United States Senate Committee on Indian Depredations
The Committee on Indian Depredations was a standing committee of the United States Senate from 1893 to 1921. It superseded a select committee which operated from 1889 to 1893.
History
The Committee on Indian Depredations was created by a Senate resolution on March 15, 1893, and superseded a select committee on Indian depredations that had been established in 1889 to deal with the increased volume of Indian depredation claims. The committee oversaw claims under the Indian Depredation Act, which allows for citizen claims against the federal government for crimes committed by American Indians. Many committee petitioners requested that claims for crimes committed during wartime be eligible for compensation, because the act limited claims to depredations committed in times of peace with the Indians.The committee was terminated April 18, 1921, when the Senate eliminated this and several other obsolete standing and select committees.
Predecessor committees
- Select Committee on Indian Depredations
Chairmen
- Gideon C. Moody 1889–1891
- George L. Shoup 1891–1893
- William Lindsay 1893-1895
- John L. Wilson 1895–1899
- William Deboe 1899–1901
- Robert J. Gamble 1901–1903
- J. Frank Allee 1903 - December 14, 1904
- Charles Dick December 14, 1904December 18, 1905
- Elmer J. Burkett December 18, 1905 - January 31, 1907
- Charles Curtis 1907–1911
- Isidor Rayner 1911–1912
- Robert Latham Owen 1912–1913
- William Borah 1913–1917
- Miles Poindexter 1917–1919
- Henry L. Myers 1919–1921