Archive for December, 2025

Chippewas Got Drafted

December 22, 2025

The Selective Service Act of May 18, 1917 required men between the ages of 21 and 31 to register for the draft by June 5, 1917. Being 24 at that time, Leon Boutwell registered on June 5, 1917. On August 2, 1917, The Tomahawk, a newspaper owned and operated by Gus Beaulieu primarily for residents of the White Earth Reservation, published a list of young Chippewa men selected for service in the military during the first WWI draft. Leon Boutwell was just one of many Chippewas selected. These men would have had to be citizens in order to be eligible for the draft. Non-citizens could enlist and many Indians did just that. In fact, A larger percentage of Indians than whites enlisted voluntarily.

An article on a different page of the August 2, 1917 edition of The Tomahawk reported that Leon Boutwell had enlisted in the army aviation corps, apparently to get an assignment more to his liking. In October, he was stationed at St. Louis, Missouri. The next March he was at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, apparently bored because the only excitement was an occasional airplane crash. At that time, he was assigned to the 14th Field Artillery Band. He and it remained at Fort Sill the duration of the war.

Leon Boutwell was far from the only Chippewa to be drafted for WWI as the list that follows illustrates and it is just the list for the first draft. Two other drafts followed, broadening the age range eligible to be conscripted from 21 to 30 to 18 to 45.

Leon Boutwell Got Drafted

December 19, 2025

While researching Keewatin Academy, I stumbled across a mention of Leon Boutwell as having been drafted during WWI. Seeing that reminded me of the statement I’ve both seen and heard lately that Indians weren’t made citizens until 1924. How then could a non-citizen Chippewa Indian like Leon Boutwell be drafted?

The short answer is that Boutwell was a citizen as were many Indians. But how did he become a citizen? There were multiple ways for Indians to become citizens as listed by Wikipedia below:

Key Pathways to Citizenship Before 1924:

Why It Was Complicated:

Richard Henry Pratt, founder and superintendent of Carlisle Indian School for 25, years urged not just his students but Indians in general to become citizens in order to acquire the full rights of being an American. Many were reluctant to do so because citizens were required to pay taxes, become eligible for military drafts, as well as for other reasons. Apparently, Boutwell or one of his parents did something to get him made a citizen. He listed himself as a natural-born citizen on his WWI draft registration card and answered “No” to “Do you claim exemption from draft?” So, he must have considered himself to be a citizen. But why?

His eligibility for Federal aid form, completed April 26, 1915 lists both his parents as citizens. His father, who was 1/16 blood Chippewa, owned no land but his mother, who was listed as being 1/3 blood (an unlikely percentage), owned 160 acres. Leon owned 80 acres at that time and had sold another 80 acres. This land ownership suggests that Leon’s parents and he became citizens after accepting allotments, which must have been quarter sections (160 acres). His father likely didn’t receive an allotment because he was only 1/16 blood and the requirement for eligibility was probably ¼ blood. His valuation of his mother’s land seems optimistic.