Equity Case 7071 Searching For Descendants
Over the years many people have approached me about Equity
Case 7071 and the people who sought to be transferred from the Freedmen Roll to
the Chickasaw or Choctaw by Blood Roll. When I first became aware of this case
that had my great grandmother as the lead litigant I was intrigued that so many
people claimed to have Native American ancestry.
At first I was pretty much a non-believer because a lot of
people will tell you their grandmother was a full blood this and that, with
high cheek bones and long hair, I dismissed it and went on about my business. It
wasn’t until my father began telling me stories about “his” Indian grandmother
that I took an interest just to humor him in the idea of him having Native
American ancestry.
It was by accident I became engrossed and involved in
research that is now going on thirty years because when I saw the name of his
Indian grandmother in the book written by Dr. Daniel F. Littlefield Jr., I was
not convinced my father was not making the story up.
Once I read about Bettie Ligon and her claim to be the
daughter of Robert Howard Love a Chickasaw Indian I began to research the story
and cut my father some slack on this incredible story he recalled from his
childhood. The more and more I researched the more and more information I
discovered.
Equity Case 7071 Cover Page |
I have tracked down documents in the Congressional Record, law libraries, historical societies, courthouses
and newspapers from all over the country to research the reasons and documents
that would support the claim of more than fifteen hundred individuals seeking acknowledgement
and the rights of a Chickasaw or Choctaw Indian by blood.
Daily Ardmoreite April 14, 1907 |
In the course of my research I’ve uncovered many documents
that tend to demonstrate the truth in their claims and the extent the
Chickasaw, Choctaw Nations went to deny these individuals their rights as
citizens. I discover how complicit the Department of Interior was in condoning
a racist custom of ignoring the genealogical ancestry of people who possessed
Chickasaw or Choctaw ancestry based on the antebellum notion that a person’s “race”
is predicated on the “race of their mother. If that individual had a mother
that was enslaved, then the only conclusion they could reach was that child did
not, did not derive any genetic material from their father.
So it is time to reach out to the descendants of the men,
women and children who appear on Equity case 7071; Bettie Ligon, et al.,
Plaintiffs v Douglass H Johnson, et al., green McCurtain, et al., and James R.
Garfield, Secretary of the Interior, Defendants.
These people never really had their day in court. It was the
decision of one man; Webster Ballinger who decided that when it came time to
file a brief so he could argue what was once described as the” most important suit
that was ever filed with the clerk of the United States district court since the
establishment of the citizens tribunal is that of Bettie Ligon on behalf of
herself and over 1,500 other freedmen of the Choctaw and Chickasaw nations.”
Today, the Department of Interior is using the same language
that was used in 1907 to justify the continued practice of dismissing
applications for a CDIB card to establish a person “Indian blood.” In an article written April 14, 1907 in the
Daily Ardmoreite the attorneys for the claimants on Equity Case 7071 stated; “the
Five Civilized Tribes adopted a rule whereby they declared all persons
possessed of negro blood regardless of the quantum of Indian blood, to be
negroes only and entitled only to such share in the tribal properties as was
accorded to ex-slaves.”
The article further states, the commission adopted a rule
that this class of persons were entitled to only such property rights as were
their mothers going back to the old ante-bellum rule which applied to slaves
and which applies nowhere in this country at this time, the status of the
individual depended upon the status of the mother.”
Department of the Interior CDIB Rejection Letter 2017 |
In other words there was no consideration that the claims by “freedmen” of having a Chickasaw or Choctaw father was used to evaluate if
someone had Indian blood. Based on that custom, now more than one hundred years later he record of their Indian fathers was never going to be
included in deciding if the descendants of these men and women would ever
receive the rights and privileges of citizenship in the nation of their
ancestor’s birth.
Oh, and by the way, this decision also meant that these individuals would not receive the customary three-hundred and twenty acres of land that was given to someone with Chickasaw or Choctaw blood.
Oh, and by the way, this decision also meant that these individuals would not receive the customary three-hundred and twenty acres of land that was given to someone with Chickasaw or Choctaw blood.
That is no different than the letters sent to descendants of
people on Equity Case 7071 from the Department of Interior; “Whether a person
should have been included on the rolls is irrelevant, the fact is that they
were not an “that ends the matter.”
The courts, the Department of the Interior, Congress and the
Chickasaw and Choctaw Nations have based their entire decision making process
on the racist ante-bellum theory that a person’s race is predicated on their
enslaved mother; “and that ends the matter?”
Does it?
I would like to hear from those who have an ancestor on
Equity Case 7071 and what their thoughts are concerning the continued adherence
to a slave era custom?
I would like to know who has applied for a CDIB card and
have been rejected.
I would really like to know if we have the wherewithal to
stand up to the Chickasaw and Choctaw Nation as well as the United States
government to demonstrate that this bit of their past will not stand and that
does not end the matter!
I can be reached at videogriot@gmail.com
If you have researched your ancestor(s) and know their name
and Dawes Card Number please forward that information.
And if you have an image of that ancestor and would like to
share it I would greatly appreciate putting a face to the people of Equity Case
7071.
Thanks in advance.
Terry LIGON
Great grandson of Bettie LOVE-LIGON
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