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1 Guy Nichols, et al., Judge Isaac C. Parker: Myths and Legends aside [1] (1995)

handle is hein.death/jicpml0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 







       Judge Isaac C. Parker


Myths and Legends Aside


  Time  will have little effect on the legacy of Judge
Isaac Charles Parker. The man  and the myth loom
over Fort Smith and, indeed, much of Oklahoma, and
his influence upon their destinies still can be felt today.
As with many  great men, the image does not quite fit
the man. The people of today owe much to newspapers
of the 1880's and 1890's, for in these newspapers can be
found the day-to-day realities of a man often called the
most powerful judge in American judicial history.


  Isaac Parker was a  legitimate federal judge duly
appointed by President Ulysses S. Grant. In fact, it was
the  president who approached  Parker to take the
position. One popular misconception is that Parker
was some variety of self-appointed official who decided
to take up residence at Fort Smith because he saw a
great potential to hang people.
  This  is pure myth. As events would prove, it was
Parker's judicial legitimacy coupled with his personal
honor, integrity and devotion to duty that stemmed the
tides of crime and exploitation in the Indian Country.
  In  1882  at Washington,  D.C., certain factions
wanting   to  increase their own   gains  through
exploitation of the Indian tribes and their lands west of
Fort Smith constantly besieged legislative ears at the
nation's Capitol. The message was always the same:
There  are too many hangings in Fort Smith. This
proves there is too little civilization in the Indian
Country. If this area was made an organized territory,
the problem would be solved.
  Simplistically, there were  two  flaws  in  this
reasoning.
  The  first flaw was that the word civilization had
different meanings to different people. To those living
in the Indian Country, civilization -meant further
encroachment  by outsiders upon lands guaranteed by
treaty to the Five Civilized Tribes. To land speculators
and  others, the term civilization was the excuse
needed to gain entrance to the riches within Indian
Country-land,  minerals and timber-wealth that was
protected by treaties and laws enforced only by the
Federal Court for the Western District of Arkansas.
  The  second flaw was that those voicing the need for
territorialization never really got around to explaining
how  long-standing problems, particularly crime, in
Indian Country  would be  solved by a lone act ot
Congress.


  Newspapers across the country, many with direct ties
to railroads, land speculators or other similar interests,
took up  the cause of territorialization and decried
Parker's violent court and  the court's officers,
portraying them as bloodthirsty and cruel.
  There  were even  hints that residents of Indian
Country  needed some  form of protection from the
gallows. The answer, as these newspapers were quick
to note, was congressional legislation making Indian
Country an organized territory. Once the territory was
established, other courts with other judges could be
created to take over the duties of the Federal Court for
the Western District of Arkansas.
  Privately, it was believed that once in place these new
judges could  be  easily persuaded to ignore  the
precedents set by Judge Parker's rulings and side with
outside interests.
  Parker realized that he and his court were being used
as propaganda vehicles for those wishing to exploit the
Indian lands: However, what really concerned him was
what was taking place in Congress. Legislators looking
west from their vantage point in Washington saw only
the gallows on  the horizon and  not the political
foundation upon which  it stood-a foundation based
entirely upon solemn  treaties ratified by Congress.
These treaties and the other federal laws of the land
were  being enforced in Indian Country by Parker's
court. And it was by enforcement of these treaties and
laws that exploitation was slowed.


Judge Isaac C. Parker shortly before his death in 1896.


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