Contrary to the national standards, Oregon had a history of opening the polls to local indigenous peoples well before the 1924 Indian Citizenship Act. Some newspaper accounts of voting in 1896 involve a controversy over voting irregularities on the Siletz Reservation – the votes of 125 residents resulted in Thomas Tongue winning Oregon’s 1st District Congressional seat. In addition, a 1906 newspaper references an opinion by Oregon Attorney General Andrew Crawford for the Indian Agent on the Klamath Reservation stating that individuals with allotments would be considered eligible to vote.