As the Cherokees were the first to violate the compact
of neutrality entered into with other tribes at the Creek Agency in
February, and at the Antelope Hills Conference some months later, natural
courtesy and a glue regard to the good will of their neighbors rendered
necessary an explanation of their changed attitude. Chief Ross sent a
circular letter to the various tribes explaining the causes which impelled
the Cherokee Nation to join the Confederacy.' He even went so far as to
suggest the desirability of a union of all the Red Brethren with the
Richmond government. One of these letters was dispatched to Hopothleyohola,
who had been a very good friend of the Cherokee chief and had supported him
loyally in his stand for neutrality.. The letter was returned, with a note
written across the back, asking if Mr. Ross were really the author of it.
This sharp thrust at Cherokee
constancy was not lost upon Chief Ross who immediately sent a special
delegation, headed by Joseph Vann, the second chief of the nation on a
mission of peace to the Creeks, to explain more fully the position of the
Cherokees and to invite their chiefs to visit the Cherokee Council then in
session. But Hopothleyohola would have nothing to do with them. They had
broken a compact and were not to be trusted again. He would go his way and
they were free to go theirs. His mind was made up, for reasons of his own,
to remain loyal to the Union.
With two-thirds of his tribe in war paint and fighting
gear he was preparing to defend its interests in the Cherokee Nation at all
costs. Not that the old Creek chief was actuated by such motives as inspired
Webster's immortal words, "liberty and union, now and forever, one and
inseparable." In fact he had no clearly defined conception of American
patriotism. How could he, or the members of hi stribe or of any of the
Indian tribes? Indian Territory was not an integral part of the Union as was
Texas or Arkansas, but was practically a foreign dependent group of allied
nations. Its citizens were a people apart from the Federal Government, with
a patriotism all their own, which took no cognizance of such common bonds of
interest as the celebration of Thanksgiving and the Declaration of
Independence. He had a grudge to pay and this occasion furnished the
opportunity. And who can criticise the chief of a recently. barbarous tribe
for going to war with such an incentive when, if the truth were told, half
of the white men, on both sides in the conflict were actuated by no higher
motives? If this fact of the relation of the Indians to the Federal
Government is kept clearly in mind, along with some others which must linger
in the memory of all who have read the preceding pages of this story, it
will be less difficult to understand why Indian loyalty was likely to shift
from time to time with the changing fortunes of war.
But Hopothleyohola was not one to
waver in his allegiance. With an armed force he made a raid upon his former
friends, the Cherokees, driving off stock and wantonly destroying other
property. Then marshaling his forces in the Creek Nation, he prepared to
stand his ground against an overwhelmingly superior number of Choctaws,
Chickasaws, Seminoles and Cherokees under Colonel Cooper. A Stronhold was
chosen and intrenchments thrown up in a bend of the Bird Creek about twelve
miles north of Tulsey town. This, Cooper prepared to attack in December.
On the eve of battle the Cherokee
troops under Colonel Drew deserted in a body, swearing that they would
willingly shoot Yankees, but when it came tq fighting their old friends and
neighbors, the Creeks, they drew the line. Cooper, with his remaining
forces, attacked the Creeks and easily defeated them, driving them into the
hills beyond. Still pursuing them, he finally pushed them northward beyond
the Kansas line, followed by a straggling train of helpless women and
children.
The winter of 1861-2 was a bitter one for these Indian
refugees. Loyal bands from the Five Tribes, together with detachments from
other tribes kept arriving, until the aggregate numbered over six thousand,
camped along the southern border of the state. Shelterless, half naked,
barefooted and nearly starved, they presented a sorry sight.
All attempt of the Federal
authorities to relieve them resulted only in furnishing opportunity for
peculation to Government agents and state politicians who shamelessly
feathered their own nests at the expense of shivering, shelterless and
starving women and children. There seemed no way of relieving the situation
as long as the Indians remained in Kansas. The only hope of relief lay in
their return to Indian Territory, now occupied by the Confederate troops.
Before the Indians could return in safety the country would have to be
cleared of the enemy and reoccupied by Federal forces, which were so
urgently needed in other quarters just at this time.
This was the situation when
Senator Lane, the originator of the "homeward bound" movement, went to
Washington in January, 1862, and there so convincingly presented the cause
of still "Bleeding Kansas" and of the Indian refugees, that he was given
permission to organize an expedition at once to carry out his purpose. Owing
to petty jealousies and to the spirit of insubordination, if not rank
duplicity, on Lane's part, to gain his ends, the expedition soon fell into
disrepute as "Lane's jay hawking expedition." The project was thus delayed
from month to month until a petty game of personal ambition and state
politics could be played out, the Indians, meanwhile, dying of starvation
and exposure.
While political intrigues and petty jealousies were
sacrificing the Union Indians in Kansas, General Curtis was marching hs
troops across Missouri for the purpose of avenging Lyon and Wilson Creek,
and of recovering Federal forts in Arkansas. The Confederate forces west of
the Mississippi in command of Major General Earl Van Dorn were concentrated
in northwest Arkansas to oppose him. They consisted of Sterling Price's
volunteer troops, chiefly from Missouri, McCulloch's regulars, and several
regiments of Indians under General Albert Pike. The opposing armies met near
Fayetteville, Arkansas, early in March" and two engagements took place at
Pea Ridge and Elk Horn Tavern. The result was a defeat for the Confederacy,
due in part to a lack of cooperation among commanding generals. Both were
bloody battles in which Indians on one side were pitted against Germans on
the other.
