To the Most Honorable President of the United States of America
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Our Most Solemn and Respectful Greetings:
We the General Council, being the governing body, of the Mikasuki Tribe of Seminole
Indians in the State of Florida, have met in formal council in the Everglades in this time
of decision to out Tribe and appeal to you as a great leader of your people to dispense
the justice which will preserve our freedom, property rights and independence.
We, (*)unconquered, have been at peace with your Nation
for over one hundred years. Our history tells us that in the past treaties have been made
with the Nations of Great Britain and Spain, recognizing and entitling us to vast portions
of lands in what is now known as the State of Florida.
When your Nation in 1821 made a treaty with the country of Spain you agreed to
recognize our property rights in such of those lands that at that time were recognized by
Spain. Subsequently your Nation made treaties with our independent Nation, all of which
were dishonored by your Nation either by failure to act or by provoked wars.
Under the last treaty your Nation made with our Nation we were entitled to all of those
lands as shown by the "Map of the Seat of War in Florida compiled by order of Brig.
General Zachary Taylor, principally from the Surveys and Reconnais- sances of the Officers
of the U. S. Army by Capt. John MacKay and Lt. J. E. Blake" in 1839; as well as the
lands due us under various other treaties.
We, the Mikasuki Tribe of the Seminole Nation, have made no requests of any kind upon
your government since the McComb Treaty of 1839. We have never asked for nor taken any
assistance, in money or in any other thing, from your Nation.
We have for over one hundred years lived on lands in the Everglades, some of which were
established as Indian Reservations, and for over one hundred years we have not been
discontent with our relationship, because you let us alone and we left you alone. For over
one hundred years we have not allowed the conduct we have received from your government to
disturb us in spite of many insults to our Nation, chief of which has been the deliberate
confusion of our Mikasuki Tribe of Seminole Indians, governed by our General Council, with
the Muskogee Tribe of Seminole Indians in order to avoid recognition of our tribal
government, independence, rights and customs.
Now, and for the first time in over one hundred years, we are obliged to address
ourselves to your government.
There has been filed before the Indian Claims Commission in your government, without
our authority, a claim, supposedly by us, and supposedly to compensate our Tribe with
money for lands taken from us by the United States Government in the past.
We want no
money.
(emphasis supplied)
. . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....
. . . . . We have expressed our wishes, our customs and our view as a Tribe through
our General Council which governs us to your government officials but have been ig- nored,
given little courtesy and much insult, had your local Indian Agent interfer- ing in our
internal affairs and had your Secretary of the Interior tell us to change the form of
government under which we have lived for centuries.
We have, and have had for centuries, our own culture, our own customs, our own
government, our own language, and our own way of life which is different from the
government, the culture, the customs, the language, and the way of life of the White Man.
We do not say that we are superior or inferior to the White Man and we do not say that the
White Man is superior or inferior to us.
We do say that we are not White Men but Indians, do not wish to become White Men but
wish to remain Indians, and have an outlook on all of these things different from the
outlook of the White Man. We do not wish to own lands because our land is for all of us.
We live on our land, which is the land of all of our Tribe, and we live from our land
which is the land of all of our Tribe. We have failed to have your Indian Agent or your
Secretary of the Interior or your other government offici- als understand our outlook.
We are therefore solemnly and respectfully requesting that you appoint a special
representative to act for you, who is not connected with any branch of your government,
who is fair and impartial, and who will be instructed by you to meet with us so that we
may make ourselves understood to him, so that he may try to under- stand us, and so that a
satisfactory agreement can be reached between your Nation and our Nation on the
preservation of the lands to which we are entitled under all past treaties, under the law
of nations, and under justice; and the recognition of our tribal government, the General
Council, so that we and you may live together in this land which was all once our land.
Signed this 26 day of February 1954, by the General Council.
(by their X)
Sam Jones Micco Ingraham Billie Jimmie Billie
Oscar Hoe Frank Charlie Jimmie Henry
Willie Jim George Osceola Jack Clay
Translated, interpreted and witnessed . . . .