Chickamauga Cherokee
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The Chickamauga Cherokee is a Native American group who separated from the Cherokee from the American Revolutionary War to the early 1800s.[1] Most of the Cherokee people signed peace treaties with the Americans in 1776-1777, after the Second Cherokee War. Followers of the skiagusta (war chief) Dragging Canoe moved with him down the Tennessee River, away from their historic Overhill Cherokee towns. Relocated to a more isolated area, they established 11 new towns to distance themselves from encroaching colonists.
Frontier Americans associated Dragging Canoe and his band with their new town on Chickamauga Creek, and began to refer to the band as the Chickamaugas. The Chickamauga moved further west and southwest into present-day Alabama five years later, establishing five larger settlements. They were then more commonly known as the Lower Cherokee, a term closely associated with the people of the five lower towns.
Dragging Canoe, the first Chicamauga chief, separated from the Upper Cherokee. Division among the Cherokee is indicated by a May 4, 1808 letter from Thomas Jefferson to the "Chiefs of the Upper Cherokee" in which he says, "You propose My Children, that your Nation shall be divided into two and that your part the Upper Cherokees, shall be separated from the lower by a fixed boundary, shall be placed under the Government of the U.S. become citizens thereof, and be ruled by our laws; in fine, to be our brothers instead of our children."[2]
Migration
[edit]Chickamauga towns
[edit]
During the winter of 1776–77, the Cherokee followers of Dragging Canoe moved down the Tennessee River and away from their Overhill Cherokee towns. They established nearly a dozen towns in this area to distance themselves from European-American encroachment.
Dragging Canoe and his followers settled where the Great Indian Warpath crossed Chickamauga Creek, near present-day Chattanooga, Tennessee. They named their town "Chickamauga", after the creek, and the adjacent region was known as the Chickamauga area. American settlers referred to its militant Cherokee as "Chickamaugas."
In 1782, militias under John Sevier and William Campbell destroyed the eleven Cherokee towns. Dragging Canoe led his people further down the Tennessee River, establishing five Lower Cherokee towns. After the Revolutionary War, westward migration increased from the new states of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia.
Five Lower Towns
[edit]Dragging Canoe moved his people west and southwest into present-day Georgia, centering on present-day Whiteside, Tennessee on Running Water Creek. The other towns founded at this time were Nickajack (near the cave of the same name), Long Island (on the Tennessee River), Crow Town (at the mouth of Crow Creek), and Lookout Mountain (present-day Trenton, Georgia). More towns developed to the south and west, and were also known as the Lower Towns.[citation needed]
Warfare
[edit]The Chickamauga Cherokee became known for their uncompromising enmity with United States settlers who pushed them out of their traditional territory. From the town of Running Water, Dragging Canoe led attacks on white settlements throughout the American Southeast.
The Lower Cherokee and the frontiersmen were at war until 1794. Chickamauga warriors raided as far as Indiana, Kentucky, and Virginia with members of the Northwestern Confederacy, which they helped establish). Because of a growing belief in the Chickamauga cause and US destruction of homes of other Native Americans, most of the Cherokee became allied against the United States.
After the 1792 death of Dragging Canoe, his hand-picked successor John Watts assumed control of the Lower Cherokee. Under Watts's lead, the Cherokee continued their policy of Indian unity and hostility toward European Americans. Watts moved his base of operations to Willstown to be closer to his Muscogee allies, and had concluded a treaty in Pensacola with Spanish West Florida governor Arturo O'Neill de Tyrone for arms and supplies to continue the war.
Cherokee interactions
[edit]The Chickamauga and later Lower Towns were no different from the rest of the Cherokee than other groups of settlements known as the Middle Towns, Out Towns, (original) Lower Towns, Valley Towns, or Overhill Towns, which were established along the Appalachian Mountains by the time of European contact. The groupings were geographic rather than political, and residents of the Overhill and Valley Towns spoke a similar dialect. The people based their government in the clan and town, and townhouses were built for communal gatherings. Some of the towns were associated with smaller nearby villages, and regional councils had no binding powers.