Deeds of revolting barbarism were perpetrated upon the
dead and dying by the scalping knife, sword and bayonet. The country at
large was horrified to hear that the first scratch of battle had revealed
the savage under the epidermis of the most cultured and civilized Red Skin,
and jumped to the conclusion that all Indians employed in the engagement had
reverted to their primitive customs in warfare. The truth is certainly bad
enough to need no exaggeration. As a matter of fact eight scalped heads were
counted on the battle field after the fight was over.18 There was perhaps a
greater number of mutilated bodies of Confederate dead. The scalps, without
doubt., were counted as trophies by Indian braves who had not yet learned
that such unrefined methods of killing their fellow men were not to be
countenanced in civilized warfare. Their own people, deeply mortified over
the offense, condemned it severely, but were unable to locate the offenders
for punishment.
The trail of blood from the mutilated bodies of
southern soldiers, however, leads in quite another direction until it stops
at the door of a band of men whose ancestors on the banks of the Rhine had
been undergoing the process of civilization ever since the time of
Charlemagne, or before. Thus it would seem that, under the savage influence
of war, the power of atavism is as strong after a thousand years of
evolution as after a hundred. Be that as it may, the Cherokees rendered
splendid service in the battle of Pea Ridge in spite of the contempt in
which they were held by the commanding general.
After these defeats the white troops were drawn off
towards the east where they were needed to stay the march of the Union army
steadily advancing southward down the eastern Mississippi Valley. Colonel
Drew's regiment went into camp at the mouth of the Illinois River in the
Cherokee Nation. Colonel Watie was sent on a raiding expedition into
southwest Missouri, and General Pike establshed headquarters in the
southwestern corner of the Choctaw Nation, at Fort McCulloch.
At length, after various delays,
the; Lane expedition had been organized and was ready to march into Indian
Territory. Leaving Humbolt, Kansas, the latter part of June, it crossed the
southern border of the state five thousand strong. The advance guard was led
by General Weer, who, upon entering the Indian country, offered to open
negotiations with the Cherokees to return to their former alliance. Through
Chief Ross they, courteously declined the offer, saying that a treaty of
alliance had already been entered into with the Confederacy, the reasons for
which were too well known to Colonel Weer for it to be necessary to
recapitulate them.
The country was now in a defenseless condition and a
letter was sent post haste to General Hindman, who had been placed in
command of the Trans-Mississippi District on the. death of McCulloch at Pea
Ridge, calling on him for protection against the invading army. The
commanding general at once ordered General Pike northward to join the
Cherokee regiments in the vicinity of Fort Gibson. Pike, whose forces were
poorly equipped to meet the enemy, for reasons which will appear later,
sulked in his tent ignoring the order. After it had been peremptorily
repeated several times he resigned, and Douglas M. Cooper was put in
command. Cooper moved northward promptly but too late to prevent a
Confederate defeat at Locust Grove, about thirty miles north of Tahlequah.
Here a small command composed of Cherokee troops, under Colonel Watie and
Colonel Drew, and a batallion of Missourians, under Clarkson, offered a
brave resistance to the Kansas forces, who otunumbered them two to one.
Clarkson's whole train was captured and Drew's regiment18 deserted to the
enemy. Colonel Watie's troops fought with great bravery but were finally
forced to give way to superior numbers.
An explanation of Drew's conduct,
as well as Pike's, is to be found in a declaration of General Pike to the
Five Tribes bearing the date of July 31, 1861. It states that their cause
had been betrayed by the Confederacy, that they themselves, in violation of
their treaties, had been taken out of their country and forced to serve
beyond its boundaries, yet without their due measure of credit; that they
had been despised and criticised by the white troops; that they had been
kept in Arkansas while their own country was being exposed to hordes of jay
hawkers, and that they were permitted to go to its defense only when the
enemy's forces had reached such proportions that their own unaided strength
was unable to withstand it, yet no appreciable number of white troops had
been sent to their assistance. In addition to these charges the supply of
clothing and ammunition intended for the Indian troops had been stopped at
Little Rock or Fort Smith and directed into other channels, so that their
soldiers were ill clad and poorly equipped. They remained unpaid from month
to month causing unrest and dissatisfaction throughout Indian Territory. In
addition to these causes, the old factional jealousies among the Cherokees
had been aggravated by the greater appreciation shown by the Confederate
Government for Colonel Watie's troops who had won the reputation of being
better soldiers than Drew's full-bloods.
After the engagement at Locust
Grove, General Weer moved his army southward in two detachments and
established headquarters on the Grand River about fourteen miles north of
Fort Gibson. On July 14, Major Campbell entered the Confederate stronghold
and the same day Captain Green arrived at Tahlequah. The following day the
latter moved his command to Park Hill where he found about two hundred
Cherokees awaiting an opportunity to join the Union. Colonel W. P. Ross and
Major Thomas Pegg, who were at Mr. Ross's house debating whether they should
respond to an order just received from Colonel Cooper to report for duty at
Fort Davis were arrested and sent to headquarters.
