At the beginning of the nineteenth
century the Cherokees were the most powerful and the most civilized of all
the North American Indians. Their possessions, which at one time extended
from the eastern slope of the Blue Ridge Mountains almost to the
Mississippi, and from northern Kentucky to central Alabama and Georgia,
though greatly diminished, still covered a territory of fifty-three thousand
square miles, almost half of which lay in Tennessee, a small area in southwestern North Carolina, the rest being about equally divided between
Alabama and Georgia. They were the mountaineers of the south holding the
mountain barriers between the English settlements on the Atlantic Seacoast
and the French and Spanish garrisons in the Mississippi Valley and on the
Gulf Coast.
They called
themselves Yun-wi-yah, meaning principal people. The name Cherokee, or
Cheraqui has been given more than one interpretation. According to one
version it is a contraction of two words meaning "He takes fire." It was
believed by the Spaniards to signify rock-dwellers, and was probably given
them by neighboring tribes as descriptive of the mountain country which
according to Bancroft, was the most picturesque and salubrious region east
of the Mississippi. "Their homes are encircled by blue hills rising beyond
blue hills of which the lofty peaks would kindle with the early light and
the overshadowing night envelop the valleys like a cloud". David Brown, a
Cherokee youth educated at Cornwall, Connecticut, writing in 1822, describes
it as a well-watered and fertile region; "Abundant springs of pure water are
to be found everywhere," he says. "A range of lofty and majestic mountains
stretch themselves across the nation, the northern part of which is hilly
while in the southern and western parts are extensive and fertile plains,
covered partly with tall trees through which beautiful streams of water
glide. The climate is delightful and healthy; the winters are mild and the
spring clothes the ground with richest verdure. Cherokee flowers of
exquisite beauty and variegated hues meet and fascinate the eye in every
direction."
Cradled in such
surroundings, it is not strange that the Cherokees were instinctively
artistic and responsive to every form of natural beauty. The song of bird
and the delicate fragrance of wild flower delighted, while the massive
grandeur of mountain and forest filled with awe and admiration, these
children of the wilderness, often inspiring their minds to lofty flights of
fancy which sometimes found expression in metaphors of rare subtlety and
beauty. Attachment to their ancestral homes
was strong and sincere and had its root deep in the past of their domestic
and religious institutions. As is always the case when a primitive people
has dwelt for a long time in the same region, their legends had become
localized and were associated with mountain peak and prominent rock and
tree, with spring and cave and deep river-bend.
The English traveller, Bartram., describes the people
of this tribe as of larger stature and fairer complexion than their southern
neighbors. "In their manner and disposition they are grave and steady;
dignified and circumspect in their deportment; rather slow and reserved in
their conversation, yet frank, cheerful and humane; tenacious of the
liberties and natural rights of man; secret, deliberate and determined in
their councils; honest, just and liberal, and ready always to sacrifice
every pleasure and gratification, even their blood and life itself, to
defend their territory and maintain their rights." The men are described as
tall, erect and moderately robust; their features regular and their
countenances open, dignified and placid, exhibiting an air of magnanimity,
superiority and rude independence; the women, as tall, slender, erect and of
delicate frame; their features, formed with perfect symmetry. "Their
countenances are cheerful and friendly; they move with a becoming grace and
dignity." They were a religious people: but
"never in their most savage state did they worship the work of their own
hands, neither fire nor water." They believed in a Great First Cause, in a
spirit of Good, and a spirit of Evil in constant warfare with each other,
the Good finally prevailing. Heaven, an open forest of shade and fruit
trees, was adorned with fragrant flowers and mossy banks beside cool
sparkling streams; game abounded and there were enough feasts and dances to
satisfy, but not to cloy, the appetite for pleasure. This happy and immortal
region reserved for beautiful women, prepared and adorned by the Great
Spirit, and men distinguished for valor, wisdom and hospitality, lay just
across the way from the land of Evil Spirits, where the wretched who had
failed on earth, were compelled to live in hungeT, hostility and darkness,
hearing and seeing the rejoicings of the happy without the hope of ever
reaching the delectable shores.
Witches and
wizards were abroad in the land, who claimed supernatural powers and were
supposed to have intercourse with evil spirits, and to have the power of
transforming themselves into beasts and birds, in which forms they took
nocturnal excursions in pursuit of human prey, usually, though not always,
those stricken with disease. The croak of a frog or the hoot of an owl in
the twilight was enough to strike terror to the heart of the bravest Indian
child, who verily believed that the witches "would get him if he didn't
watch out."
