
Thomas Downs papers, 1862-1938
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Creator:
- Downs, Thomas, 1845-1911
- Abstract:
- The Downs papers consist of assorted material relating to Thomas Downs of Connersville, Indiana, focusing on the period between 1903 and 1911, when he was employed as an Indian agent to the Ute, Winnebago, Yakima, and other Native American nations in the western United States.
- Extent:
- 1.75 linear feet
- Language:
- English
- Authors:
- Collection processed and finding aid created by Rob S. Cox, 1997
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The Downs papers includes a portion of the personal and professional correspondence of Thomas Downs of Connersville, Ind., focusing on the period between 1903 and 1911, when he was employed as an Indian agent to the Ute, Winnebago, Yakima, and other Indian nations in the western states. While there is comparatively little information on Native Americans or Native American cultures, per se, Downs' letters do provide a glimpse into the mind of one Indian agent during the first decade of the 20th century, and documentation of the strained relations between Native Americans and the federal government and the cold reality of reservation life.
There are three topics within the Downs Papers which stand out as being of particular interest. First, there is approximately a dozen letters sent to Downs and other Indian service officials relating to the "rebellion" of Ute Indians at Thunder Butte in November, 1907. These letters, along with several newspaper clippings and a memoir written in about 1911 by Florence Downs Reifel (apparently from Downs' notes) provide a sense of how the situation unfolded and the pressure Downs must have felt to resolve the crisis quickly, if harshly.
The second topic relates to Downs' 1909 inspection tour of the Round Valley Indian School in Covelo, Calif., and the reservations at Neah Bay and Yakima, Wash. Throughout the year, Downs was accompanied by his wife, Mary Jane (Jennie), and although all of the letters are signed "Pa and Ma," they were actually written alternately and independently by Thomas and his wife. Jennie Downs' letters are not particularly informative, though they contain a few useful observations on the conditions of life on the reservation and at Indian schools. Thomas' letters are somewhat more detailed, providing a good impression of the Yakima reservation, in particular, which was then being placed under a comprehensive system of irrigation. On a side note, three of Downs' letters include amusing comments on the difficulty of train travel amidst the crush of visitors to the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition of 1909.
Finally, there is a small, but interesting group of letters pertaining to Thomas Downs' efforts to enroll the Winnebago Indians in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Nebraska during October and November, 1909. These include a sad letter describing the scattered and depressed condition of the Winnebagoes in Wisconsin, and a far more optimistic assessment of their kin at the Winnebago Agency in Nebraska, who had taken up farming and other "industrious" habits.
Also noteworthy are three bound "journals" kept in Indian Service notebooks and a photocopy of a fourth. Notebook 2 (Box 5) includes notes taken by Downs in the field at the Yakima Reservation in 1909, describing the status of individual Yakima (and mixed blood) men and women. Notebook 3 (Box 5) includes what appear to be essays or speeches by Downs, including one dealing with racism and citizenship, comparing the social conditions of African-Americans and Native Americans. The fourth journal, present only in photocopy (filed under correspondence for the year 1911), includes an exceptional account of the protracted illness and death of Thomas Downs, as well as an excellent Downs-eye view of the Thunder Butte incident.
The remaining correspondence in the collection includes several touching letters dictated by Thomas Downs to Florence Downs Reifel in December, 1910, when Thomas was too ill to write for himself. These copies include a dramatic letter addressed to Downs' sister, Eliza, with whom he had broken off relations 45 years previously. Through this letter, Downs hoped to mend some family fences before his death, and although Eliza's acceptance of the olive branch -- and her forgiveness (1911 January 7) -- eventually came, it seems probable that it would have arrived after Downs was too ill to read it.