The groups of towns developed differing ideas about relations with European Americans, partially based on interaction, intermarriage, and trading and other partnerships. The only Cherokee "national" role before 1788 was that of First Beloved Man, a chief negotiator from the towns most isolated from European settlers. The Cherokee established a national council after that year, but it met irregularly and had little authority.
Dragging Canoe addressed the national council at Ustanali and acknowledged Little Turkey as his successor; he was memorialized by the council after his death in 1792. Chickamauga leaders frequently communicated with the Cherokee from other regions. They were supported in warfare against the colonists and later pioneers by warriors from the Overhill Towns. A number of Chickamauga chiefs signed treaties with the federal government, along with other Cherokee Nation leaders.
Aftermath of the wars
[edit]After the Treaty of Tellico Blockhouse in late 1794, leaders of the Lower Cherokee dominated national tribal affairs. When the national government of the Cherokee Nation was organized, the first three people to hold the office of Principal Chief were Little Turkey (1788–1801), Black Fox (1801–1811), and Pathkiller (1811–1827). All three had been warriors under Dragging Canoe. Doublehead and Turtle-at-Home, the first two speakers of the Cherokee National Council, had also served with Dragging Canoe. Domination of the Cherokee by former warriors from the Lower Towns continued well into the 19th century; after the revolt of the young Upper Towns chiefs (who had also served with Dragging Canoe and John Watts), representatives of the Lower Towns remained a major voice.
Resettlement
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Many former warriors returned to the original settlements in the Chickamauga area, some of which had been reoccupied. They also established new towns in the area and several in north Georgia. Others moved into towns which were established after the earlier migration.
Brother Steiner, a representative of the Moravian Brethren, met with Lower Cherokee former warrior Richard Fields in 1799 at Tellico Blockhouse. Steiner hired him as guide and interpreter, since he had been sent south by the Brethren to find an appropriate location for a mission and school in Cherokee territory. It was found at Spring Place on land donated by James Vann, who supported a European-American education for his people. When Steiner asked Fields, "What kind of people are the Chickamauga?" the guide laughed and replied, "They are Cherokee, and we know no difference."[3] Neither the Chickamauga nor other Cherokee considered them distinct from the 18th-century Cherokee.[4]
Others joined the remnant populations from the former Overhill towns on the Little Tennessee River known as the Upper Towns, centered on Ustanali in Georgia. Vann and his protégés, The Ridge and Charles R. Hicks, became leaders. They were the most progressive of the Cherokee, favoring acculturation, formal European-American education, and modern agricultural methods.[5]

For a decade or more after the end of hostilities, the northern section of the Upper Towns had its own council and acknowledged the chief of the Overhill Towns as its leader. They moved south after ceding their land to the United States.
John McDonald returned to his home on the Chickamauga River, across from Old Chickamauga Town, and lived there until he sold it in 1816. It was purchased by the Boston-based American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions for use as the Brainerd Mission, which served as a church (the Baptist Church of Christ at Chickamauga) and a school with academic and vocational training. His daughter, Mollie McDonald, and son-in-law Daniel Ross developed a farm and trading post near the old village of Chatanuga (Tsatanugi) in the early days of the wars. Settled near them were sons Lewis and Andrew Ross and a number of daughters. Their son John Ross, born in Turkey Town, became a principal chief who guiding the Cherokee through the 1830s Indian removal and relocation to Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River.
