Page:A Century of Dishonor.pdf/35

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INTRODUCTORY.
17

extinguish the Indian title by purchase or conquest, and to grant the soil and exercise such a degree of sovereignty as circumstances required, has never been judicially questioned.”

Kent also says, after giving the Supreme Court decision in the case of Johnson vs. M‘Intosh: “The same court has since been repeatedly called upon to discuss and decide great questions concerning Indian rights and title, and the subject has of late become exceedingly grave and momentous, affecting the faith and the character, if not the tranquillity and safety, of the Government of the United States.”

In Gardner's “Institutes of International Law” the respective rights to land of the Indians and the whites are thus summed up: “In our Union the aborigines had only a possessory title, and in the original thirteen States each owned in fee, subject to the Indian right, all ungranted lands within their respective limits; and beyond the States the residue of the ungranted lands were vested in fee in the United States, subject to the Indian possessory right, to the extent of the national limits.”

Dr. Walker, in his “American Law,” makes a still briefer summary: “The American doctrine on the subject of Indian title is briefly this: The Indians have no fee in the lands they occupy. The fee is in the Government. They cannot, of course, aliene them either to nations or individuals, the exclusive right of pre-emption being in the Government. Yet they have a qualified right of occupancy which can only be extinguished by treaty, and upon fair compensation; until which they are entitled to be protected in their possession.”

“Abbott’s Digest,” one of the very latest authorities, reiterates the same principle: “The right of occupancy has been recognized in countless ways, among others by many decisions of courts and opinions of attorney-generals.”

It being thus established that the Indian's “right of occupancy” in his lands was a right recognized by all the Great