Cherokee History TidbitsBeginning at about the time of the American Revolutionary War (late 1700s), divisions over continued accommodation of encroachments by white settlers, despite repeated violations of previous treaties, caused some Cherokee to begin to leave the Cherokee Nation. These early dissidents would eventually move across the Mississippi River to areas that would later become the states of Arkansas and Missouri. Their settlements were established on the St. Francis and the White Rivers by 1800. Eventually, there were such large numbers of Cherokees in these areas the US Government established a Cherokee Reservation located in Arkansas, with boundaries from north of the Arkansas River up to the southern bank of the White River. Many of these dissidents became known as the Chickamauga. Led by Chief Dragging Canoe, the Chickamauga made alliances with the Shawnee and engaged in raids against colonial settlements. Other Cherokee leaders who lived in Arkansas were The Bowl, Sequoyah, Spring Frog and The Dutch.
By the late 1820s, the Territory of Arkansas had designs
on acquiring the land held by the Arkansas Cherokee. A
delegation of Arkansas Cherokees went to Washington,
D.C., and were forced to sign a treaty to vacate the
Arkansas Reservation. Arkansas Cherokees had two
choices: cooperate with the US government and move to
Indian Territory (later Oklahoma), or defy the US
Government and refuse to leave the Arkansas Reservation
area. Around 1828, the tribe split, some going to Indian
Territory. Others disobeyed the US Government and stayed
on the old Reservation lands in Arkansas. Those who
stayed on the old Arkansas Cherokee Reservation lands
have lobbied the US Government since the early 1900s to
be considered a Federally recognized Cherokee tribe. The
US Government has ignored their pleas. Today, there are
thousands of Cherokee living in Arkansas or Southern
Missouri who are relatives of these pre-Trail of Tears
Cherokee.
John Ross was an important figure in the history of
the Cherokee tribe. His father emigrated from
Scotland prior to the Revolutionary War. His mother
was a quarter-blood Cherokee woman whose father was
also from Scotland. He began his public career in
1809. The Cherokee Nation was founded in 1820, with
elected public officials. John Ross became the chief
of the tribe in 1828 and remained the chief until
his death.
Cherokees were displaced from their ancestral lands
in North Georgia and the Carolinas because of
rapidly expanding white population, as well as a
Gold Rush around Dahlonega, Georgia in the 1830's.
Samuel Carter, author of Cherokee Sunset,
writes, "Then ... there came the reign of terror.
From the jagged-walled stockades the troops fanned
out across the Nation, invading every hamlet, every
cabin, rooting out the inhabitants at bayonet point.
The Cherokees hardly had time to realize what was
happening as they were prodded like so many sheep
toward the concentration camps, threatened with
knives and pistols, beaten with rifle butts if they
resisted." In the terror of the forced marches, the
Cherokee were not always able to give their dead a
full burial. Instead, the singing of Amazing Grace
had to suffice. Since then, Amazing Grace is often
considered the Cherokee National Anthem.
Once the Cherokees reached Indian Territory (now Oklahoma), tensions ran high and the suspension of the Cherokee Blood Law was ignored. On June 22, 1839, after the adjournment of a tribal meeting, some of the prominent signers of the Treaty of New Echota were assassinated, including the drafter of the Blood Law, Major Ridge, along with John Ridge and Elias Boudinot. This started 15 years of civil war amongst the Cherokees. One of the notable survivors was Stand Watie, who became a Confederate general during the American Civil War. The Cherokees were one of the five "civilized tribes" that concluded treaties with, and were recognized by, the Confederate States of America.
In 1848 a group of Cherokee set out on an expedition
to California looking for new settlement lands. The
expedition followed the Arkansas River upstream to
Rocky Mountains in present-day Colorado, then
followed the base of mountains northward into
present-day Wyoming before turning westward. The
route become known as the Cherokee Trail. The group,
which undertook gold prospecting in California,
returned along the same route the following year,
noticing placer gold deposits in tributaries of the
South Platte. The discovery went unnoticed for a
decade, but eventually became one of the primary
sources of the Colorado Gold Rush of 1859.
Other Cherokees in western North Carolina served as
part of Thomas' Legion, a unit of approximately
1,100 men of both Cherokee and white origin,
fighting primarily in Virginia, where their battle
record was outstanding. Thomas' Legion was the last
Confederate unit to surrender in North Carolina, at
Waynesville, North Carolina on May 9, 1865.
The Dawes Act of 1887 broke up the tribal land base.
Under the Curtis Act of 1898, Cherokee courts and
governmental systems were abolished by the US
Federal Government. These and other acts were
designed to end tribal sovereignty to pave the way
for Oklahoma Statehood in 1907. The Federal
government appointed chiefs to the Cherokee Nation,
often just long enough to sign a treaty. However,
the Cherokee Nation recognized it needed leadership
and a general convention was convened in 1938 to
elect a Chief. They choose J. B. Milam as principal
chief, and as a goodwill gesture Franklin Delano
Roosevelt confirmed the election in 1941.
W. W. Keeler was appointed chief in 1949 but as
federal government adopted the self-determination
policy, the Cherokee Nation was able to rebuild its
government and W. W. Keeler was elected chief by the
people, via a Congressional Act signed by President
Nixon. Keeler, who was also the President of
Phillips Petroleum was succeeded by Ross Swimmer,
Wilma Mankiller, Joe Byrd and Chad Smith who is
currently the chief of the Nation.
The United Keetoowah Band took a different track
than the Cherokee Nation and received federal
recognition after the Indian Reorganization Act of
1934. They are descended from the Old Settlers, or
Cherokees that moved west before Removal, and the
tribe requires a quarter blood quantum for
enrollment.
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