
The three arrows symbolize the three great Choctaw Chiefs, Apuckshunnubbee, Pushmataha, and Mushulatubbee, who signed the Treaty of Doaks Stand (1810), by which the United States assigned the tribe a vast domain (all of southern Oklahoma) for a part of the Choctaw land in Mississippi. Ten years later, when the Choctaws gave up all the rest of their home country in Mississippi and moved west, they divided the new land into three districts, and each district was named for one of these great Chiefs.
Though peace-loving, the Choctaws would speedily string their bows and staunchly set forth to defend themselves if they were provoked. Pushmataha embodied the nature of the tribe. He was the tribal leader in war. Provision was made for this Seal at the noted Choctaw convention at Doaksville in 1860. This Seal was used on all official papers of the Choctaw Nation until 1907, when the Indian and Oklahoma territories united as the State of Oklahoma.