During the summer and fall of 1835, Curry and
Schermerhorn exhausted every available force to secure consent to a treaty,
going so far as to importune the legislatures of Tennessee and Alabama to
pass laws prohibiting Cherokees, ejected from their possessions in Georgia,
from taking up residence in those states, Curry openly alleging it to be the
policy of the United States to make the situation so miserable as to drive
the Indians into a treaty or abandonment of the country. Indians were
arrested and thrown into jail on the slightest excuse or none at all, held
without trial and dismissed without explanation, at the pleasure of the
Georgia Guard.
For the express purpose of depleting the population of
the eastern nation and weakening its government, thereby rendering it more
amenable to the state and Federal policy, Agent Curry now redoubled his
efforts in the direction of enrollment, halting at no methods to secure
individual consent, or semblance of consent, to emigrate. To this end he
allowed whiskey to be brought into the Cherokee country and used freely
among the Indians although their own laws forbade it; exercised the coarsest
kind of intrigue among the more ignorant and helpless and, where everything
else failed, he used force in securing enrollment. As evidence in this
indictment there is the incident of Atahlah Anosta, a full-blood, who, while
drunk, was induced to enroll against the wishes of his wife and children.
When the time came for him to leave for Arkansas he absconded. A guard sent
to fetch him arrested his wife and children and drove them through a cold
rain to the agency where they were detained under guard until the woman
agreed to emigrate. There is also the story of Sconatachee, an Indian over
eighty years of age, whose consent to register had been secured during a fit
of drunkenness into which he had been inveigled by Curry's accomplices. When
he failed to appear at the time the emigrants were assembling, Curry, with
an interpreter, went after him. The Indian refused to accompany him,
whereupon Curry drew a revolver and tried to drive the old fellow to the
agency. Failing in this attempt, he later sent a sufficient force to
over-power and tie him hand and foot, and thus the white haired chief of a
once mighty race was hauled in a wagon to the agency like a hog to market.
But neither these measures, nor others which the
Federal officials had yet been able to devise, seemed to incline the Indians
to emigrate nor to render them more friendly to a treaty. Convinced that he
was making poor headway, the commissioner finally wrote the Secretary of War
suggesting that a treaty be concluded with a part of the nation only, should
one with the whole be found impracticable. In reply, he was advised that if
a treaty could not be concluded upon fair and open terms, he must abandon
the effort and leave the nation to the consequences of its own stubbornness.
But Mr. Schermerhorn, familiar with Jacksonian methods of dealing with the
Indiana, was able to read between the lines, and face to face with the fact
that he must bring the Cherokees to terms very .soon or lose favor with the
President, he began to plan his course of action regardless of instructions,
confident that a successful treaty would meet with executive approval, and
no questions asked.
As time for the October Council drew near, interest
became centered in the proposed treaty. The Indians seemed to consider the
approaching meeting of vital importance, and the attendance bade fair to be
unusually large. Men, women and children turned out to see what would be
done about the treaty. Mr. Scherinerhorn and Major Curry were on hand to
urge its merits. Their hopes ran high, if we are to credit their
correspondence at this time, their intention being to create a division in
the National party, a part of whom could then be won over by hook or crook,
to unite with the Ridge faction in agreeing to the treaty. They were doomed
to surprise and disappointment, however, for the unexpected again happened.
The two factions had come together and had agreed to act unitedly in
arranging with the United States a new treaty. As a result, the Schermerhorn
treaty was rejected unanimously by the Council, the Ridges and Boudinot
using their influence against it. The astonished commisioner in reporting
the affair to the Secretary of War acknowledged his disappointment in the
unadvised and unexpected course taken by the Ridges, explaining it on the
ground that they had become discouraged in contending with the power of
Ross. "But," he piously observed, "the Lord is able to overrule all things
for good." His chief hope in accomplishing a treaty now lay in the fear, on
the part of the Indians, of Georgia legislation. Alabama and Tennessee, he
thought, would pass some wholesome laws to quicken their movements.9 In
order that he might have assurance of executive approval of steps already
taken, and support in occupying higher ground, Mr. Schermerhorn sent Major
Curry on to Washington "with private dispatches of a confidential nature to
the President and Secretary of War, part of which were verbal."
In the glow of good feeling attending the
reconciliation of two factions, the Council passed a resolution providing
for a committee of twenty members to be chosen from both parties and
empowered to arrange a treaty with the commissioner in the Cherokee Nation
or at Washington. John Ridge and Elias Boudinot were appointed members of
this committee. Upon consulting Mr. Schermerhorn and finding that he had no
authority to treat with them upon any other basis than the treaty just
rejected, the committee prepared to set out for Washington. But trouble was
brewing among the newly reconciled parties. The Treaty men began to think
that they were not sufficiently recognized on the committee and that due
consideration had not been shown them by the Council. These, and other
grievances of a personal nature, furnished fuel to the smouldering embers of
factional emnity which were soon fanned into a blaze by assiduous Federal
and state agents. Accusations and recriminations became the order of the
day, and resignations of the Ridge men from the committee naturally
followed. First John Ridge resigned, and then Boudinot, and they were soon
won back to their alliance with Mr. Schermerhorn.
