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August 1991, BISHINIK,
page 4
Learn
your tribal history
Tolls
In 1854, the Choctaw
Council allowed for toll gates. The rates were as follows:
"For each four wheeled wagon, or their vehicle, drawn by four
or more horses, mules, or oxen with driver, the sum of fifty
cents; for each four wheeled wagon, or other vehicle drawn by one
or two horses, mules or oxen, the sum of twenty-five cents; for
each man and horse, the sum of ten cents; and for each animal in
every drove of cattle, horses, mules, hogs, or sheep, one
cent."
Roadwork
Under a law passed by the
General Council of the Choctaw Nation in 1854, all free males
between the ages of eighteen and fifty years and all United States
citizens, licensed mechanics and merchants, living in the Nation
were required to work six days out of every year on the public
roads or pay a fine of fifty cents per day. All schoolteachers and
farmers belonging to thc different institutions in the Nation,
students in the schools, and doctors, were exempt from working on
the roads.
Farming
Once in Indian Territory
the Five Civilized tribes began applying the farming skills used
in their former homelands in the southeastern U.S. Early in the
nineteenth century the Choctaws learned to grow cotton in their
Mississippi homeland. They brought this skill into the Choctaw
Nation of southeastern Indian Territory, and planted the first
cotton crop as early as 1825. Cotton farming was well established
along the Red and Arkansas Rivers by the 1840s. The farmers used
the steamboats which traveled up the Arkansas and Red Rivers to
market their cotton.
Military Post
Ft. Towson was originally
established in 1824 to protect a new frontier line and to
establish federal authority on the international boundary with
Mexico.
Ft. Towson's major
military role came during the war with Mexico (1846-1848). By the
close of this conflict, Towson's place as a frontier outpost was
preempted with the establishment of forts farther to the west and
its garrison was reduced drastically.
In 1854 Fort Towson was
abandoned by the U.S. War Department and turned over to the
Department of the Interior, which almost immediately turned the
property over to the Choctaw Nation. In 1854 the Choctaw Council
made Fort Towson the capital of the Choctaw Nation, and tribal
councils were held there in 1855 and 1856. Many of the buildings
at the fort, including those on officer's row, were subsequently
destroyed by fire in 1857. Fort Towson's last use appears to have
been during the Civil War, when it served as the headquarters of
the Confederate forces operating in the Indian Territory and as a
refuge for Indians loyal to the Confederacy.
The site of Fort Towson
has been under the control of the Oklahoma Historical Society
since 1968.
Written
Constitution
The Choctaw was the first
of the Five Civilized Tribes granted a domain in Oklahoma. The
nation was organized in 1834 under a written constitution, the
first constitution written within the boundaries of the state,
adopted in a council held on the location which was named the
Capital. The founding of a separate government by the Chickasaws
in the western part of the Choctaw Nation in 1856, called for
another Choctaw constitution, known as the Skullyville
Constitution. Opposition to the Skullyville Constitution resulted
in a convention of Choctaw citizens held in 1860, at Doaksville
where necessary charges were made and a constitution finally
drafted, referred to as the Doaksville Constitution, which
remained in full force and effect in the Nation until 1907.
Indian Brigade
In January of 1864, when
the first Choctaw-Chickasaw Indian Brigade was formed with Col.
Tandy Walker in command, the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations in
their alliance with the Confederate government had reserved the
privilege of limiting their activities to the Indian Territory.
Regardless of this reservation, the the spring of 1964, by it's
own choice, Col. Walker's brigade was transferred to Arkansas for
service with the army of General Sterling Price and actively
participated in the battle of Poison Springs, on April 19, 1864.
The views and opinions expressed in this page are strictly
those of the page author.
The contents of this page have not been reviewed or approved by
the University of Minnesota.
Articles From the Choctaw newspaper
Bishinik.
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