Downs' children and grandchildren are less well represented in the collection, except as recipients of letters. There are some juvenile writings of his daughters, Florence and Susan Jane, and sparse materials relating to the children's education, including grade school report cards and a few miscellaneous letters from George Downs, written while in college at Purdue and medical school in Ann Arbor. Of a more personal nature are two lovely mother's day letters from Jane Reifel to her mother, Florence (1921 May 8, 1938 May 7), extolling Florence's virtues as a mother. Jane admits to having been a rebellious youth, but confesses that she now realizes how Florence's mothering had made her a solid person, unlike her social-seeking cousins. Box 3 also includes a hand-drawn mother's day card from Jane. On an entirely different note, Box 3 contains two "mash cards" -- one a calling-card-sized card printed with the words "May I C U Home?" -- with the answers "yes" and "no," printed on the ends of the card, presumably to be used by the young woman to signal her reply. The other card, "Cigar Flirtation," describes the sexual code of cigar smoking. Finally, two undated letters from Thomas Downs to his son-in-law, Jesse Rhoads, outline his specifications for a house being built for the family, including a photograph of the house and a rough floor plan.
The Downs Papers includes a large number of deeds, accounts, receipts, banking records, canceled checks, and other financial miscellany (Box 4), some leather wallets and a silver match case engraved "Capt. T.D." (Box 7), along with a few obituaries and biographical essays on Thomas Downs, his sons William (who died at 16) and George, and other family members.
- Biographical / Historical:
-
A native Indianan, Downs was born in Lawrenceburg on March 31, 1845. At only 16, he left home to enlist as a private in Co. K, 54th Indiana Infantry, later serving in the Vicksburg Campaign and in the Department of the Mississippi with the 16th Indiana Infantry and 13th Indiana Cavalry. Upon mustering out of the army, he returned to his parents' home in Connersville, Ind., and in November, 1866, married his seventeen year-old sweetheart, Mary Jane Eisman, the daughter of a German immigrant.
The young couple flourished in Connersville, raising five children while Thomas built his reputation as a carpenter, and later as a top notch general contractor. Downs, Ready & Co., of which he became senior partner in 1884, was employed throughout the state in the design and construction of public buildings, including the 8th Street School, the National Bank building and both the Catholic and Methodist churches in Connersville, and a similar variety of buildings in Rushville, Greenville, Muncie, and Marion. A public-minded man, Downs built a solid civic reputation through his work in Republican political circles, as city councilman (1887-1889), and as a member of the school board (1890-1899), and after the turn of the century, he even entertained thoughts of running for a seat in congress. At the same time, he held positions of responsibility in several fraternal and patriotic organizations, including the Grand Army of the Republic, the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, the Royal Arch Masonic lodge, the Union Club, and the Improved Order of Red Men.
Downs' military experience and civic authority were called upon during the Spanish-American War, and for the remainder of his life he remained in service to the government. His administrative skills earned him a captain's commission and an appointment as Assistant Quartermaster at the Jefferson Barracks in Saint Louis and, after the war, with the youngest of his children already in college, he elected to remain in the military. From 1901-1903, he helped to construct the barracks at Fort Stevens, Ore., earning additional income on the side through investments in a variety of extractive enterprises, including the White Pine Lumber Co., the Muir Glacier Packing Co., and the Wisconsin Central Gold Mining Co. His love for the military, however, seems to have waned in Oregon, and in February, 1903, he resigned from the military to accept a commission as Special Indian Agent.
During the early years of the 20th century, the efforts of the federal government to "civilize" Native Americans was pursued with particular vigor. If the soul of the "civilizing" program was the instruction of Native Americans in the English language and European notions of work and sedentary agriculture, the heart of the program was the development of a comprehensive system of government-run Indian schools, designed to eradicate all traces of "savage" culture and behavior. Thomas Downs was among the dozens of men employed as an agent by the Bureau of Indian Affairs during the first decade of the 20th century, helping to establish and maintain these Indian schools -- a man, in his own mind trying to benefit his "charges," while representing a harsh, occasionally brutal federal policy.
From 1903 to 1910, Downs traveled throughout the west, assisting in the establishment and inspection of Indian schools and negotiating the complaints of reservation Indians. His duties were mostly fairly mundane until November, 1907, when he faced a "rebellion" by Ute Indians at Thunder Butte on the Cheyenne Agency, S.D. Early in October, 1907, a band of Utes who had been "brought in" to Thunder Butte by Capt. Carter P. Johnson, were reported to be acting "impudent and sullen" to Downs and other agents, refusing to "help themselves or work." In line with older treaties, the Utes argued that "they were Government people and did not have to work" for the stores promised them, and they further rejected demands to place their younger children in day schools and remand their older children to government boarding schools. At a council on October 14th, and with winter nearing, Downs came down firmly, threatening to withhold stores from the Utes -- effectively starving them -- if they did not accede to the government's demands. Another agent, Mr. Dagnett, held before the Utes the example of the "Sioux" who abided peacefully by similar terms, offering an olive branch of $2 per day for labor under an Indian foreman at Rapid City, and suggesting that their children would be placed in a non-reservation boarding school nearby. On principle, however, the Utes continued to resist, repeating that they were "government people and did not have to work neither would they obey regulations" (all quotes from Downs' journal, interfiled in correspondence, 1911).
