Czarina Conlan

Czarina Conlan
1906
Born Madeline Czarina Colbert
(1871-01-14)January 14, 1871
Colbert, in the Chickasaw Nation of Indian Territory
Died May 5, 1958(1958-05-05) (aged 87)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Nationality American
Other names Czarina Colbert
Occupation museum curator, Native American cultural preservationist, suffragist and indigenous rights activist
Years active 1919-1942
Known for first woman to be elected to a school board in Oklahoma and first woman to represent the Choctaw Nation in Washington, D.C.

Czarina Conlan (1871-1958) was a Choctaw-Chickasaw archivist, who curated at the Oklahoma Historical Society museum for 24 years. She founded the first woman's club in Indian Territory and served as the chair of the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Committee of the Oklahoma State Federation of Women's Clubs for 12 years. She was the first woman elected to serve on a school board in the state and though the Attorney General of Oklahoma ruled she could not serve, she defied the order and completed a two-year term on the Lindsay School Board. In 1928, she was appointed by an assembly of 400-500 Choctaw and Chickasaw tribe members from throughout Oklahoma to chair their convention and then to represent their interests in Washington, D.C. on the pending coal and asphalt resources bill. It was the first time a woman had been sent from either tribe as a representative for their tribe in Washington. She was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame in 1935.

Early life

Madeline Czarina Colbert[1] was born on January 14, 1871 in Colbert, in the Chickasaw Nation of Indian Territory[2] to Athenius (née Folsom) and James Allen Colbert.[3] Her father was of the Chickasaw people and involved in tribal affairs of the Chickasaw Nation. Colbert's paternal grandfather, Martin Colbert was involved in the negotiations for the Chickasaw removal from Mississippi to Indian Territory,[4] though he did not participate in the Trail of Tears, choosing to remain in Mississippi.[5] Her great-grandfather on her father's side, Levi Colbert, served as Andrew Jackson's standard-bearer at the Battle of New Orleans.[4] Colbert's mother was of Choctaw descent and the daughter of Rev. Israel Folsom, who was one of the first native preachers to work among the Choctaw.[6] Her great-grandfather, Nathaniel Folsom married Aiahnichih Ohoyoh a cousin of Mushulatubbee.[7]

Colbert attended local Chickasaw schools for a few years, a convent school, St. Xavier Academy, in Denison, Texas[8][9] and then studied at Baird College in Clinton, Missouri. Colbert went on to further her education at Mary Baldwin College[2] in Staunton, Virginia in 1889.[10] She married Michael Conlan on November 6, 1894 in Atoka, in the Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory[3] and subsequently, the couple had one child, a daughter Lottie.[11]

Career

In 1896, Conlan organized the first women’s club in Indian Territory, the Pioneer Club of Atoka.[12] In 1898, when the women's clubs of Oklahoma decided to come together as the Federation of Women's Clubs for Oklahoma and Indian Territories, Conlan's group joined the federation.[13] In 1899, she was the only delegate from Indian Territory to attend the convention of the General Federation of Women's Clubs (GFWC) in Los Angeles.[14][note 1] At the time, the GFWC was deeply divided on the issue of race and did not come to a resolution to resolve whether the organization would be for "whites only" until 1902.[17] In 1903, when a group of ten Indian Territory women's clubs withdrew from the Oklahoma Federation to form the Federation of Women's Clubs of Indian Territory, Conlan was elected their first president and the group was admitted to GFWC in 1904.[13] In 1908, a year after Oklahoma statehood, the Indian women's group re-merged with the Oklahoma Women's Club.[18][13] She served for twelve years as the chair of the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Committee of the Oklahoma State Federation of Women's Clubs (OSFWC).[12][19] The committee was primarily concerned with health issues for women and conducted hygiene classes at Indian schools and consulted in maternity issues.[18] In 1926, the organization, under Conlan's direction, prepared an index of Native American cultural contributions.[19] In 1932, she was elected as the Director of the OSFWC, which placed her on the national board of the GFWC.[11]

Conlan was one of the leading suffragists in Oklahoma.[20] She authored a resolution for the national convention of the GFWC[21] held in Boston in 1908[20] for women to press state legislatures to allow women to serve on school boards if law did not prohibit it.[21] Conlan was the first woman to serve on a school board in Oklahoma, having been elected to the post on the Lindsay School Board a decade before women's suffrage was granted.[11] Though elected in 1909,[20] the state Attorney General determined that she could not serve. Conlan rallied other women and served in defiance of his order[21] for two years.[11] She later ran for the post of Commissioner of Charities and Corrections in 1914.[22]

In 1913, Conlan worked on a Century Chest Project for the Ladies Aid Society of the First English Lutheran Church of Oklahoma City. She was responsible for gathering items from various Oklahoma tribes, including books and documents in their native languages as well as cultural artifacts. The time capsule was opened in 2013 and displayed at the Historical Society Museum.[1] In 1919, Conlan began working as the curator of the Native American collection of the museum run by the Oklahoma Historical Society.[18] Because of her ancestry, Conlan was often able to secure gifts and items for the museum collection, that others might not have been able to acquire.[14] She served as the main collector of Native American artifacts and documents for the museum until 1942, when she was dismissed from the post.[23]

