territory until a formal peace treaty was signed.

The following spring a Reconstruction treaty was drawn up by the United States. The Southern Treaty Commission crafted the 1866 Treaty with the Choctaw and Chickasaw.[37] The treaty had 51 articles. Some provisions in brief included:

  • declaration of permanent peace,[38]
  • amnesty granted for siding with Confederate States of America,[39]
  • slavery abolishment.[40]

The Choctaw delegation included Campbell LeFlore, John Page, James Riley, Alfred Wade, and Allen Wright. Also present were Peter P. Pitchlynn, Douglas H. Cooper, and Chickasaw delegates. The treaty was proclaimed in July 1866.

Western Theater

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John Blakeley, who was a private in Spann's Independent Scouts, wrote a number of affidavits for Indians who applied for a Mississippi pension.

In Meridian, Mississippi and Tuscaloosa, Alabama, the Indian Confederates surrendered after several years of service in the Confederacy. Some individuals may have served as early as 1861. Jack Amos, in his Mississippi pension, stated that he first enrolled in April 1861. The last of the Indian Confederates surrendered in May 1865.

Decades after the War, many Confederate veterans established U.C.V camps. Spann was elected commander of U.C.V. Camp Dabney H. Maury in Newton, Mississippi. John Blakeley, a white teenager during the War, was made camp adjutant and wrote about the Choctaw soldiers.

Blakeley wrote in The Meridian Press, a Meridian, Mississippi newspaper, concerning the few surviving Indian members of Camp Maury. He wrote: "On the first Saturday in February, 1901, Camp No. 1312 was organized with ... nineteen Indian braves ... If there is enough interest yet felt by our people for these unfortunate and only genuine Americans yet remaining in Mississippi and of noble record, will it be too much to ask you to please hand this to your excellent paper, the Press, and send a copy of it to Camp Dabney H. Maury."[41]

The veterans attended many national reunions. In 1903, Spann and some Indian veterans attended the New Orleans reunion. At the New Orleans reunion, Jack Amos was interviewed by a Louisiana journalist.

"FAMOUS INDIAN SCOUT ... Jack Amos of the Choctaw Tribe is Here. One of the Heroic Red Men of the Stormy Period. First With Pearce, and Later With Spann's Battalion. Mississippi Is Planning to Honor the Indian ... He is of the Choctaw tribe, and belonged to a heroic band of red men who gave splendid aid to the Confederacy, and who suffered much as a result of their loyalty to the Southern cause. Amos is now a citizen of Mississippi, and has resided in that State since the war. He is an attractive figure among the reunion visitors, and, while well advanced in years, is entering into the spirit of the occasion with a fine enthusiasm. He is a full-blooded Choctaw Indian, and is a native of Mississippi. Amos is now seventy-three years old. He talks well of himself and of the part he and other Indians played in the war."

— The Times-Democrat, Friday, May 22, 1903[33]

Jack Amos died a few years later in 1906.

Reconstruction

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Henry Crittenden was a Choctaw Nation slave who was freed after the war.

Reconstruction was particularly harsh for the Indian nations found west of the Mississippi. The Choctaw Nation was facing calamity with the loss of vast tracts of land, the "unrestricted colonization of freedmen among them," and the end of their autonomous tribal government.[42]

Not long after emancipation, the Choctaw Freedmen were "homeless and penniless."[1] Very few were literate which made them "helpless and dependent."[1]