During the first week of November, this tense situation seemed to be veering toward armed violence, and amid rumors that the Utes were "intend[ing] to begin depredations... to shoot up the whites and burn the school plant," the white women and children were ordered off the reservation. Johnson hastily arranged a meeting with Ute leaders, and reported them willing to negotiate, but at the same time, Downs continued to report that they remained defiant. In a memo to his superiors in Washington, Johnson criticized Downs for this difference in perception, suggesting that Downs had been excessively harsh in his dealings with the Utes. The Indian service officials, however, sided with Downs, arguing that he was simply carrying out the policies laid down by the Indian service. Chastened, Johnson then used his influence to assist Downs in resolving the crisis to the satisfaction of the government, and after four troops of cavalry were called in, 57 Ute men, along with their wives and children, relented, accepting Dagnett's offer to work in Rapid City. The remaining 244 men, women and children at Thunder Butte were then disarmed and agreed to return to Utah in the Spring, led by Capt. Johnson.
In February 1909, Downs was sent to Covelo, Calif., to inspect the Round Valley Indian School, and then to Neah Bay, Tacoma, and Yakima, Wash. In October, he was appointed Indian Commissioner to enroll the Winnebago Indians in Wisconsin, meeting each one face to face. Downs discovered that the task, which he was given a year to complete, was a daunting one. The Winnebagoes were scattered in small groups throughout the state, in Minnesota and Nebraska, with some members as far away as Ontario and Washington -- many lived in isolated groups as small as a single family. Worse, many of the Winnebagoes lived under particularly poor conditions, according to Downs -- "back number compared with the Sioux" -- and he added without a hint of irony, "the[y] do not seem to have benefitted by their association with the whites" (1909 October 15). With tremendous industry and a good interpreter, however, Downs accomplished the remarkable feat of registering the Winnebagoes in only three months.
In January, 1910, Downs was preparing to assume charge of the Indian schools in Anadarko, Okla., when he suffered a severe fall at a railroad platform. The accident resulted in an "obstruction of the bile" that required emergency surgery, and for several months thereafter, he was restricted to bed with a terrible series of ailments. After developing "dropsy" in December, Downs never recovered, dying of liver failure at home on January 20, 1911.
- Acquisition Information:
- Donated by Tom Downs, 1995. M-3122 .
- Custodial History:
-
The Thomas Downs papers were donated to the Clements Library in 1995 by Tom Downs of Lansing, Mich., the grandson of Thomas Downs.
- Arrangement:
-
The collection is organized into 6 series
- Series 1: Correspondece
- Series 2: Miscellaneous
- Series 3: Financial Records
- Series 4: Notebooks
- Series 5: Printed Items
- Series 6: Realia
- Rules or Conventions:
- Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)
Related
- Additional Descriptive Data:
-
Alternate Locations
Heinemann, J. L. The Indian Trail down the White Water Valley (Indianapolis: Krieg Bros., 1912) Transferred to Book Division.
United States Office of Indian Affairs. Routes to Indian agencies and schools ... (Carlisle: Carlisle Indian Press, 1908). Transferred to Book Division.
7 cartes de visite, 1860s. Transferred to Graphics Division. (C.3.14)
Tintypes, all unidentified except two of Cain family. Transferred to Graphics Division. (C.3.14)
3 real photo postcards (Marie E. Seiling, 1912; John, 1916; Cliff House auto tour group, ca.1915) Transferred to Graphics Division. (C.5.6)
Connersville (Ind.) Daily News vol. 2 (123), 1888 November 1 (brief notice of the Downs' visit to Chicago) vol. 2 (126), 1888 November 5 vol. 9 (83), 1895 September 17. Transferred to off-site storage.
