The fugitive chief of the Cherokees, hastened to
Washington and at once began trying to set himself and his nation right with
the United States Government. In spite. of intriguing enemies, who, for
reasons of their own, did not wish to see the Cherokee reinstated, he
secured an interview with the President and stated his case. He claimed
that, deserted by their natural protector, his nation had been compelled to
seek an alliance with the Confederacy. As soon as the Federal troops came to
their rescue the main body of the Cherokees had gladly returned to their
allegiance. He believed that they were justified in the course they had
pursued because they had been forced into it by the exigencies of the
moment. Notwithstanding the fact that he had thrown the whole weight of his
influence and the strength of his resources into the balance for the
Confederacy for a few months, his heart, he naively assured the President,
had always been in the Union. As a matter of fact his heart had never been
in the Union nor in the Confederacy. It had never gone beyond the boundaries
of the Indian Territory, scarcely beyond those of the Cherokee Nation. He
had joined the Confederacy because he saw destruction ahead if he did not.
He had tried to make the best of a bad situation. Likewise, his loyalty to
the Union was actuated purely by motives of self-preservation. Why should it
have been otherwise? Searching the history of the last thirty years one
fails to find a reason except in the most abstract ethics.
The point of view and logic of the
defense were not lost upon Lincoln. With his great breadth of mind and depth
of sympathy he could not fail to appreciate, in a measure, the position of
the Indian in the war. He was convinced that the chief had some show of
justice on his side and promised a thorough examination of the case as soon
as circumstances would permit. With the assurance that his nation would be
fairly dealt with in due time, Mr. Ross was compelled to content himself for
the present.
The promised investigation did not materialize,
however, and the end of the war found the Cherokees on a precarious footing
at Washington. If they had cherished any hope of escaping the rigors of
reconstruction they were soon to be undeceived. Politicians were not slow to
see the White Man's opportunity in the Red Man's extremity. It was a rare
chance of securing valuable lands for nothing, and one not to be neglected.
One of the first statements of this policy is to be found in the early
summer of 1864 in a letter of Colonel W. A. Phillips, then Commandant at
Fort Gibson. The occasion was a convention held by the Choctaws, at New
Hope, the preceding March, with a view to profiting by the President's
Amnesty Proclamation. They had appointed a provisional governor4 for their
nation and sent a delegate to Washington. Colonel Phillips, upon hearing of
this, forwarded a protest to the National Capital, stating that the tribe
was still in a stale of rebellion and advising that no terms be made until a
more secure basis had been reached. The illuminating suggestion was added,
that the situation furnished a good excuse for reducing the great Indian
domains to mere reserves, and for opening up land for settlement, an
opportunity which the country could not afford to neglect.
A word to the wise was sufficient. The next year found
the policy suggested by Colonel Phillips fairly well outlined by the Indian
Department. Presently rumors reached Indian Territory that the treaty rights
of the Indians were considered abrogated and in the renewal of friendly
relations the tribes would be completely at the mercy of the United States
in consequence of their part in the rebellion. The people of the Five
Tribes, having much to lose in such a case, were particularly uneasy and
desirous of renewing their treaty relations on the best terms obtainable. As
a first step towards this end a grand council of all the Southern Indians
was called to meet at Camp Napoleon, Chattahomha, May 24, 1865.
Representatives of fifteen tribes are said to have been present. A solemn
league of peace and friendship was errtered into, resolutions were drawn up
expressing their purpose and wishes and delegates, representing each of the
tribes, were appointed to go to Washington for the purpose of conferring
with the Federal Government on the subject of new treaties. Hearing of this
action of the Indians and thinking it wiser to arrange treaties with them in
their own country, the President appointed a commission to meet their
representatives at some place in the Indian Territory.
The Choctaws again took the
initiative. Their chief, Peter Pytchlyn, a conservative, well educated man,
who had never been a bitter partisan in the war,7 sent out a call for a
general conference with the commissioners to be held at Armstrong Academy,
September 1. His proclamation, after describing the existing conditions and
urging all to send representatives to the conference, closes with the
following significant sentences: "It therefore becomes us as a brave people
to forget and lay aside our prejudices and prove ourselves equal to the
occasion. Let reason obtain, now that the sway of passion has passed, and
let us meet in council, with a proper spirit, to renew our former relations
with the United States government.
