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Logos Oil Company Vs. Department Of The Interior, 1947-08-04 - 1981-12-03

 Item — Box: 38, Folder: 18
Identifier: CAC_CC_109_5_38_18_0025
Logos Oil Company Vs. Department Of The Interior
Logos Oil Company Vs. Department Of The Interior
The text describes a situation in which a man named Charles Jolley purchased oil and gas rights from a family called the fishers, only to later learn that some members of the fisher family were half-blood creek Indians and that the lease was therefore null and void. A hearing was held in the Okfuskee county court, at which Mr. Jolley's was not the high bid. In a letter addressed to the department of the interior, Mr. Jolley objected to the appearance by a trial attorney at the hearing and to the provisions of the act of august 4, 1947 requiring approval of leases by half-blood Indians by an oklahoma county court. The department of the interior responded that the trial attorneys appearance was fully authorized by applicable federal law and that the 1947 act was not "archaic," as Mr. Jolley had characterized it.

Dates

  • 1947-08-04 - 1981-12-03

Language of Materials

English

Conditions Governing Access

Certain series of this collection are stored off-site and require prior notice to access. If you wish to view these materials, please contact the Congressional Archives staff to arrange an appointment.

The following series are stored off-site: Clippings, Invitations, White House Records, and 2017 Accrual.

Extent

3 pages

Overview

97th Congress (1981-1983)

Preservica Internal URL

Preservica Public URL Preservica Access

Related Materials

Creek

General

Energy, Native Americans
  • TypeCollection

Repository Details

Part of the Carl Albert Center Congressional and Political Collections Repository

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