Most of the Lower Cherokee remained in the towns they inhabited in 1794 (known as the Lower Towns), with their seat at Willstown. Former Lower Towns warriors dominated Cherokee political affairs for the next twenty years. They were more conservative than the Upper Towns leaders, assimilating but keeping as many old ways as possible.[5]
The Lower Towns were roughly south and southwest of the Hiwassee River, along the Tennessee to the north border of the Muscogee nation, and west of the Conasauga and the Ustanali in Georgia. The Upper Towns were north and east of the Hiwassee, between the Chattahoochee River and the Conasauga, about the same area as the later Amohee, Chickamauga, and Chattooga districts of the eastern Cherokee Nation.[6]
Traditional Cherokee settlements in the highlands of western North Carolina became known as the Hill Towns, with their seat at Quallatown. The lowland Valley Towns, with their seat at Tuskquitee, were more traditional; so was the Upper Town of Etowah, inhabited primarily by full-bloods (many Cherokee in other towns were of mixed race but identified as Cherokee) and the nation's largest town. The Overhill towns along the Little Tennessee remained more or less autonomous, and kept their seat at Chota.
Lower Towns leaders
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John Watts remained head of the Lower Cherokee council at Willstown until his death in 1802. Doublehead, already a member of the triumvirate, then moved into that position and held it until his 1807 assassination by Alexander Saunders (the Ridge, James Vann's best friend) and John Rogers. Rogers was succeeded on the council by the Glass, who was also assistant principal chief of the nation under Black Fox. The Glass was head of the Lower Towns' council until the unification council of 1810.

By the time John Norton (a Mohawk of Cherokee and Scottish ancestry) visited the area in 1809–1810, some of the formerly-militant Cherokee of the Lower Towns had become the most assimilated. James Vann became a major planter, holding more than 100 African-American slaves, and was one of the wealthiest men east of the Mississippi. Norton became a friend of Turtle-at-Home, John Walker, Jr. and the Glass, all of whom were involved in business and commerce. At the time of Norton's visit, Turtle-at-Home owned a ferry and landing on the Federal Road between Nashville, Tennessee and Athens, Georgia (where he lived at Nickajack).
When Georgia and the US government increased pressure on the Cherokee Nation to cede its lands and move west of the Mississippi River, Lower Towns leaders such as Tahlonteeskee, Degadoga, John Jolly, Richard Fields, John Brown, Bob McLemore, John Rogers, Young Dragging Canoe, George Guess (Tsiskwaya, or Sequoyah) and Tatsi (also known as Captain Dutch) were forerunners. Believing that removal was inevitable in the face of settler greed, they wanted to get the best lands and settlements possible. They moved with their followers to Arkansas Territory, establishing what ecame known as the Cherokee Nation West. They then moved to Indian Territory after an 1828 treaty between their leaders and the US government. They were called the Old Settlers in Indian Territory, living there for nearly a decade before the rest of the Cherokee were forced to join them.
The remaining Lower Towns leaders also strongly advocated voluntary westward emigration, bitterly opposed by the former warriors and their sons who led the Upper Towns. Major Ridge (as the Ridge had been known since his military service during the Creek and First Seminole Wars), his son John Ridge, and his nephews Elias Boudinot and Stand Watie came to believe that they needed to negotiate the best deal with the federal government in the face of removal. Other emigration advocates were John Walker, Jr., David Vann, and Andrew Ross (brother of principal chief John Ross).
Taking advantage of negotiations after the Creek War, a small group of negotiators selected by American forces and headed by Major Ridge signed the Treaty of New Echota on December 29, 1835. The delegation was not authorized by the Cherokee government to sign treaties on behalf of the nation, however, and the treaty was seen by the people as illegal.[7]
Later events
[edit]Tecumseh's return
[edit]In November 1811, the Shawnee chief Tecumseh returned to the South in the hope of support from the southern tribes for his crusade to drive back the Americans and revive the old ways. He was accompanied by representatives of the Shawnee, Muscogee, Kickapoo, and Sioux peoples. Tecumseh's exhortations in the Chickasaw, Choctaw and Lower Muscogee towns found no traction, but he attracted some support from younger Upper Muscogee warriors.
