I find it interesting how over and over it is stated how the Modoc's were mistreated by their enemies the Klamath's but how the truth is denied by so many.
My wish is someday soon that the truth will be told to all and we will finally receive some of our homeland back so we can fulfill the wishes of our Ancestors.
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13 REPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF INDIAN AFFAIRS
THE CAUSES WHICH LED TO THE MODOC WAR. October 14, 1864, a
treaty was concluded with the Klamath and Modoc tribes and Yahooskin- band of
Snake India ns in Oregon, by the first article of which said Indians ceded to
the United States all their right, title, and claim to all the country claimed
by them, and accepted a reservation described in said article by natural
boundaries, upon which they agreed and bound themselves to locate immediately
after the ratification of' the treaty. The ratification of this treaty was
advised and consented to by the Senate, July 2, 1866, and the same was
proclaimed by the President February 17, 1870. At the date of proclamation the
Modocs were found on their reservation, where they remained until April, 1870,
and then left for their cainp on Lost River. There is evidence that Captain
Jack and his band were prepared at this time to remain upon the reservation and
settle down in the way of civilization, if there had been ordinary
encouragement and assistance, and if the Klamath’s, who largely outnumbered
Captain Jack's band, and who were their hereditary enemies, had allowed them so
to do. This band began to split rails for their farms, and in other ways to
adopt civilized habits; but the Klamath’s demanded tribute from them for the
land they were occupying, which the Modocs were obliged to render. Captain Jack
then removed to another part of the reservation; end began again to try to live
by cultivating the ground. But he was followed by the same spirit of hostility
by the Klamath’s, from which he does not seem to have been protected by the
agent. The issue of rations seems also to have been suspended for want of
funds, and for these reasons Captain Jack and his band returned to their old
home on Lost River, where they became a serious annoyance to the whites, who
had in the meanwhile settled on their ceded lands. This annoyance led to
serious apprehensions on the part of the military. Authorities, and under date
of the 19th of March, 1872, the honorable Secretary of War transmitted to this
Department copies of correspondence between the military in regard to the
matter. A copy of this correspondence was sent to Superintendent O’neal by the
Indian Office, April 12, 1872, with directions to have the Modocs removed, if
practicable, to their reservation; and if removed, to see that they were
properly protected from the Klamath’s. The superintendent was then instructed,
in case they could not be removed, to report the practicability of locating
them at some other point. The superintendent reported on the 17th June that
their reservation was the best place for them to be located, but that he did
not believe it practicable to remove them without using the military for that
purpose, and that if they should resist, he doubted whether there was force
enough in the country to compel them to go. In reply, the superintendent was
directed, July 6, 1872, to remove them to the Klamath reservation. The attempt
to execute this order resulted in a conflict between the Modocs and the troops
and the white settlers. For the purpose of examining into the same, and, if
possible, to procure a peaceable solution of the difficulties, a commission was
appointed by the Secretary of the Interior in January last. This commission, as
finally composed, consisted of A. B. Meacham, late superintendent Indian
affairs for Oregon, L. S. Dyar, agent for the Klamath agency, and Rev. E.
Thomas, and by direction of the Secretary of the Interior, under date of March
22, 1873, they were put under the direction of General Canby. While engaged in
a conference with Captain Jack, chief of the Modocs, and other representative
men of the tribe, on the 11th of April, General Canby and Dr. Thomas were
brutally murdered by these Indians, and Mr. Meacham severely wounded. Thus
ended the negotiations with the Modocs, who, after seven months'
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14 REPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF INDIAN AFFAIRS.
Fighting,
were subdued by the military, and Captain Jack and three of his principal men
were tried by court-martial and executed. The remnant of this Modoc band has
been transferred to the Indian Territory, and located for the present on the
Quapaw Indian reservation, where they have gladly availed themselves of the
privilege of putting their children in school, and have entered upon industrial
life with such readiness and good will as to warrant the conclusion that if
these Indians could have had this opportunity of gaining their support out of
soil upon which an ordinary white man could get a living, and had received just
treatment, there would have been no cause of trouble with them. The report of
the commission, prepared by the surviving member, A. B. Meacham, is herewith submitted,
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