The Grand Council which was
convened at Fort Smith instead of at Armstrong Academy, to suit the
convenience of the commissioners, proved to be a notable one indeed. The
Federal Government was represented by Elijah Sells, Superintendent of the
Southern Indians, Thomas Wister, a prominent Quaker of Pennsylvania, Major
General W. S. Harvey of the United States Army, Colonel Ely S. Parker, an
educated Iroquois Indian who had served as a member of General Grant's staff
during the war, and D. N. Cooley, president of the commission. Milton W.
Reynolds, who was present as a representative of the New York Tribune,
declared that the delegates of the hidian tribes were no less brilliant and
conspicuous than the representatives of the Federal Government, but if the
truth were told, so far as power of expression, knowledge of Indian treaties
and real oratory were concerned, they had a decided advantage. Governor
Colbert of the Chickasaws, Colonel Pytchlyn of the Choctaws and Chief Ross
of the Cherokees were regarded as men of ability, education and good
breeding wherever they were known. But the most gifted and powerful in
eloquence of all the Indian representatives was Colonel E. C. Boudinot, son
of Elias Boudinot1° and nephew of Stand Watie, just out of the Confederate
Congress at Richmond where he had served as a delegate of the Southern
Cherokees. With his impassioned eloquence and distinguished appearance he
was one of the most pronounced figures in the convention.' There was present
also a large delegation from Kansas, composed of lawyers and lobbyists, who
came for the purpose of insisting that room be made in Indian Territory for
the Indians in Kansas whose reservations covered some of the best lands in
the southern part of the state. In addition to all these was a multitude of
men, women and children from the various tribes. Their picturesque camps on
the outskirts of the town must have interested, even if their pathetic
poverty failed to touch the sympathy of the most hardened war veteran
present.
The council was called to order on September 8.12
After the blessings of the Great Spirit had been invoked upon the
deliberations in an earnest prayer by Reverend Lewis Downing, second chief
of the Cherokee Nation, the objects of the meeting were stated by the
chairman, Commissioner Cooley, who informed the Indians that, since most of
them had violated their treaty obligations to the United States by entering
into diplomatic relations with the Confederacy, they had forfeited all
annuities and interests in lands in Indian Territory. However, the
long-suffering President was willing to hear his erring children in
extenuation of their great crime, and to make treaties with such nations as
were willing to be at peace among themselves and with the United States.
There were certain general terms on which their relations might be restored;
the opposing factions of each tribe must enter into a treaty of amity and
peace among themselves, between each other as tribes, and with the United
States; the tribes settled in the Indian country should bind themselves, at
the call of the United States authorities, to assist in keeping peace among
the wild tribes of the plains; slavery should be abolished and measures
taken to incorporate the slaves into the several tribes on an equal footing
with the original members, or they should otherwise suitably provide for
them; slavery or involuntary servitude should never exist in any tribe or
nation except in the punishment of crime; a part of the lands hitherto owned
and occupied by the Indians must be set apart for the friendly Indians in
Kansas and elsewhere, on such terms as might be agreed upon or fixed by the
government.
Full delegations from some of the tribes had not yet
arrived, but the next few days were taken up by those present in submitting
credentials, discussing the limitations placed upon them by their
instructions and in explaining how and why they had been induced to egn
treaties with the Confederate Government.
According to the report of the
chairman of the Council one of the most interesting of these explanations
was a paper from the loyal Cherokees pleading "not guilty" to the charge of
being rebels in consequence of the treaty concluded with the southern
states. This brought forth a lengthy reply from Commissioner Cooley, in
which he reviewed the history of the Cherokees in the Civil War, showing
that they had been guilty of open defection from the Union, and fixing the
blame upon a few bad men, chief of whom was John Ross. That the majority of
the nation had been, and still were, loyal at heart he admitted. If they
wished to remove the stigma and the disability placed upon them by a few
wicked renegades they would be given an opportunity to do 80 by submitting
to the terms proposed by the United States. All forfeitures and penalties
against those who had not voluntarily aided the enemy would be remitted,
even if they were found necessary in other cases.
