PARTIAL BIBLIOGRAPHY ON OKLAHOMA
Lengthy discussion of Indian Affairs. Both branches of Congress. Congressional Record for 1914. Jan., 22; Feb., 10, 11, 12, 13, 17, 16, 17, 19, 20, 26, 28; March, 10, 11, 12, 21, 26, 27, 28, 31; Apr., 24, 28, 29; May 4; also Dec., 20, 1913.
Detailed reviews of satisfactory conditions of Five Civilized Tribes; statistics of some; need of protection; legislation recommended. Board of Indian Commissioners reports to President and Secretary of Interior. 1869–1890
Letters expressing the favorable cooperation indorsing the work of, or urging the retention of District Agents in the Five Civilized Tribes. Washington 1912. Printed for the use of the Committee on Indian Affairs.
Choctaw-Chickasaw Tribal Affairs. Patrick J. Hurley. Thirty-first Annual Report Lake Mohonk Conference, P. 29. 1913.
Toward “Restricted” and “Unrestricted” Indians of Five Civilized Tribes, Should the Law and its Administration be the same?—William H. Murray. Thirty-first Annual Report Lake Mohonk Conference. P. 35. 1913.
Memorial of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, Relative to the Rights of the Mississippi Choctaws. Submitted for consideration in connection with H. R. 19213. 1913.
Five Civilized Tribes, Conditions—George Vaux, Jr. The Red Man. Dec., 1912. P. 135.
Report of the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes to the Secretary of the Interior. June 30, 1912.
The Reorganized Schools in the Five Tribes.—J. P. Brown. Twenty-eighth Annual Report Lake Mohonk Conference, 1910. P. 79.
Report on School Taxation in Indian Territory. House of Representatives Doc. No. 34. Fifty-eighth Congress, 3rd Session, Dec. 6, 1907.
Education Among the Five Civilized Tribes.—J. P. Brown. Quarterly Journal of the Soc. Amer. Indians. Oct.-Dec., 1913. P. 416.
Veto Message of the President of the United States, without approval Senate Bill 7978, entitled “An Act Relating to inherited estates in the Five Civilized Tribes in Oklahoma.” Senate Doc. 899, 62nd Congress, 2nd Session, August 6, 1912.
Laws and Regulations, Relating to Indians and their Lands.—Oscar H. Lipps. 1913.
Suppressing the Liquor Traffic in Indian Territory and Oklahoma.—William E. Johnson. Twenty-fifth Report Lake Mohonk Conference, 1907. P. 27.
Indian Appropriation Bill, Hearings before the Committee on Indian Affairs, U. S. Senate. Parts 1, 2, 7, and 5. Ending June 30, 1915.
Hearing before Committee on Indian Affairs of the U. S. Senate. Appropriation Bill. Jan. 28 to Feb. 10, 1905.
Suits in Court of Claims by the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians. “To authorize the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations to bring suit in the Court of Claims and for other Purposes.” Doc. No. 1010, 62nd Congress, 3rd Session. 1913.
The Grace Cox Inheritance Case. Decision of Comm. of Indian Affairs which relates to the Determination of Heirs of Deceased Indians. Jan. 22. 1914.
Letter from Dept. of Interior to Chairman of the Committee on Indian Affairs, transmitting detailed statement of all expenditures and disbursements from various funds on account of the Five Civilized Tribes from 1908 to 1911 inclusive. Senate, 62d Congress, 2d Session, June 30. 1911.
The U. S. Government and the Indian Problem.—Hon James S. Sherman. Twenty-seventh Annual Conference Lake Mohonk, 1909. P. 74.
Status and Needs of the Five Civilized Tribes. Thirty-first Annual Report Lake Mohonk Conference, 1913. P. 16.
The Need of Publicity in Indian Affairs.—John M. Oskisen. Twenty-fourth Annual Report Lake Mohonk Conference, 1906. P. 38.
Indian Territory Tribes. The Cherokees, Chapter VIII. Pp. 257–297. Indian Territory pp. 425–431. Century of Dishonor.—Helen Hunt Jackson. 1886.
The Five Civilized Tribes—Why They Employ Attorneys.—Speech of Hon. William H. Murray, Congressional Record, No. 78, Vol. 51. Feb. 11, 1914.
Oklahoma Red Book, 1909–14. Oklahoma City.
Fort Sill Indians, Report of Condition of.—William H. Ketcham, Member Board of Indian Commissioners, Jan. 5, 1914.
The Shawnee Indians: Their Customs, Traditions, and Folk-lore.—Rev. Jacob Spencer. Kansas City Historical Society, 1907–1908. P. 382.
Reports of the Dawes Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes. 1894–1895.
Five Civilized Tribes. Handbook of American Indians. Vol. I. P. 463.
Seminole. Handbook of American Indians. Vol. II. P. 500.
Creek. Handbook of American Indians. Vol. I. P. 362.
Choctaw. Handbook of American Indians. Vol. I. P. 288.
Chickasaw. Handbook of American Indians. Vol. I. P. 260.
Cherokee. Handbook of American Indians. Vol. I. P. 245.
Sank and Fox Agency, Oklahoma. Report of the Department of the Interior. 1900. P. 348.
Indian Territory. Fourth Annual Report of the Board of Indian Commissioners. 1872. P. 14.
Osages. Third Annual Report of the Board of Indian Commissioners. 1871. P. 5.
Cherokees, General Condition of the Eastern. Twenty-eighth Annual Report of the Board of Indian Commissioners. 1896. P. 13.
Choctaws and Chickasaws. Fifth Annual Report of the Board of Indian Commissioners. 1873. P. 52.
First to Fifth Annual Reports of the Commissioner of Charities and Corrections of the State of Oklahoma. Dec. 10, 1908 to 1913.—Kate Barnard.
McMurray Contracts. Hearings Before the Committee on Indian Affairs. U. S. Senate, 63rd Congress. First Session on H. R. 1917. pp. 338–353, 354–456.
Our National Problem. The Sad Condition of the Oklahoma Indians.—Warren K. Moorehead. 1913.
Kiowa Agency, Anadarko, Oklahoma. General Condition of Agency Indians.—Report of Department of the Interior, 1904. P. 293.
Habits of the Indians. Kiowa Agency, Oklahoma.—Department Interior Report, 1900. P. 332.
Kiowa Agency, General Condition of the Indians of.—Report of the Department of the Interior, 1902. P. 287.
Pawnee Agency, Oklahoma.—Report of the Department of the Interior, 1904. P. 302.
Cantonment Training School, Oklahoma.—Report of the Department of the Interior, 1904. P. 283.
Cantonment Training School, Oklahoma.—Report of the Department of the Interior, 1903. P. 252.
Mott Report Relative to Indian Guardianships in the Probate Courts of Oklahoma.—Honorable Charles H. Burke. House of Representatives, Dec. 13, 1912.