The war clouds were now gathering
thick and fast about the gray haired chief of the Cherokees. A few days
before the arrival of the Union forces Colonel Cooper, in the name of
President Davis, had commanded him to issue a proclamation calling on every
able-bodied Cherokee man between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five W
enlist in the Confederate military service. Following on the heels of this
demand, and probably caused by it, the Pins rose in rebellion and compelled
their chief, at the end of a halter, to declare for neutrality. Compliance
with the demand meant death at the hands of his own people. To ignore it was
to put himself at the mercy of Colonel Cooper. While he was thus hesitating
between the devil and the deep sea, the question was settled for him by
Captain Gaino, who arrested and placed him on parole, thereby adding to the
complication and confusion.
With the Confederate army in retreat, the Federal army
in control and his own government in anarchy, he found himself again face to
face with a crisis which he had to meet quickly. The Confederacy had proved
itself no more faithful to treaty relations than the Federal Government had
done. Good faith no longer bound him. Expediency pointed to a renewal of
relations with the north. Worn out and sick at heart over the hopelessness
and confusion of the whole situation, he determined to return to his
allegiance to the Union while there was yet a shadow of hope to save himself
and his nation from utter annihilation. When General Weer again approached
him on the subject, he yielded. As the Cherokee Nation was no longer a safe
place for him, he accepted the offer of a Union escort to Fort Gibson. With
his family and what valuables 22could be loaded onto two ox wagons he left
the country, making his way by way of Fort Scott, Kansas, to Philadelphia.
The success of the first Union
invasion proved temporary. At this time a small, well organized force could
have held the country easily, but inefficiency and lack of harmony among the
commanding officer823 led to mutiny and insubordination on the part of the
soldiers. Delay resulted, giving the Confederate Indians under Cooper and
Stand Watie time to join forces with white troops under General Raines. When
these combined commands moved northward the Union army retreated towards
Kansas, leaving the Cherokee country in the hands of the Confederacy again.
Tahlequah was recaptured. The victorious southern Cherokees held a
convention and passed resolutions deposing Chief John Ross from office.
Stand Watie, now a military hero, was elected to succeed him.
Had the triumphant army been
content to enjoy the fruits of its victory with moderation and mercy, there
would be one less series of disgraceful tales to tell of the Civil War.
Unfortunately that was not the case. Summary vengeance was wreaked upon the
families of loyal Cherokees, their long-standing enemies. Women, children
and old men, driven out of doors at midnight, were forced to seek protection
by following the trail of the retreating army by the light of their burning
homesteads. Beautiful Rose Cottage, after it had been sacked and denuded of
whatever valuables could be carried away, was given to the flames.
The success of the Confederate
army was short-lived. In a few weeks the Federal forces, having rallied for
a second invasion of Indian Territory, marched back across the Kansas line,
this time under command of Brigadier James G. Blunt, who defeated Cooper at
Fort Wayne, and with the assistance of Colonel W. A. Phillips, drove the
Confederate army south of the Arkansas River. Fort Gibson was retaken and
from now on to the end of the war remained the base of Union activity in
Indian Territory.
When the fortunes of war had again wrested the greater
part of the Cherokee Nation from the hands of the Confederate forces and it
was apparent that the Northern army had come to stay, the loyal Cherokees
met in Council at Camp John Ross in February, 1863. Thomas Pegg acting as
principal chief. They repudiated the alliance with the Confederate states,
restored their allegiance to the Union, abolished slavery and involuntary
servitude in the Cherokee Nation and passed a law confiscating the property
of all Cherokee citizens who were enemies of the Union. Mr. Ross was
reinstated as principal chief.
The war dragged on in Indian
Territory for two years longer. The Union army continued holding the country
north of the Arkansas River and the Confederates, south. Raids matched
counter-raids with no permanent gains to either side and much loss to both.
The Confederate Indians took refuge on the Red River where they suffered as
great hardships as had been endused by the refugees in Kansas at the
beginning of the war. Sherman's path to the sea presented a scene of no
greater destruction and desolation than Indian Territory after the Civil
War.
The
loyal bands returned to their homes in the summer of 1862, 1863 and again in
1864 and made crops only to have them destroyed by raiders from the south.
The suffering was intense on both sides. Parched corn came to be a luxury
during the winter months and wild fruits and berries sustained life in
summer. All the cattle and horses were appropriated by the army, and with
the able-bodied men in the service of one faction or the other, the women
and children were left to shift for themselves.
Probably no part of the United or
disunited, States suffered such havoc as did the Indian territory during
this period. After the besom of war had swept, first north and then south,
hardly a home was left standing. The country presented a tragic picture of
blackened chimneys rising from the ruins of charred homesteads, of unfenced
fields overgrown with weeds and brambles, and of a destitute population,
reduced to the very verge of despondency. Thus did the Red Man help pay the
price of freedom for the Black.
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