The Cherokee delegation under the Ridge, who visited Tecumseh's council at Tuckabatchee, strongly opposed his plans; Tecumseh cancelled his visit to the Cherokee Nation because the Ridge threatened him with death if he went there. Tecumseh was escorted on his recruiting tour by 47 Cherokee and 19 Choctaw, however, who presumably went north with him when he returned to the Northwest Territory.[8][9]
War with the Creek
[edit]Tecumseh's mission sparked a religious revival, referred to by anthropologist James Mooney as the "Cherokee Ghost Dance" movement.[10] It was led by Tsali of Coosawatee, a former Chickamauga warrior. He later moved to the western North Carolina mountains, where he was executed by U.S. forces in 1838 for violently resisting removal.
Tsali met with the national council at Ustanali, arguing for war against the Americans. He moved some leaders until the Ridge was more persuasive in rebuttal, calling for support of the Americans in the coming war with the British and Tecumseh's alliance. During the War of 1812, William McIntosh of the Lower Muscogee sought Cherokee help in the Creek War to suppress the Red Sticks (Upper Muscogee). More than 500 Cherokee warriors served under Andrew Jackson against their former allies.[11][12]
A few years later, Major Ridge led a troop of Cherokee cavalry who were attached to the 1,400-strong contingent of Lower Muscogee warriors under William McIntosh in the First Seminole War in Florida. They were allied with, and accompanied, a force of U.S. regular Army, Georgia militia, and Tennessee volunteers into Florida for action against the Seminoles, refugee Red Sticks, and escaped slaves fighting against the United States.[13]
Warriors from the Cherokee Nation East traveled to the Old Settlers lands (or Cherokee Nation West) in Arkansas Territory to assist them during the Cherokee-Osage War of 1817–1823. Cherokee warriors (with only one exception) did not take to the warpath in the Southeast again from the end of the Seminole War to the American Civil War, when William Holland Thomas raised the Thomas Legion of Cherokee Indians and Highlanders in North Carolina to fight for the Confederacy.
The state of Georgia seized land in its south in 1830 which had belonged to the Cherokee since the end of the Creek War (land separated from the rest of the Cherokee Nation by a large section of Georgia territory), and began to parcel it out to settlers. Major Ridge led a party of 30 south; they drove the settlers out of their homes on what the Cherokee considered their land and burned the buildings to the ground, but harmed no one.[14]
References
[edit]- ^ "Jefferson Papers: From Thomas Jefferson to Cherokee Deputation, 9 January 1809". Founders Online. National Archives. Retrieved 18 June 2024.
- ^ "Jefferson Papers: From Thomas Jefferson to Cherokee Nation, 4 May 1808". Founders Online. National Archives. Retrieved 18 June 2024.
- ^ Allen, Penelope; "The Fields Settlement"; Penelope Allen Manuscript; Archive Section; Chattanooga-Hamilton County Bicentennial Library;
- ^ Founders; government archives online; accessed December 2016
- ^ a b Wilkins, Thurman. Cherokee Tragedy: The Ridge Family and the Decimation of a People, pp. 33–47. (New York: Macmillan Company, 1970).
- ^ Wilkins (1970). Cherokee Tragedy, pg. 58.
- ^ The Cherokee Nation: A History, Robert J. Conley. University of New Mexico Press.
- ^ Eckert, Allan W. A Sorrow in Our Heart: The Life of Tecumseh, pp. 655–665. (New York: Bantam, 1992)
- ^ McLoughlin, William G. Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic, pp. 168–185. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1992)
- ^ Mooney, James. The Ghost Dance Religion and the Sioux Outbreak of 1890, pp. 670–677. (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1896)
- ^ McLoughlin (1992), Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic, [sic]; pp. 186–205.
- ^ Wilkins (1970), Cherokee Tragedy, pp. 52-80.
- ^ Wilkins (1970), Cherokee Tragedy, pp. 114–115
- ^ McLoughlin, William G., Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic, pp. 209–215.(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1992).
Further reading
[edit]- The Bloody Ground: The Chickamauga Wars and Trans–Appalachian Expansion, 1776-1794; Kane, Sean Patrick; retrieved July 2021; PDF format/download.