After four days of preliminary
discussion by delegations from several different tribes, a draft of a
preliminary treaty, based upon the principles contained in the opening
remarks of the commissioner, was presented to the convention. The loyal
Cherokees expressed their willingness to sign the agreement if they did not
acknowledge that they had forfeited their rights and annuities as set forth
in the preamble, but their signatures must be made under the statement that
"we, the loyal delegation, acknowledge the execution of the treaty of
October 7, 1861, but we solemnly declare that the execution was procured by
the coercion of the rebel army." The Southern Cherokees objected to the
treaty on the ground that it would be neither for the benefit of the
emancipated negro, nor for that of the Indian, to incorporate the former
into the tribe on an equal footing with its original members. They also
objected to consolidating all the tribes of Indian Territory under one
government, because of the many incongruous and irreconcilable members which
no power could bring into a semblance of assimilation. They further asked
that there might be an equitable division of their country by the United
States, as they believed that there was no way of restoring peace and
harmony between the still warring factions.
Mr. Ross was still in the east
when plans for the council were arranged. Realizing how desirable it was for
him to be on hand to defend himself and his nation, he set out for the west
as soon as he was able. The Cherokee National Council was in session when he
reached Tahlequah the first of September, and. he lingered a few days before
proceeding to Fort Smith. It was not until the thirteenth that he arrived at
the camp.
The meeting had been in session several days and the
factional differences between the loyal and the Southern Cherokees had been
given time to show themselves. Added to the ancient feuds, which still
rankled, was the confiscation act passed by the loyal Council of 1863, which
prevented the southern part of the tribe, numbering about six thousand, from
returning home. They were at this time living in great destitution upon the
Red River and their representatives at Fort Smith were anxious to secure
assurance from the loyal delegation that the law would be repealed and their
people reinstated in their homes. This promise could not be secured, the
delegation claiming that they did not have the power to bind their Council
to any policy of action. Considerable disappointment and irritation
naturally. The success of the Fort Smith Council from the point of view of
all concerned was only partial, due to the 'fact that the terms offered by
the United States were not altogether acceptable to the Indians, :and partly
to the fact that several of the delegations, including the Cherokees, had
not been notified that new treaties with them were desired by the
government, and they had therefore not been properly authorized to make
treaties relinquishing any of their lands 'for the use of friendly tribes in
Kansas. The Cherokees refused to enter into any negotiation for such a
treaty until their Council should appoint a commission with the proper
authority for the purpose. The meeting therefore came to an end with nothing
definite accomplished, so far -as the- Cherokees were concerned, except a
preliminary treaty of peace and amity as a basis for futur action, and an
agreement to send a delegation with proper authority to treat at Washington,
probably the next December.
The winter of 1866 was a dreary one - indeed for the
whole tribe. The condition of those on the Red River 'could not be expected
to improve as long as they remained there. Those who returned to their
-desolate nation fared little better. There were few churches, no schools,
no cultivated fields, except here and there a little corn patch in some
secluded place cultivated by women and children and the old men. The mills
had been destroyed, so that the primitive mortar and pestle had to be
depended upon for what little meal was used. ,Fortunate indeed were those
who had all the boiled corn or hominy they wanted. Flour at forty dollars a
barrel was prohibitive. Even salt, which before the war had been
manufactured in considerable quantities on the Grand Saline, was at a
premium, the salt works, which had been in use for over thirty years, having
gone the way of other improvements. Hoes, plows, axes, all implements so
necessary to an agricultural community, were sold at prohibitive rates, and
the necessary price -of the, commonest necessities was very hard to get.
This was plainly no time for
haggling and hair-splitting. Yet when itho delegations met in Washington at
the beginning of the year their early discussions gave little promise of
prompt adjustment of the difficulties by means of a treaty. Both sides had
engaged strong legal counsel and the discussions were ably conducted. Draft
after draft of a treaty was drawn up, only to be rejected by one or both
parties. The Southern Cherokees, feeling that it would be unsafe to return
home with the Ross party in full possession of the government and the
confiscation laws in force, demanded, as the only hope for their peace and
well-being, a division of the Cherokee lands and annuities in proportion to
the numbers of each party. A prompt protest was filed by the National party
which had always opposed any scheme which threatened their national
integrity. They suggested instead that one district's of the nation be set
aside for two years for the sole occupation of the Southern party, pending a
final settlement of the controversy. Of course this plan was wholly
unacceptable to the opposition because of the smallness of the district and
for other very good reasons.
Weeks and months of bickering and wire-pulling
followed, each party suspicious of the other, and both of the Federal
Government, which, determined to secure land upon which to colonize Indian
tribes in Kansas, was not blind to its opportunity of driving a keen bargain
at the expense of the discordant factions. Despairing of arranging terms
with the loyal Cherokees, the commissioners at last determined to treat with
the Southern party. Finally, on June 19, a treaty was concluded with them
providing that a certain part of the Cherokee Nation should be set apart for
their exclusive use. They, in turn agreed to sell to the United States a
part o4 the national domain. The treaty was not laid before the Senate but
was held as a Rooseveltian big stick over the Nationals, who, after another
month of discussion, themselves came to terms and signed a treaty on July
19. At best this treaty was a three-cornered compromise which pleased
nobody, but was recognized by all as the best that could be obtained under
the circumstances. The Federal Government, as usual, came out the greater
gainer. The treaty provided for the repudiation of the alliance with the
Confederacy; declared amnesty for all past offenses; repealed the
confiscation laws; allowed 160 acres of land to every freedman; agreed to
the establishment of a United States Court in the Indian Territory, and the
settlement of friendly Indians on unoccupied lands of the Cherokees. These,
with some articles of minor importance, constituted the treaty of 1866.
Chief Ross, though much broken in
health, headed his delegation as he had done for almost forty years. Before
the final draft of the treaty was arranged he became too ill to attend the
deliberations of the delegation. Realizing that his end was near, the
commissioners, at the suggestion of the Secretary of the Interior, repealed
their decree of the previous year deposing him from the chieftainship of the
Cherokees, on the ground that the reason which rendered that action
necessary no longer existed. Just at sunset, on August first, he quietly and
peacefully passed away, August 1, 1866.
When news of his death reached the
Cherokee Nation, there was sincere mourning among a large portion of his
people, both full-bloods and the mixed element who realized that they had
lost in their venerable chief a warm friend and an able champion. By act of
the National Council, his body was taken to Park Hill and interred with
fitting ceremony in the cemetery near his own home. When the National
Council convened in October it passed a resolution and placed upon the
records a memorial in which his service to his people and their love and
confidence toward him were ably expressed. It claims justly that his long
career, passed in the constant service of his people, "furnishes an instance
of confidence on their part and fidelity on his which had never been
surpassed in history.
That there is another side to Mr. Ross's reputation
those who have followed this story of his life need not be reminded. By his
enemies he was regarded in a very different light from that in which he
appeared to his friends. Fond of place and power, ambitious for his own
immediate family, dishonest in the use of the Cherokee national funds,
severe and partial in the administration of justice, crafty and
unscrupulous, trimming his sails to every political breeze,—these are some
of the charges brought against him.
Most of these charges were made by prejudiced persons
not competent to judge the man fairly, and are therefore not to be
considered seriously. Some of them are perhaps true in a sense. In the light
of later events it is evident that he made mistakes in his policy of
government. Yet they were not mistakes of a small man, but of a great one.
If he erred it was on the side of zeal for a cause which he thought to be
right. That he was a political trimmer is an accusation that needs stronger
proof than has yet been brought to light, while the accusation itself can be
easily accounted for without discredit to Mr. Ross. To understand him it
must not be forgotten that he was first, last and always a Cherokee Indian,
a citizen of the Cherokee Nation which was to him a sovereign, independent
nation. His consuming desire and purpose were to serve and protect, to the
best of his ability, this nation at whos6 head he stood so proudly and
staunchly for many years. To him its welfare and its claims were paramount.
He had no other patriotism, a fact which can be understood and appreciated
fully, perhaps, only by those who have lived under conditions similar to
those under which he lived, and have possessed sentiments and attachments
akin to his.
The interests of the full-blood Indians were his first
care. The Cherokees have had other chiefs who were patriotic and
incorruptible, men of whom any group of people might justly be proud. But
they have never had a chief who so guarded the interests of the helpless and
gave them preference over the stronger, mixed-blood population. And who has
needed a strong and sincere friend more than the full-blood? The Cherokees
can boast of better educated men than John Ross, more eloquent orators, men
of greater literary skill, of higher legal talent. But they have yet to
produce a statesman of greater all-round ability, of more strength of
character, of greater devotion to ;his tribe, than this Scotch Cherokee
Christian gentleman whose long, dramatic career came to a close well-night
half a century ago, marking the end of a most important period of Cherokee
history.
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