Page:The Indian History of the Modoc War.djvu/205

 R, Supt.

Reservation. They were boys at the time of the Modoc War. Two others are here that was born near Seneca, Mo. Amos Kisk and Parker Hubbard ; the above mentioned people are all married, most of them has large families. The other few that are now at Ouapaw, Oklahoma, may come to Oregon to live in the future as they have that privilege. There is also one woman survivor. Her name is One-Eyed Dixie. She lives near the Yainax, Klamath, Oregon, Reservation.

One-Eyed Dixie. Present day. Photo taken at the Snake Camp, Klamath Indian Reservation, near Ely, Oregon, where she now resides with her daughter.

There was a bill passed (No. 306 H. R. 16743) that the remnants of Capt. Jack's band of Modocs, together with the descendants, should be restored to the rolls of the Klamath Agency in Oregon, that they should be allotted as all other Indians on said reservation, that they be accorded all the rights and privileges of all other Indians enrolled at the Klamath Agency, Oregon; approved March 3, 1909. They can sell their lands at Quapaw if they want to or lease their allotments,