Adair, who for forty years was a
trader among the southern Indians and travelled extensively through their
country between 1735 and 1775, describes the Cherokees as living in villages
situated beside "cool, sparkling streams," in which they bathed frequently,
either as a religious rite or for the purpose of "seasoning" the body and
rendering it indifferent to exposure. "They are almost as impenetrable as a
bar of steel," he declares.
Their villages
lay in four main groups: the Lower Settlements lying upon the head streams
of the Savannah; the Middle Settlements on the Tennessee and its southern
tributaries; the Valley Towns west of them between two ranges of the Blue
Ridge Mountains; and the Overhill Settlements on the Little Tennessee
between the Blue Ridge and Holston. Besides these main groups were scattered
towns situated in different parts of the Cherokee country. It was estimated
in 1736 that there were sixty-four towns and villages, "populous and full of
women and children," with about sixteen or seventeen thousand souls all
told, over six thousand of whom were warriors. Each village had its council
house and its outlying fields of maize, beans and squashes, the common
property of the community. The head man of the village, together with
certain warriors distinguished for prowess, not only managed local affairs
but represented the village at the General Council of the nation usually
held, at Chota on the Tellico River. A certain loose tribal unity was
maintained by a principal chief and by certain laws or regulations by which
every member of the tribe was bound.
To
summarize, the Cherokees, by virtue of their location had developed an
artistic temperament, certain physical and mental characteristics and a form
of religious belief in keeping with and influenced by their surroundings.
Because of this intimate relation their attachment to their country was
exceedingly strong, a fact important in the explanation of their later
actions, but often either overlooked or disregarded by the ever encroaching
whites. Contact of the Cherokees with
Europeans dates back to the middle of the sixteenth century, when the daring
and adventurous De Soto, marching northward from Tampa Bay and passing over
"rough and high hills," arrived in the land of the Cheraqui. The Spaniards
described the Indians as a naked, lean and unwarlike people given to
hospitality to strangers. To the travellers they presented baskets of
berries and presents of corn, wild turkeys and an edible species of small
dog, which latter the Cherokees themselves did not eat, according to the
Gentleman of Elvas.
From time to time the
Cherokees met Spanish explorers and English and French settlers from whom
they gradually adopted such civilized arts as appealed to them. That they so
long remained conservative to European ideas and appeared to disdain
anything alien was due to the fact that there was so little in civilization
that appealed to people in the barbarous stage, and not to their lack of
intellectual vigor. Their own tools and implements were so admirably suited
to their purposes that they did not feel the need of better ones. Fire arms
proved an exception. The Indian learned their use readily, for by them he
was enabled to supply the growing demand for furs, the chief article of
trade with Europeans, and to hold his own with his enemies. By 1715 about
twelve hundred Cherokee warriors were supplied with guns, and a few years
later the governor of South Carolina furnished two hundred more with guns
and ammunition on condition that they would help him in a war upon a
neighboring tribe.
Before the end, of the
seventeenth century Virginia and South Carolina traders began dealing with
the Cherokees. In 1690 Cornelius Daugherty, a Virginia Irishman, established
himself among the tribe with whom he spent the remainder of his life. He was
followed by other traders, some of whom were not on the very' best terms
with the aborigines, due chiefly to their custom of purchasing or capturing
Indians to be sold in the settlements or to the West Indies, and to their
general conduct toward the natives, which was described as sometimes "very
abuseful." Complaints of these abuses coming from the Cherokees to Governor
Nicholson, coupled with the jealousy of French encroachments upon English
trade with the Indians, caused him to arrange for a conference of chiefs to
be held at Charleston in 1721. A treaty establishing i boundary between the
Cherokees and the settlement was agreed upon; a chief was designated as the
head of the nation to represent it in all dealings with the colonial
government; a commissioner was appointed to superintend the relation of the
colony with the Cherokees and a small cession of land was made, the first in
the long list that was to follow.
Nine years
later we find North Carolina commissioning Sir Alexander Cummings to arrange
a treaty of alliance with the tribe. After a preliminary meeting with the
chiefs on the Hiwassee in the Cherokee country he conveyed a committee of
six of them, bearing the crown of the nation, to England where, after a
visit of several weeks, they signed the treaty of Dover. The treaty provided
that the Cherokees trade with no other country than England, and that none
but Englishmen be allowed to build forts or cabins, or plant corn among
them. In return for these concessions the chiefs carried home a generous
supply of paint, a few pounds of beads and some other equally worthless
articles. Flattered by the courteous treatment which they received in
England they did not at first realize the disproportionateness of the
bargain. These two treaties were but the
beginning of land cessions by which, year after year, from this time on,
under one pretext or another, the aborigines were shorn of their ancestral
domains and found themselves powerless to prevent it.