On the eve of the departure of the Nationalists for
Washington, Mr. Ross was seized by the Georgia Guard on the plea that he was
a white man residing in the Indian country and conducted across the Georgia
line where he was held for some time. The charge was too absurd to deceive
any one, however, and he was finally released without trial or explanation.
All his private correspondence, as well as the proceedings of Council, were
seized at the same time and searched for incriminating evidence which would
justify his removal from the scene of action. With him out of the way, it
was thought the Indians would be more easily managed. At the same time John
Howard Payne, who was the guest of Ross and was in the nation for the
purpose of collecting historical and ethnological material relating to the
tribe, was seized and all his manuscript rifled. A few weeks before this the
Cherokee Phoenix had been suppressed and its plant seized and carried off by
the Georgia Guard, at the instigation of Major Curry, who saw that it was
thereafter run in the interest of removal.
Before leaving Red Clay, in October, Mr. Schermerhorn
had posted, on the walls of the council house, notice of a meeting to be
held at New Echota, the third week in December, for the purpose of agreeing
to the terms of a treaty. The notice was accomplished by the threat that
those who failed to attend would be counted as assenting to any treaty that
might be made, and the promise that all who should attend would be subsisted
at government expense. Threats and promises, however, proved of little
avail, and when the proceedings opened there were present not more than
three hundred Indians, men, women and children. Of these a good many were
emigrants, and none of them were principal officers of the Cherokee Nation.
Curry, who had returned from Washington, evidently with the assurance of
executive support, proceeded to carry things with a high hand, openly
threatening any one who had come there to oppose the treaty. At Mr.
Schermerhorn's suggestion a committee of twenty was selected from among
those present to confer with him as to details of a treaty. When it was
reported to the people for their vote, the ballot showed seventy-nine in
favor and seven against. A delegation of thirteen was appointed to accompany
the commissioner to Washington for the purpose of urging the ratification of
the treaty, and clothed with power to assent to any alterations made
necessary by the President or Senate. Mr. Schermerhorn immediately wrote the
Secretary of War of his success, exulting in the belief that John Ross was
at last prostrate, the power of the nation having been taken from him as
well as the money. He was now a Sampson shorn of his locks.
The treaty provided that the Cherokee Nation cede all
its remaining territory east of the Mississippi River for the sum of four
million five hundred dollars and a common joint interest in the country
occupied by the Western Cherokees, with the addition of a small tract on the
northeast. The Cherokees were to be paid for their improvements and removed
and subsisted for a year at the expense of the United States, the removal to
take place within two years from the ratification of the treaty. Provision
was made for the payment of debts owed by the Indians out of money coming to
them from the treaty; for the reestablishment of missions in the west; for
pensions to the Cherokees wounded in the services of the government in the
War of 1812, and the Creek war; for permission to establish such military
posts and roads in the new country for the use of the United States as
should be deemed necessary; for satisfying Osage claims in the western
territory and for bringing about a friendly understanding between the two
tribes; and for the commutation of all annuities into a permanent national
fund, the interest to be placed at the disposal of the officers of the
Cherokee Nation for the care of schools and an orphan asylum, and for
general national purposes. It was signed by J. F. Schermerhorn and William
Carroll as commissioners of the United States, and by the committee of
twenty on the part of the Treaty party, prominent among whom were Major
Ridge and Elias Boudinot.
The main body of the nation, indignant at what had
been done, stood ready to contest the treaty. Second Chief Lowrey called a
meeting of the Council at Red Clay in January, and although the weather was
bitterly cold and stormy, and smallpox had broken out in one district, over
four hundred persons were present. Those who were detained sent in votes by
friends and neighbors. A resolution passed, denouncing the methods used by
the commissioners and declaring the treaty null and void, was signed "by
upwards of twelve thousand Cherokees" and forwarded to Washington. This
protest, with one signed by three thousand two hundred and fifty, residing
in North Carolina, was presented to Congress by the National delegation.
While the Executive had shown too plain a hand in the game to leave any
doubt as to what course he would now pursue, it was still believed that the
National Legislature would not stand for the methods used when the facts in
the case became known. But in spite of the strenuous opposition against the
ratification of the treaty it passed the Senate by a majority of one vote
and was promptly signed and proclaimed by the President, May 23, 1836. The
treaty allowed the nation two years in which to remove, and no time was lost
by the administration in taking preliminary steps to carry it into
execution. To Governor Lumpkin, of Georgia, and Governor Carroll, of
Tennessee, who had been instrumental in bringing it about, was given the
commission to supervise and direct the execution of the treaty, while Benj.
F. Curry was made superintendent of removal. The details of graft which crop
out in the correspondence of the time as found in the official records prove
that the removal of the Indians provided many a fat job for place hunters
and friends of influential politicians on good terms with the
administration. Many a political debt was paid with the capital furnished by
the sale of the Cherokee Nation East.
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