In 1928, a convention of Choctaw and Chickasaw tribe members from throughout Oklahoma was held in Ardmore. The purpose of the convention was to discuss both financial issues and the burdens being placed upon them due to passage and implementation of the Indian Citizenship Act and the Burke Act. Since their tribal governments had been abolished, the tribes were concerned about the inability to secure funds that were due them for their coal and asphalt lands to provide for their tribe members. Those elected as committee representatives were men, except two women, Conlan for the Choctaw tribe and Estelle Ward for the Chickasaw tribe. Conlan was selected as chair of the convention.[24] The committee met to prepare the recommendations and broke with precedent, sending Conlan and Estelle Chisholm Ward to Washington, D.C. to argue in favor of passage of a bill proposed by U.S. House Representative Wilburn Cartwright for sale of the coal and asphalt holdings, as well as continuing the restrictions of selling Indian lands. It was the first time that women had been sent to Washington as representatives of their tribes.[25] In 1944, Congress finally passed a bill authorizing the sale of the coal and asphalt lands, but there were factions of Choctaw and Chickasaw who were discontented that it had taken so long for their leadership to distribute the funds from the long-promised sale. In the political battle which then ensued between Harry J. W. Belvin and Chief William A. Durant, Conlan threw her support behind Durant, who lost the election.[26]

Conlan died on 5 May 1958, in Oklahoma City following a brief illness and was buried at the Fairlawn Cemetery.[9] The Western History Collections at the University of Oklahoma maintains a collection of memorabilia called the "Madeline Czarina Colbert Conlan Collection". which focuses on Choctaw and other Native American documents.[27]

Awards and recognition

In 1933, Conlan was nominated to receive the inaugural Indian Achievement Medal of the Indian Council Fire, though she did not win the award,[28] she was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame in 1935.[12][29]

Notes

  1. It is unclear if the convention in question was a state convention or if the year is incorrect and it was a national convention. California formed their state organization in 1899 and had a statewide convention in that year. They did not host a national convention until 1902.[15][16][17]

References

Citations

Bibliography

  • Atkinson, James R. (2004). Splendid Land, Splendid People: The Chickasaw Indians to Removal. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-5033-8.
  • Clark, J. S. (January 4, 1938). "Interview with Elizabeth King Cogill" (PDF). University of Oklahoma Digital Libraries. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  • Cushman, Horatio Bardwell (1962). History of the Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Natchez Indians. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3127-6.
  • Green, Richard (September 8, 2014). "Jimmy Belvin and the Rise of Tribal Sovereignty, 1944-48". Chickasaw. Ada, Oklahoma: The Official Site of the Chickasaw Nation. Archived from the original on January 11, 2015. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  • Littlefield Jr., Daniel F.; Parins, James W., eds. (1995). Native American writing in the Southeast. Jackson, Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-61703-441-1.
  • Local government publication (1936). Principal Women of America: being the biographies of American women who stand pre-eminent in their country. 2. London, England: Mitre Press. OCLC 656133682.
  • Nichols, Max (March 26, 2014). "Items in The Century Chest to be exhibited at Historical Society". Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: NewsOK. Retrieved 7 August 2016.
  • Smith, Mary Jane (Winter 2010). "The Fight to Protect Race and Regional Identity within the General Federation of Women's Clubs, 1895-1902". The Georgia Historical Quarterly. Savannah, Georgia: Georgia Historical Society. 94 (4): 479–513. ISSN 0016-8297. JSTOR 41304225.
  • Southwell, Kristina L., ed. (2002). Guide to Manuscripts in the Western History Collections of the University of Oklahoma. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3473-4.
  • Sprague, Donovin Arleigh (2007). Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-4147-1.
  • Wilson, Linda D. (2009). "Oklahoma Federation of Women's Clubs". Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: Oklahoma Historical Society. Archived from the original on April 15, 2015. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  • "Chickasaws and Choctaws to Send Delegation to Capital". Ardmore, Oklahoma: The Daily Ardmoreite. March 25, 1928. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspaperarchive.com.
  • "Club Women Index Arts Background of Indians". Joplin, Missouri: The Joplin Globe. AP. July 21, 1926. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "Conlan, Czarina: 1935". Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: Oklahoma Hall of Fame. 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  • "Do the Women Want to Vote?". Ardmore, Oklahoma: The Daily Ardmoreite. AP. May 24, 1909. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "Do You Know That?". Mary Baldwin News Letter. Staunton, Virginia: Alumni Association of Mary Baldwin College. 3 (5). April 1928. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  • "Holds Office Through Sentiment". Ardmore, Oklahoma: The Daily Ardmoreite. AP. June 29, 1910. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "Indians Break Precedents to Send Women Representatives". Ardmore, Oklahoma: The Daily Ardmoreite. April 3, 1928. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspaperarchive.com.
  • "Indian Women of Oklahoma Active Workers in Clubs". Decatur, Illinois: The Decatur Daily Review. AP. December 13, 1927. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "Mrs. Czarina Colbert Conlan". Sallisaw, Oklahoma: The Star-Gazette. July 10, 1914. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "Noted Oklahoma Woman Is Here". Portsmouth, New Hampshire: The Portsmouth Herald. August 20, 1925. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "State Birthday is Remembered". Miami, Oklahoma: The Miami Daily News-Record. November 17, 1935. Retrieved 9 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "State Briefs". Miami, Oklahoma: The Miami Daily News-Record. February 23, 1942. Retrieved 9 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "(untitled)". Los Angeles, California: The Los Angeles Times. May 19, 1899. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "Who is the Greatest Indian of Today?". Van Buren, Missouri: The Current Local. AP. August 31, 1933. Retrieved 4 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • "Women's Club Leader's Rites Set Thursday". Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: The Daily Oklahoman. May 7, 1958. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspaperarchive.com.
  • "Woman's Club Officers". Los Angeles, California: The Los Angeles Times. June 29, 1901. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via Newspapers.com.
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