In 1755, a treaty and purchase of land were again
negotiated by South Carolina. In 1756 North Carolina commissioned Hugh
Wad-deli to conclude a treaty of alliance and cession which was followed up
the same year by Governor Glenn's chain of military forts, Fort Prince
George erected on the Savannah, Fort Monroe, 170 miles farther down the
river, and Fort Loudon on the Tennessee, at the mouth of the Tellico. In
1777 Cherokee hostilities were put down with a heavy hand by the combined
forces from Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina and most of their
principal towns on the Tennessee destroyed. A cession of land was wrung from
the Indians which proved so distasteful to the Chicamauga band that they
refused to assent to it. Moving westward they settled the "Five Lower Towns"
on the Tennesee, among which was Lookout Mountain town where Daniel Ross
came so lear losing his life. With various other treaties these bring as to
the end of the official relations of the Cherokees with colonial
governments, so far as concerns land cessions, and to the War of
Independence and the formation of the Confederation.
The mother country and her colonies, by failing at the
outset to adopt a definite systematic policy of justice and humanity towards
the Indians, established the precedent for all subsequent dealings with
them. Charters and patents granted by England to the colonies neglected to
give due consideration to the prior claims of the aboriginal tribes. The
colonies left their course with the Indians to be directed by circumstances.
Agents and commissioners were given a free hand in securing land cessions
and arranging treaties. Bribes were used without scruple and chiefs and
headmen corrupted by every available means. That any advantage which might
be taken of the ignorance and misunderstanding of natives, unfamiliar with
the English language, was considered legitimate is evident to any one
familiar with the history of Indian treaties. Neither governments nor
individuals considered it dishonest to cheat an Indian, criminal to rob him,
nor murder to kill him. Any attempt to protect him or to teach him the way
of salvation was scarcely deemed meritorious. That amicable relations
existed at all between the Indians and the English was due to two causes:
first, the few exceptional white men who looked upon the savage as entitled
to the same justice and humanity as that to which the white man is entitled;
and second, to the increasing proximity of Spaniards in Florida and French
in the Mississippi Valley and on the Gulf Coast, bidding for Indian trade.
These the English watched with jealous eye, dreading not only the loss of
profitable trade, but the hostility of the natives who could become
formidable enemies at the very back doors of the settlements.
This fear caused the colonists to adopt a conciliatory
policy toward the Cherokees who, responding to their advances, formed an
alliance with them against the French. In the attack upon Fort Duquesne a
band of Cherokee warriors rendered valuable service to the English. The
contemptuous attitude of British and Colonial officers, the severe military
restraint placed upon them, suspicion of their fidelity, together with
various other reasons, caused them to become dissatisfied and return home.
Having lost their horses in an encounter with the French and being fatigued
by the long journey, they supplied themselves with mounts from a herd which
they found running at large on the frontier. The inhabitants of Virginia,
horrified at this act of horse stealing, attacked the warriors on their way
home through the settlements and killed forty of them. An act of treachery
on the part of a settler who invited a party of Cherokees to his house in
order that they might be surrounded and shot down as they left his
hospitable roof completed the estrangement. Ata-Kulla-Kulla, a prominent
chief, calling a council of war declared that, after they should have safely
conducted back to the settlements some Englishmen who were among them for
the purpose of arranging a treaty, "the hatchet shall never be buried until
the blood of our people shall be avenged." "But let us not violate our
faith," said he, "by shedding the blood of those who have come among us in
confidence, bearing belts of wampun to cement a perpetual friendship. Let us
carry them back to the settlements and then take up the hatchet and endeavor
to exterminate the whole race of them. In the bloody war which followed
villages were burned, orchards and maize fields destroyed, women and
children murdered, many warriors slain, and the remaining inhabitants forced
to take refuge in the caves of the mountains until peace was restored by the
humiliating treaty of 1760.
The tribe had not
fully recovered from the effects of this struggle when they were confronted
with the War of Independence. Smarting under their recent defeat and
resenting the steady encroachment of colonists upon their hunting grounds,
they promptly, ranged themselves on the side of the British and placed their
warriors at the service of King George. In the border warfare which followed
Indians and white vied with each other in the atrocity of their deeds. The
Cherokees, finally completely defeated, were forced to sue for peace in
1785. By the terms of the treaty of Hopewell which followed, Congress was to
pass laws regulating trade with them; the Cherokees were allowed to send a
delegate to Congress; and no whites were to be suffered to settle upon
Cherokee lands. This treaty was unsatisfactory to Indians and whites alike.