Bibliography
Barrows, Frederic Irving, ed. History of Fayette County, Indiana (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1917) cat. 10/96 rsc
Downs Family Genealogy- Hezekiah (1819-1883) m. Ruth Ann (Chase) Downs (1813-1885)
- Thomas Downs (1845-1911) m. Nov. 20, 1866 to Mary Jane Eisman (b. 1849)
- Florence Downs (b. 1867) m. Martin Reifel
- Jane Augusta Reifel (b. 1901)
- Helen Downs Reifel
- Susan Jane Downs (b. 1868) m. Charles A. Rieman
- Gladys Rieman m. Robert C. Hamilton
- Mary Jane Rieman m. William F. Maurer
- Augusta Ann Downs (b. 1870) m. Jesse B. Rhoads
- William Francis Downs (1872-1888)
- George A. Downs (1877-1936) m. Sept. 18, 1909 to Marie E. Seiling
- Thomas Downs
- Florence Downs (b. 1867) m. Martin Reifel
- Montgomery Downs
- Eliza Downs
- William Francis Downs
- Thomas Downs (1845-1911) m. Nov. 20, 1866 to Mary Jane Eisman (b. 1849)
Partial Subject Index
African-Americans--Social conditions - Notebook 3 (Box 6)
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition (1909 : Seattle, Wash.) - 1909 June 27
- 1909 July 7
- 1909 July 11
Autograph books - Box 5
Birthday cards - n.d. (Jane Rieman to Mary Jane Downs)
Brothers and sisters - 1910 December (to Eliza Downs)
- 1911 January 7
Business cards - Misc. business cards (2 folders, box 3)
California--Description and travel - 1901 December 22
Cemeteries--Indiana - 1884 July 14
Cheyenne Agency (S.D.) - See listing under Ute Indians--South Dakota
Chicago (Ill.)--Description and travel - 1901 December 22
Children's art - n.d. (Jane Rieman)
Christmas - 1879 December 30
- 1911 December 26
Cigars - "Mash" cards (Box 3)
Columbia Club (Indianapolis, Ind.) - 1898 January 11
Connersville (Ind.) High School--Commencements - 1895 May 23
Connersville (Ind.)--History - Indiana Magazine (Box 6)
Courtship - "Mash" cards (Box 3)
Death--Poetry - 1911 January
Discharge, Military - 1862 September 15
- 1865 October 22
Downs, George A., 1877-1938 - Obituaries (Box 3)
Downs, Thomas, 1845-1911 - Miscellaneous folders (Box 3)
Downs, Thomas, 1845-1911--Death - 1910 December 23
- 1910 December (7 folders)
- 1911 January 20
- ca.1911 January (2 folders)
- 1911 (Journal interfiled with correspondence)
Downs, William Francis, 1872-1888 - 1888 October 30
- 1889 January 15
- Obituaries (Box 3)
Eulogies - 1888 October 30
- 1911 January 20
- ca.1911 January
Fathers and sons - 1901 March 27
Fires--Indiana--Connersville - 1880 March 22
Fort Columbia (Wash.) - 1901 March 27
- 1901 April 17
Grand Army of the Republic - 1889 September 24
- 1895 September
House construction--Indiana - n.d. December 10 (Thomas Downs to Jesse B. Rhoads)
- n.d. (Thomas Downs to Jesse B. Rhoads)
Huston, Mrs. J. E. - Misc. genealogical notes (Box 3)
Indian agents - 1903 October 15
- 1907 March 30
- 1908 November 12
- 1911 (Journal interfiled with correspondence)
- Notebook 1 (Box 5)
Indians of North America - 1911 (Journal interfiled with correspondence)
- Notebook 1 (Box 5)
- Notebook 3 (Box 6)
Indians of North America--California - 1909 February 28-May 19
Indians of North America--Education - See Round Valley Indian School
- 1909 May 23
- 1909 June 23
Indians of North America--Legal status, laws, etc. - Notebook 1 (Box 5)
Indians of North America--Nebraska - 1909 November 7
Indians of North America--Social conditions - Notebook 3 (Box 6)
Indians of North America--South Dakota - 1907 November 1-December 12
- 1911 (Journal interfiled with correspondence)
Indians of North America--Washington - 1909 May 23-July 27
- Notebook 2 (Box 5)
Indians of North America--Wisconsin - 1909 October 3-31
- 1909 November 14
Measels - 1879 November 9
- 1879 December 5
Medical students--Michigan - 1901 March 27