Commemoration

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U.C.V. Camp Dabney H. Maury was planning to erect a monument for the Mississippi Choctaws participation during the Civil War.[43] However, this didn't happen for unknown reasons. But, state markers were placed in many of these historic areas decades after Camp Maury attempted to place a monument.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Flickinger, Robert Elliott (1914). "The Choctaw Freedmen". Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  2. ^ Debo, Angie (1934). "Life in the New Land". The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 78.
  3. ^ The War of the Rebellion, Series IV, Volume II. 1900. p. 353.
  4. ^ Nichols, David A. (1978). "Lincoln and the Southern Tribes 'Our Great Father at Washington Has Turned Against Us'". Lincoln and the Indians. Minnesota Historical Society Press. p. 28.
  5. ^ Nichols, David A. (1978). "Lincoln and the Southern Tribes 'Our Great Father at Washington Has Turned Against Us'". Lincoln and the Indians. Minnesota Historical Society Press. p. 25.
  6. ^ a b Nichols, David A. (1978). "Lincoln and the Southern Tribes 'Our Great Father at Washington Has Turned Against Us'". Lincoln and the Indians. Minnesota Historical Society Press. pp. 195–196.
  7. ^ a b Debo, Angie (1934). "Life in the New Land". The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 80–81.
  8. ^ a b c d e Debo, Angie (1934). "The Civil War and Reconstruction". The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 80.
  9. ^ Goodheart, Adam (February 9, 2011). "The Choctaw Confederates". Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  10. ^ Garrison, Webb (1995). "Padday Some Day". More Civil War Curiosities. Rutledge Hill Press. ISBN 9781558533660.
  11. ^ Nichols, David A. (1978). "Lincoln and the Southern Tribes 'Our Great Father at Washington Has Turned Against Us'". Lincoln and the Indians. Minnesota Historical Society Press. p. 29.
  12. ^ "Second Indian Cavalry Brigade". Retrieved 2020-06-22.
  13. ^ The War of the Rebellion, Series I, Volume XIII. 1885. p. 944.
  14. ^ "1st Regiment, Choctaw Mounted Rifles, CSA". Retrieved 2020-07-09.
  15. ^ Franzmann, Tom (1985). "Second Indian Cavalry Brigade". Retrieved 2017-07-25.
  16. ^ "Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma: 1880 - Jackson F. McCurtain". 1880. Archived from the original on February 2, 2009. Retrieved 2008-02-08.
  17. ^ "The Choctaw Warriors". Richmond Enquirer. December 17, 1861.
  18. ^ "Tushkahoma". The Alabama Beacon. April 4, 1862.
  19. ^ The War of the Rebellion, Series I, Volume XLI, Part III. 1893. pp. 970–971.
  20. ^ Hauptman, Laurence M. (1995). "The General, The Western Cherokee and the Lost Cause". Between Two Fires: American Indians in the Civil War. The Free Press. p. 47. ISBN 9780029141809.
  21. ^ "Col. Tandy Walker". Star-Vindicator. February 17, 1877.
  22. ^ "Brave Indians". The Newton Record. January 1, 1903.
  23. ^ McIntire, Carl (July 20, 1980). "Choctaw Rebels tracked down deserters during Civil War". Clarion-Ledger Jackson Daily.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ferguson, Robert. "Southeastern Indians During The Civil War". The Backwoodsman. Vol. 39, no. 2 (Mar/Apr 2018 ed.). Bandera, Texas: Charlie Richie Sr. pp. 63–65. Retrieved February 17, 2018.
  25. ^ Tucker, Leslie R. (2014). "The Final Stage". Brigadier General John Adams, CSA. McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 184.
  26. ^ Boggan, Greg (2005-02-06). "The Chunky Creek Train Wreck of 1863". Archived from the original on 2009-02-02. Retrieved 2017-06-22.
  27. ^ a b Kidwell, Clara (1995). "The Choctaws in Mississippi after 1830". Choctaws and Missionaries in Mississippi, 1818-1918. University of Oklahoma. p. 170. ISBN 0-8061-2691-4.
  28. ^ a b "The Affair at Ponchatoula". Mobile Advertiser And Register. March 29, 1863.
  29. ^ Spann, S. G. (December 1905). "Choctaw Indians As Confederate Soldiers". Confederate Veteran. XIII (12): 560 and 561.
  30. ^ "Jack Amos: Choctaw Indian was prominent figure in Newton County efforts during the Civil War". The Union Appeal. October 29, 2003.
  31. ^ a b c Spann, S.G. (March 7, 1900). "Confederate Choctaws". Anderson Intelligencer.
  32. ^ "A Timely Move and a Good One". The Eastern Clarion. August 8, 1862.
  33. ^ a b "Famous Indian Scout". The Times-Democrat. May 22, 1903.
  34. ^ a b c Debo, Angie (1934). "The Civil War and Reconstruction". The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 83.
  35. ^ Debo, Angie (1934). "The Civil War and Reconstruction". The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 84.
  36. ^ Debo, Angie (1934). "The Civil War and Reconstruction". The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 85.
  37. ^ "Treaty with Choctaw and Chickasaw, 1866" (PDF).
  38. ^ Treaty with Choctaw and Chickasaw, Article 1
  39. ^ Treaty with Choctaw and Chickasaw, Article 5
  40. ^ Treaty with Choctaw and Chickasaw, Article 2, 3
  41. ^ "Interesting Roster". The Meridian Press. March 23, 1903.
  42. ^ Debo, Angie (1934). "The Civil War and Reconstruction". The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 87.
  43. ^ "Famous Indian Scout in New Orleans". The Newton Record. May 28, 1903.
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