The latter paid scant attention to the article forbidding them to settle on
Indian lands; the natives refused to submit to the encroachment of the
settlers and kept them terrified by sudden raids and bloody masacres. The
whites retaliated in kind and this condition of affairs kept up until
stopped by intervention of the Federal Government, in 1790.
As early as 1789 General Knox, Secretary of War,
called the attention of President Washington to the disgraceful violation of
the treaty of Hopewell, and recommended the appointment of a commission to
look into the matter and, if need be, negotiate a more effective treaty.26
In August of the next year the Senate passed a resolution providing for such
a commission, and the result was the treaty of Holston, which, in addition
to settling the boundary question, gave the Federal Government the exclusive
right to trade with the Cherokees, granted an annuity of $100 and promised
to supply implements of husbandry and send four persons into the Cherokee
Nation to act as interpreters.
An Indian
agent, who was sent to see that the policy of the treaty was carried out,
established headquarters on the Hiwassee River near where it empties into
the Tennessee, and from this point settled disputes between the whites and
Cherokees, enforced intercourse laws, apportioned annuities and distributed
plows, hoes, spinning wheels, cards and looms among the Indians and
instructed them in their use. Colonel Silas Dinsmore, who was agent from
1796 to 1799, devoted his energies to the raising of cotton, to which some
sections of the nation were excellently well suited. Major Lewis succeeded
him and was succeeded in turn by R. J. Meigs, an old Revolutionary soldier,
who had marched to Quebec with Arnold. For twenty-two years he served as
Indian agent, rendering efficient and intelligent service and acquiring a
knowledge of the character and needs of the Cherokees which made him
authority in their affairs29 as long as he lived.
This new policy of the Federal Government gave
encouragement, impetus and direction to the progressive spirit already
abroad in the nation. Notwithstanding the half century of intermittent
warfare the Cherokees had made considerable advancement before the treaty of
Holston. Adair states that horses had been introduced among them early in
the eighteenth century, and that by 1760 they had a prodigious number of
them and they were of excellent quality. The same may be said of cattle,
hogs and poultry. Sevier, on his expedition against the Coosa towns in 1793,
allowed his army to kill three hundred beeves at Etowah, and leave their
carcasses rotting on the ground.30 Benjamin Hawkins, while travelling
through the Cherokee Nation three years later, met two Indian women driving
ten fat cattle to the settlements to selL21 Indian pork was highly esteemed
by the colonists; "At the fall of the leaf" says Adair, "the woods are full
of hickory nuts, acorns, chestnuts and the like, which occasions the Indian
bacon to be more streaked, firm and better tasted than any we met with in
the English settlements." Baskets were made by the women, and pottery of
simple though pleasing design was moulded from day and glazed by holding in
the smoke of corn meal bran; hunting was a lucrative occupation of the men
until the end of the nineteenth century, a party of traders taking home at
one trip thirty wagon loads of furs.
By their
geographic position and superior numbers, the Cherokees might have held the
balance of power in the south had it not been for the looseness of their
tribal organization. The first attempt to weld the whole nation into a
political unit was in 1736 when Christian Priber, a French Jesuit, went to
live among them and, by promptly adapting himself to their language and
dress, won their confidence to such an extent that he was able to induce
them to adopt a scheme of government which he drew up, modelled on the
French monarchy, with the chief medicine man as emperor, himself as
secretary of state, and Great Tellico as the national capitaL But when
Priber was arrested by the authorities of North Carolina, on the accusation
of being a secret emissary of the French, this scheme gradually went to
pieces. It was seventy-two years later that they reorganized their
government and adopted their first code of written laws. In 1808 the Council
provided for the organization of regulating parties to maintain order in the
nation, named the penalty for horse stealing and declared that fatherless
children should inherit the father's property in case the mother married
again." It had been the custom among the Cherokees, time out of mind, to
transmit from father to son the memory of the loss by violence of relatives
or members of the clan. With the memory also was transmitted the obligation
to revenge the loss. "Who sheddeth man's blood, by the clansmen of the
deceased shall his blood be shed," was considered good savage ethics; but
the Cherokee Nation emerging from barbarism had outgrown this ancient
custom, and in 1810 an act of oblivion for all past murder was passed by
unanimous consent of the seven clans in council at Oostinaleh; punishment
was taken from the clan and placed in the hands of the General Council. The
later development in government will be taken up and treated in a future
chapter. |