- 1901 June
Men--Societies and clubs - 1897 December 9
- 1898 January 11
- 1910 June 27
Menus - 1897 December 9
- 1903 January 13
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States - 1909 January 28
- 1909 February 5
Mortgages--Indiana - 1876 July 10
- 1877 March 16
- 1877 March 23
- 1877 May 12
- 1877 April 5
- 1878 May 29
- 1884 April 4
- 1889 April 27
Mothers and daughters - 1921 May 8
- 1938 May 7
Mothers' Day - 1921 May 8
- 1938 May 7
- n.d. (Jane Rieman to Mary Jane Downs)
Newspapers--Indiana - 1883 February 23
Obituaries - 1888 October 30
- 1911 January 20
- Obituaries (Box 3)
Pen and ink drawing - 1880 March 22
Pensions, Military--United States--Civil War, 1861-1865 - 1911 February 28
- n.d. (unidentified writer)
Poetry - Misc. poetry (Box 3)
Power of attorney--Indiana - 1883 March 19
Purdue University - 1899 June 6
Puyallup Indian Industrial School - 1909 June 11-July 7
Racism - Notebook 3 (Box 6)
Real property--Indiana - 1876 July 10
- 1877 March 16
- 1877 March 23
- 1877 April 5
- 1877 May 12
- 1877 April 5
- 1878 May 29
- 1884 April 4
- 1889 April 27
Real property--Ohio - 1883 January 24
Report cards--Indiana - 1884 December 19
- 1885 March 20
- 1887 March 25
- 1888 May 11
- 1888 June 1
- 1918 October 1
Rieman Family - Miscellaneous folders (Box 3)
Round Valley Indian School (Covelo, Calif.) - 1909 February 28-May 19
Salvation Army - 1901 March 20
San Diego (Calif.)--Description and travel - 1901 December 22
Stranding of ships - 1901 April 14
Telephones - 1879 December 5
Thunder Butte Affair, 1907 - 1907 November 1-December 12
- 1911 (Journal interfiled with correspondence)
Union Club (Connersville, Ind.) - 1897 December 9
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Poetry - 1895 September
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Veterans - 1889 September 24
- 1895 September
- 1909 January 28
- 1909 February 5
Ute Indians--South Dakota - 1907 November 1-December 12
- [1911] (Journal interfiled with correspondence)
Washington--Description and travel - 1909 May 23
- 1909 June 23
- 1909 July 11
- 1909 July 19
Wedding invitations--Indiana - 1915 October 14
Weddings--Washington - 1909 September 18
White Pine Lumber Company - 1903 January 13
Winnebago Agency (Nebr.) - 1909 November 7
Winnebago Indians - 1909 October 3-November 7
Women college students--Ohio - 1926 February 25
- 1926 May
- 1926
Yakima Indians - 1909 July 11
- 1909 July 19
- Notebook 2 (Box 5)
- Hezekiah (1819-1883) m. Ruth Ann (Chase) Downs (1813-1885)
Subjects
Click on terms below to find any related finding aids on this site.
- Subjects:
-
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition (1909 : Seattle, Wash.)
Indian agents.
Indians of North America.
Indians of North America--Education.
Indians of North America--Government relations.
Indians of North America--Social conditions.
Indians of North America--South Dakota.
Men--Societies and clubs.
Mortgages--Indiana.
Mothers' Day.
Puyallup Indian School (Tacoma, Wash.)
Racism.
Real property--Indiana.
Ute Indians.
Winnebago Indians.
Yakama Indians. - Formats:
-
Autograph albums.
Bank statements.
Financial records.
Notebooks.
Obituaries.
Visiting cards. - Names:
-
United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs.
United States. Office of Indian Affairs. Cheyenne Agency. - Places:
-
Thunder Butte (S. D.)
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Veterans.
Washington--Description and travel.
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Copyright status is unknown.
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
Thomas Downs Papers, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan