INDIANS, TREATIES
SARRETT/SARRATT/SURRATT Families of America (SFA)
Native American Indian (NAI) Profile©
Volume. 4 - INDIANS, TREATIES
Treaties (or Event) sorted by date. ..prs
1684,
1778,
1783,
1784,
1786,
1790,
1791,
1795,
1798,
1802,
1814,
1816,
1817,
1818,
1819,
1820,
1824,
1825,
1828,
1829,
1830,
1832,
1835,
1836,
1837,
1838,
1840,
1851,
1855,
1856,
1865,
1866,
1867,
1871,
1873,
1889,
1946,
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To ascertain the exact position of the parties in respect to
each other, we shall call the attention of the reader to a few of
the treaties and laws which regulate the subject-matter,
confining ourselves chiefly to those which have been made most
recently. Our present system of Indian relations, although
commenced under the Administration of General WASHINGTON, has
been chiefly built up since the Revolution war between the United
States and Great Britain. The "Treaties" have been so numerous,
that it is impossible, in a work like this, to enter into their
details, or to do more than to refer in a compendious manner to
their leading features. We shall adopt this plan as sufficient
for our purpose. The following propositions, then, will be found
to contain the leading principles of this anomalous diplomacy,
and to have obtained admission into our "Treaties" with nearly all
the tribes:
1. The United States have almost invariably given presents,
in money, arms, clothing, farming implements, and trinkets, upon
the negotiation of a treaty; and in treaties for the purchase of
territory, we pay an equivalent for the lands, in money or
merchandise, or both, which payment is generally made in the form
of annuities, limited or perpetual.
2. When a tribe cedes the territory on which they reside,
other territory is specified for their future occupancy, and the
United States guarantee to them the title and peaceable
possession thereof.
3. The Indians acknowledge themselves to be under the
protection of the American Government, and of no other power
whatsoever.
4. They engage not to make war with each other, or with any
foreign power, without the consent of the United States.
5. They agree to sell their lands only to the United States.
Our citizens are prohibited by law from taking grants of land
from the Indians; and any transfer or cession made by them,
except to our Government, would be considered void.
6. White men found hunting on the Indian lands, may be
apprehended by them, and delivered up to the nearest agent of the
United States.
7. White men are not to trade with the Indians, nor reside
in their country without license from our authorities.
8. An Indian who commits a murder upon a white man, is to be
delivered up to be tried and punished under our laws; stolen
property is to be returned, or the tribe to be accountable for
its value.
9. The United States claims the right of navigation, on all
navigable rivers which pass through an Indian territory.
10. The tribes agree that they will at all times allow to
traders? and other persons traveling through their country, under
the authority of the United States, a free and safe passage for
themselves and their property; and that for such passage, they
shall at no time, and on no account whatever, be subject to any
toll or exaction.
11. Should any tribe of Indians, or other power, meditate a
war against the United States, or threaten any hostile act, and
the same shall come to the knowledge of a tribe in amity with the
United States, the latter shall give notice thereof to the
nearest Governor of a State, or officer commanding the troops of
the United States.
12. No tribe in amity with the United States shall supply
arms or ammunition, or any warlike aid, implements, or munition,
to a tribe not in amity with us.
If we turn to the Statute Books, for the purpose of showing
the spirit of our legislation in regard to the Indian tribes, it
will be seen that the leading intention of those laws, as
expressed on their face, is just and benevolent. Whatever
mistakes our Government may have committed, and however their
beneficence may have been misdirected, it could never have been
their purpose to oppress a people towards whom they have used
language, such as we find in the several acts of Congress,
relating to the Indians, and of which the following expressions
are specimens:
"For the purpose of providing against the further
decline, and final extinction of the Indian tribes, adjoining the
frontier settlements of the United States, and for introducing
among them the habits and arts of civilization," etc.
"In order to promote the civilization of the friendly Indians,
and to secure the continuance of their friendship," etc.
The third Article of an Ordinance for the government of the
territory of the United States, north-west of the River Ohio,
passed in 1787, runs as follows:
"Religion, morality, and knowledge, being necessary to
good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the
means of education shall for ever be encouraged. The utmost good
faith shall always be observed towards the Indians; their lands
and property shall never be taken from them without their
consent; and in their property, rights, and liberty, they shall
never be invaded or disturbed unless in just and lawful wars
authorized by Congress; but laws founded in justice and humanity
shall from time to time be made for preventing wrongs being done
to them, and for preserving peace and friendship with them."
These are noble sentiments; and they represent truly the
feelings of the great body of the American people towards the
aborigines, and the principles by which the intercourse with the
Indian tribes was intended to be governed. We shall, when we come
to inquire what have been the results of our intercourse with
those tribes, and whether those results have realized the wishes
of the American people, and the intentions of the Government,
refer to these extracts as expressing those wishes and
intentions.
We shall not detail at large the statutory provisions to
which we intend to refer, but will content ourselves with such a
synopsis as will answer our purpose. Our Indian affairs are
conducted by several superintendents, and a number of agents and
sub-agents, who are required to reside within their respective
agencies, and through whom the Government conducts all its
negotiations with the tribes, except when special trusts are
committed to military officers, or to commissioners appointed for
the occasion. We regulate the trade with them by statute,
rigorously prohibiting all ingress into their country by our
citizens, or by foreigners, and all traffic, except by special
license from our authorities. An Indian who kills a white man, or
a white man who slays an Indian, are alike tried by our laws, and
in our courts, even though the offense may have been committed in
the Indian Territory.
Larceny, robbery, trespass, or other offense, committed by
white men against the Indians, in the country of the latter, is
punishable in our courts, and where the offender is unable to
make restitution, the just value of the property taken or
destroyed is paid by our Government; if a similar aggression is
committed by an Indian against a white man, the tribe is held
responsible. The President is authorized to furnish to the
tribes, schoolmasters, artisans, teachers of husbandry and the
mechanic arts, tools, implements of agriculture, domestic
animals; and generally to exert his influence to introduce the
habits and arts of social life among them.
Although we have omitted a great many provisions similar to
those which we have quoted, we believe that we have not passed
over anything that is necessary to a fair exposition of the
principles of our negotiations with the Indians, and our
legislation over them. It will be seen that we have never claimed
the right, nor avowed the intention to extirpated this unhappy
race, to strip them of their property, or to deprive them of
those natural rights which we have, in our Declaration of
Independence, emphatically termed indefeasible. On the contrary,
our declared purpose, repeatedly and solemnly avowed, has been to
secure their friendship- to civilize them- to give them the
habits and arts of social life- to elevate their character, and
increase their happiness.
If it be asked, to what extent these objects have been
attained, the answer must be appalling to every friend of
humanity. It is so seldom that the energies of a powerful
Government have been steadily directed to the accomplishment of a
benevolent design, that we cannot, without deep regret, behold
the exertion of such rare beneficence defeated of its purpose.
Yet it is most certainly true, that notwithstanding all our
professions, and our great expenditure of labor and money, the
Indians, so far from advancing one step in civilization and
happiness, so far from improving in their condition, or rising in
the scale of moral being, are every day sinking lower in misery
and barbarism. The virtues which they cherished in their
aboriginal state, have been blunted by their intercourse with the
whites, and they have acquired vices which were unknown to their
simple progenitors. We take no account here of the CREEKs,
Cherokees, Choctaws, and Chickasaws, a portion of whom present an
exception to the great body of the Indians. We speak of the
wandering tribes- of the Indians at large, who continue to reject
the arts and habits of social life, who fear and despise the
white man, and tenaciously adhere to all the ferocious customs
and miserable expedients of savage life. If we have failed to
soften their rude natures, to enlighten their understandings, or
to imbue their minds with any of our principles of moral action,
equally have we failed to secure their friendship. We have tamed
them into submission by displays of our power, or brought them
into subservience with our money, but we have not gained their
love or their confidence.
Nor is this all. Our system is not only inefficient, but it
is positively mischievous. Its direct tendency is to retard the
civilization of the Indian. We have stripped their nations of
freedom, sovereignty, and independence. We claim the right to
regulate their trade, to navigate their rivers, to have ingress
into their country; we forbid all intercourse with them, except
by special license from our authorities; we try them in our
courts for offenses committed in their country, and we do not
acknowledge the existence of any tribunal among them, having
authority to inflict a penalty on one of our citizens. They are
subjected to the restraints, without enjoying the privileges, the
protection, or the moral influence, of our laws. Theirs is,
therefore, a state of subjection- of mere misology- precisely
that state which has always been found to destroy the energies,
and degrade the character, of a people.
But, as if by a refinement of cruelty, similar to that which
decks a victim in costly robes, and surrounds him with pleasing
objects of sense, at the moment of execution, we leave them in
the nominal possession of independence, and in the possession of
all their long-cherished and idolized customs, prejudices, and
superstitions. They are kept separate from us, and their own
national pride naturally co-operates with our injudicious policy,
to keep them for ever a distinct, an alien, and a hostile people.
They gain nothing by the example of our industry, the precepts of
our religion, the influence of our laws, our arts, our
institutions, for they see or feel nothing of the salutary
operation of all these, and only know them in their terrors or
their restraints. They are a subjected people, governed by laws
in the making of which they have no voice, and enjoying none of
the privileges pertaining to the citizens of the nation which
rules them. They obey their own laws and customs, so far as these
do not conflict with our convenience; and are left without law,
so far as our interference is concerned, except where our
interest induces us to stretch over them the arm of authority. By
giving them presents and annuities, we support them in idleness,
and cherish their wandering and unsettled habits. We bribe them
into discontent, by teaching them that every public convention
held for the settlement of misunderstandings, is to bring them
valuable tributes; while the same cause trains them to duplicity,
and induces them to exercise all their ingenuity in seeking out
causes of offense? and in compounding their grievances to the
best advantage.
These are the accidental, and unintentional, but unavoidable
effects of a system, which is radically wrong, though devised and
maintained in the spirit of benevolence.
If all this is faulty in principle, it is still worse in
practice. The Indian Department has already become one of the
most expensive branches of our Government. Our foreign relations
are scarcely more costly than our negotiations with the tribes.
If the vast sums which are annually laid out in this manner were
productive of any permanent good to the Indians, no patriot or
Christian would regret the expenditure. But when we see our
treasure squandered with a lavish hand, not only without any good
effect, but with great positive injury to the miserable race,
whom we have reduced to the state of dependence upon our bounty,
it is time to pause. When we examine further, and see how large a
portion of these vast sums are intercepted before they reach the
hand of the Red man- how much is expended in sustaining military
posts, paying agents, transporting merchandise, holding treaties,
and keeping in operation, in various ways, a vast, compomplicated,
and useless machinery- when we reflect how much is unavoidably
lost, squandered, and misapplied, the question assumes a fearful
importance.
[See: The History of the North American Indians (Vol. II); By James
Hall, Philadelphia, PA. 1836]
SOME TREATIES with Colonist:
Among the manuscript archives of South Carolina there was said to br,
some 50 years ago (1850) a treaty or Agreement between Colony South Carolina
& Cherokee and signed with the hieroglyphies of 8 Chiefs of the Lower Towns,
(If still in existence, this is probably the oldest Cherokee treaty on record.)
viz;
1. Corani, the Raven (Ka'landi) of Toxawa
2. Sinnawa, the Hawk (Tla'nuwa) of Toxawa
3. Nellawgitehi, of Toxawa
4. Gorhaleke, of Toxawa
5. Owasta, of Toxawa
6. Canacaught, the Great Conjuror, of Keowa
7. Gohoma, of Keowa
8. Caunasaita, of Keowa
(Source See Mooney, Pg31)
(Mooney listed his Source as "Noted in Cherokee Advocate,
Tahlequah, Indian Territory, Jan 30, 1845)
The practice of concluding treaties with the American Indians was
initiated in the colonial period by the British, who employed
them especially after the British victory in the French and
Indian War (1754-63). During the American Revolution, the United States
government adopted the treaty system, signing its first treaty
with the Delawares in 1778.
The major purposes of such treaties were to obtain land cessions
from the tribes, to determine boundaries between Indian and white
lands, and to regulate trade. By adopting the treaty system, the
British and United States governments recognized the prior ownership of
land by Indian tribes and in effect also acknowledged their
strength and their status as independent nations. The most
important of the early treaties were those of Fort Stanwix (1768
and in 1784), by which the IROQUOIS LEAGUE ceded rights in the
trans-Appalachian country.
When the Treaty of Paris was signed in 1783, GREAT BRITAIN ceded
to the UNITED STATES all territory West of the Mississippi River
and North to the 31st Parallel. This set the stage for the Treaty
of Hopewell. On January 10, 1786, the Treaty of Hopewell signaled
the beginning of an official bond between the United States and
the Southeast Indians. This treaty was later to be recognized as
a powerful instrument because, from this date on, the
independence of the Indian Nations will be eroded by the United
States.
"The Shaownae nation do acknowledge the United States to be
sole and absolute sovereigns of all the territory ceded to them
by a treaty of peace made between them and the King of Great
Britain, on the 14th January 1786."
The federal act of the "Indian Trade and Intercourse Act" (1790)
had prohibited sale of Indian lands without prior federal
approval, but vast sections of the eastern United States passed
from Indian control after that time.
-Treaty of 2nd July 1791. "Holston Treaty"
"It is agreed on the part of the Cherokees, that the United
States shall have the sole and absolute right to regulate their
trade."
The Chief Little Turtle, led MIAMI & SHAWNEE to a defeat at
Battle of Fallen Timbers and signed the Treaty of Greenville
(1795), by which 12 northeastern tribes surrendered the
southeastern corner of the then NORTHEAST TERRITORY to the United
States.
"Tellico Treaty",
The Federal Government and the Cherokees signed 02 Oct 1798 the treaty
which further refined the Holston Treaty of 1791.
Which marked off the lines extended from Kingston, (Roane Co.) TN.
to "Blanket Mountain" head waters of Jake's Creek near Elkmount, TN. [Ramsey pg20]
[See: Tellico Blockhouse]
1802 - President Thomas JEFFERSON signs 1st "Georgia Compact".
This compact was entered into between the United
States and the State of Georgia; the fourth article of which
stipulates, :that the United States shall, at their own expense,
extinguish, for the use of Georgia, as early as the same can be
peaceably effected, on reasonable terms, the Indian title to the
lands within the forks of the Oconnee and Oakmulgee Rivers, etc.
etc.; and that the United States shall, in the same manner, also
extinguish the Indian title to all the other lands within the
State of Georgia."
The United States, in pursuance of this compact, proceeded
from time to time, by treaties, to extinguish the Indian title to
lands within the limits of Georgia.
Under five treaties, the Creek Indian title to about fifteen million
of acres of land was extinguished; and the United States paid Georgia,
in money, one million two hundred and fifty thousand dollars in lieu
of lands which had been ceded to the Creek Indians.
From 1803 onward, total opposition to the Indians as an ethnic
group was in order. The true callousness of United States toward
the Indian Nations did not surface until after (Spain ceded
to France, 1800, France ceded to U.S. 1803) the Louisiana
Purchase. Before that time, U.S. French and Spanish agents
actively courted the Indian Nations with supplies from their
emissaries. After the U.S. no longer had any fear for Spanish or
French influence among any Indian tribe, the objective of the
U.S. government became clear. The end aim was U.S. supremacy.
President ANDREW JACKSON, JOHN COFFEE and ISAAC SHELBY used
threats as well as withholding annuities to the Indian Nations,
to gradually obtain all the Indian Nations lands east of the
Mississippi River.
-Treaty of 9th August 1814.
The United States demand an acknowledgment of the right to
establish military posts and trading houses, and to open roads
within the territory guaranteed to the CREEK nation in the second
Article, and the right to the navigation of all its waters."
By 1815 most of the Indians north of the Ohio River had been
subdued, and sentiment was strong to force all Indians to settle
west of the Mississippi River. Although treaties to effect this
end were formally negotiated, coercion, bribery, and the use of
alcohol became commonplace in wringing favorable terms from
reluctant tribal leaders.
The LOVELY'S PURCHASE of 1816, was a result of a conference
between the OSAGES and the CHEROKEES, convened at the mouth of
the Verdigris River. Major WILLIAM LOVELY, Cherokee agent in the
West, obtained an agreement whereby the OSAGES ceded to the
United States the land as follows:
"Beginning at the Arkansas River .. Frog Bayoy .. then
up the Arkansas and Verdigris to the falls of the Verdigris
River .. thence Eastwardly, to the said OSAGE boundary line, at a
point 20 leagues North from the Arkansas River .. and, with that
line, to the point of beginning..."
The CHOCTAWS who some had been relocated in the now state of
Arkansas Treaty of 1816, had created friction between white
settlers and the Indians and led eventually to the establishment
of a "permanent" western boundary for Arkansas.
So Congress created the Arkansas Territory on March 2, 1819, the
region what is now Oklahoma, (west to the 100th meridian) was
included within its boundaries. The area North of the Canadian
River, belonged to the OSAGE Indians (ceded to U.S. in 1825) and
the area South of the Canadian River to the Red River, belonged
to the QUAPAWS, which was ceded to the United States in 1818.
In the Treaty of 1817-18 the CHEROKEE first ceded land and
started their removal from their ancestral lands East of the
Mississippi to area to Arkansas Territory. The CHEROKEE agreed
to exchange 1/3rd of the lands in the East for equal acreage
located between the White River on the Northeast boundary and the
Arkansas River on the Southwest boundary in the then Arkansas Territory.




Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
US. Department of the Interior |
Turkey Town Treaty of 1817
July 8, 1817 [.1 7 Stat., 156 I Proclamation, Dec. 26, 1817]
|
Cherokee Nation, East of the Mississippi River
|
Articles of a treaty concluded, at the Cherokee Agency, within the
Cherokee nation, between major general Andrew Jackson, Joseph McMinn, governor of
the state of Tennessee, and General David Meriwether, commissioners plenipotentiary
of the United States of America, of the one part, and the Chiefs, head
men, and warriors, of the Cherokee nation, east of the Mississippi river, and
the chiefs, head men, and warriors, of the Cherokees on the Arkansas river, and
their deputies, John D. Chisholm and James Rogers, duly authorized by the
chiefs of the Cherokees on the Arkansas river, in open council, by written
power of attorney, duly signed and executed, in presence of Joseph Sevier and William Ware.
WHERESA
in the autumn of the year one thousand eight hundred and eight,
a deputation from the Upper and Lower Cherokee towns, duly authorized by their
nation, went on to the city of Washington, the first [141] named to declare to the
President of the United States their anxious desire to engage in the pursuits of
agriculture and civilized life, in the country they then occupied, and to make
known to the President of the United States the impracticability of inducing the
nation at large to do this, and to request the establishment of a division line
between the upper and lower towns, so as to include all the waters of the
Hiwassee river to the upper town, that, by thus contracting their society within
narrow limits, they proposed to begin the establishment of fixed laws and a
regular government: The deputies from the lower towns to make known their desire
to continue the hunter life, and also the scarcity of game where they then lived,
and, under those circumstances, their wish to remove across the Mississippi river,
on some vacant lands of the United States. And whereas the President of the
United States, after maturely considering the petitions of both parties, on the
ninth day of January, A. D. one thousand eight hundred and nine, including other
subjects, answered those petitions as follows: "The United States, my children,
are the friends of both parties, and, as far as can be reasonably asked, they are
willing to satisfy the wishes of both. Those who remain may be assured of our
patronage, our aid, and good neighborhood. Those who wish to remove, are permitted
to send an exploring party to reconnoiter the country on the waters of the
Arkansas and White rivers, and the higher up the better, as they will be the longer
unapproached by our settlements, which will begin at the mouths of those rivers.
The regular districts of the government of St. Louis are already laid off to the St.
Francis.
"When this party shall have found a tract of country suiting the emigrants, and
not claimed by other Indians, we will arrange with them and you the exchange
of that for a just portion of the country they leave, and to a part of which,
pro-portioned to their numbers, they have a right. Every aid towards their removal,
and what will be necessary for them there, will then be freely administered to
them; and when established in their new settlements, we shall still consider them
as our children, give them the benefit of exchanging their peltries for what they
will want at our factories, and always hold them firmly by the hand."
And whereas the Cherokees, relying on the promises of the President of the
United States, as above recited, did explore the country on the west side of the
Mississippi, and made choice of the country on the Arkansas and White rivers,
settled themselves down upon United States lands, to which no other tribe of
Indians have any just claim, and have duly notified the President of the United
States thereof, and of their anxious desire for the full and complete ratification of
his promise, and, to that end, as notified by the President of the United States,
have sent on their agents, with full powers to execute a treaty, relinquishing to the
United States all the right, title, and interest, to all lands of right to them belonging,
as part of the Cherokee nation, which they have left, and which they are
about to leave, proportioned to their numbers, including, with those now on the
Arkansas, those who are about to remove thither, and to a portion of which they
have an equal right agreeably to their numbers.
Now, know ye, that the contracting parties, to carry into full effect the before
recited promises with good faith, and to promote a continuation of friendship
with their brothers on the Arkansas river, and for that purpose to make an equal
distribution of the annuities secured to be paid by the United States to the whole
Cherokee nation, have agreed and concluded on the following articles, viz:
ARTICLE 1.
The chiefs, head men, and warriors, of the whole Cherokee Nation, cede to the United States
all the lands lying north and east of the following boundaries, viz:
Beginning at the high shoals of the Appalachy river, and running
thence, along the boundary line between the Creek and Cherokee nations,
westwardly to the Chatahouchy river; thence, up the Chatahouchy river, to
the mouth of Souque creek; thence, continuing with the general course of the
river until it reaches the Indian boundary line, and, should it strike the Turrurar
river, thence, with its meanders, down said river to its mouth, in part of the pro-portion
of land in the Cherokee nation east of the Mississippi, to which those now
on the Arkansas and those about to remove there are justly entitled.
<---
See: 1817 Map!
ARTICLE 2.
The chiefs, head men, and warriors, of the whole Cherokee Nation, do also cede to the
United States all the lands lying north and west of the following boundary lines, viz:
Beginning at the Indian boundary line that runs
from the north bank of the Tennessee river, opposite to the mouth of Hywassee
river, at a point on the top of Walden's ridge, where it divides the waters of the
Tennessee river from those of the Sequatchie river; thence, along the said ridge,
southwardly, to the bank of the Tennessee river, at a point near to a place called
the Negro Sugar Camp, opposite to the upper end of the first island above
Running Water Town; thence, westwardly, a straight line to the mouth of Little
Sequatchie river; thence, up said river, to its main fork; thence, up its northern-
most fork, to its source; and thence, due west, to the Indian boundary line.
ARTICLE 3.
It is also stipulated by the contracting parties, that a census shall
be taken of the whole Cherokee nation, during the month of June, in the year of
our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighteen, in the following manner, viz:
That the census of those on the east side of the Mississippi river, who declare
their intention of remaining, shall be taken by a commissioner appointed by the
President of the United States, and a commissioner appointed by the Cherokees
on the Arkansas river; and the census of the Cherokees on the Arkansas river, and
those removing there, and who, at that time, declare their intention of removing
there, shall be taken by a commissioner appointed by the President of the United
States, and one appointed by the Cherokees east of the Mississippi river.
ARTICLE 4.
The contracting parties do also stipulate that the annuity due
from the United States to the whole Cherokee nation for the year one thousand
eight hundred and eighteen, is to be divided between the two parts of the nation
in proportion to their numbers, agreeably to the stipulations contained in the third
article of this treaty; and to be continued to be divided thereafter in proportion to
their numbers; and the lands to be apportioned and surrendered to the United
States agreeably to the aforesaid enumeration, as the proportionate part, agreeably
to their numbers, to which those who have removed, and who declare their
intention to remove, have a just right, including these with the lands ceded in the
first and second articles of this treaty.
ARTICLE 5.
The United States bind themselves, in exchange for the lands
ceded in the first and second articles hereof, to give to that part of the Cherokee
nation on the Arkansas as much land on said river and White river as they have
or may hereafter receive from the Cherokee nation east of the Mississippi, acre
for acre, as the just proportion due that part of the nation on the Arkansas agreeably
to their numbers; which is to commence on the north side of the Arkansas
river, at the mouth of Point Remove or Budwell's Old Place; thence, by a straight
line, northwardly, to strike Chataunga mountain, or the hill first above Shield's
Ferry on White river, running up and between said rivers for complement, the
banks of which rivers to be the lines; and to have the above line, from the point
of beginning to the point on White river, run and marked, which shall be done
soon after the ratification of this treaty; and all citizens of the United States,
except Mrs. P. Lovely, who is to remain where she lives during life, removed
from within the bounds as above named. And it is further stipulated, that
the treaties heretofore between the Cherokee nation and the United States are to
continue in full force with both parts of the nation, and both parts thereof entitled
to all the immunities and privilege which the old nation enjoyed under the
aforesaid treaties; the United States reserving the right of establishing factories,
a military post, and roads, within the boundaries above defined.
ARTICLE 6.
The United States do also bind themselves to give to all the poor
warriors who may remove to the western side of the Mississippi river, one rifle
gun and ammunition, one blanket, and one brass kettle, or, in lieu of the brass
kettle, a beaver trap, which is to be considered as a full compensation for the
improvements which they may leave; which articles are to be delivered at such
point as the President of the United States may direct: and to aid in the removal
of the emigrants, they further agree to furnish fiat bottomed boats and provisions
sufficient for that purpose: and to those emigrants whose improvements add real
value to their lands, the United States agree to pay a full valuation for the same,
which is to be ascertained by a commissioner appointed by the President of the
United States for that purpose, and paid for as soon after the ratification of this
treaty as practicable. The boats and provisions promised to the emigrants are to
be furnished by the agent on the Tennessee river, at such time and place as the
emigrants may notify him of; and it shall be his duty to furnish the same.
ARTICLE 7.
And for all improvements which add real value to the lands lying
within the boundaries ceded to the United States, by the first and second articles
of this treaty, the United States do agree to pay for at the time, and to be valued
in the same manner, as stipulated in the sixth article of this treaty; or, in lieu
thereof, to give in exchange improvements of equal value which the emigrants
may leave, and for which they are to receive pay. And it is further stipulated, that
all these improvements, left by the emigrants within the bounds of the Cherokee
nation east of the Mississippi river, which add real value to the lands, and for
which the United States shall give a consideration, and not so exchanged, shall
be rented to the Indians by the agent, year after year, for the benefit of the poor
and decrepit of that part of the nation east of the Mississippi river, until surrendered
by the nation, or to the nation. And it is further agreed, that the said
Cherokee nation shall not be called upon for any part of the consideration paid
for said improvements at any future period.
ARTICLE 8.
And to each and every head of any Indian family residing on the
east side of the Mississippi river, on the lands that are now, or may hereafter be,
surrendered to the United States, who may wish to become citizens of the United
States, the United States do agree to give a reservation of six hundred and forty
acres of land, in a square, to include their improvements, which are to be as near
the centre thereof as practicable, in which they will have a life estate, with a
reversion in fee simple to their children, reserving to the widow her dower, the
register of whose names is to be filed in the office of the Cherokee agent, which
shall be kept open until the census is taken as stipulated in the third article of this
treaty. Provided, That if any of the heads of families, for whom reservations may
be made, should remove therefrom, then, in that case, the right to revert to the
United States. And provided further. That the land which may be reserved under
this article, be deducted from the amount which has been ceded under the first
and second articles of this treaty.
ARTICLE 9.
It is also provided by the contracting parties, that nothing in the
foregoing articles shall be construed so as to prevent any of the parties so
contracting from the free navigation of all the waters mentioned therein.
ARTICLE 10.
The whole of the Cherokee nation do hereby cede to the United
States all right, title, and claim, to all reservations made to Doublehead and others,
which were reserved to them by a treaty made and entered into at the city of
Washington, bearing date the seventh of January, one thousand eight hundred and six.
ARTICLE 11.
If, it is further agreed that the boundary lines of the lands ceded
to the United States by the <---
First and
<---
Second Article of this treaty, and the
boundary line of the lands ceded by the United States in the
<---
Fifth Article of this treaty,
is to be run and marked by a commissioner or commissioners appointed by the
President of the United States, who shall be accompanied by such commissioners
as the Cherokees may appoint; due notice thereof to be given to the nation.
ARTICLE 12.
The United States do also bind themselves to prevent the intrusion of any of its
citizens within the lands ceded by the first and second articles
of this treaty, until the same shall be ratified by the President and Senate of the
United States, and duly promulgated.
ARTICLE 13.
The contracting parties do also stipulate that this treaty shall
take effect and be obligatory on the contracting parties so soon as the same shall
be ratified by the President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent
of the Senate of the United States.
In witness of all and every thing herein determined, by and between the before
recited contracting parties, we have, in full and open council, at the Cherokee
Agency, this eighth day of July, A. D. one thousand eight hundred and seventeen, [08th July 1817]
set our hands and seals: |
Andrew Jackson, L/S |
Chickasautchee, (his x mark), |
Joseph McMinn, L/S |
The Bark of Chota, (his x mark), |
D. Meriwether, US Commisioner, L/S |
The Bark of Hightower, his x |
Richard Brown, (his x mark), |
John Walker, (his x mark), |
Cabbin Smith, (his x mark) |
Big Half Breed, (his x mark) |
Sleeping Rabbit, (his x mark) |
Going Snake, (his x mark), |
George Saunders, (his x mark), |
Leyestisky, (his x mark), |
Roman Nose, (his x mark), |
Ch. Hicks, |
Currobe Dick, (his x mark) |
Young Davis, (his x mark), |
George Lowry, |
Souanooka, (his x mark), |
Richard Taylor, |
The Locust, (his x mark) |
Walter Adair, |
Beaver Carrier, (his x mark) |
James Brown, |
Dreadful Water, (his x mark) |
Kelachule, (his x mark) |
Chyula, (his x mark) |
Sour Mush, (his x mark) |
Ja. Martin, |
Chulioa, (his x mark) |
John Mclntosh, (his x mark) |
Katchee of Cowee, (his x mark) |
|
White Man Killer, (his x mark), |
|
Arkansas chiefs: |
In presence of |
Toochalar, (his x mark), |
J. M. Glassel, secretary to the commission, |
The Glass, (his x mark), |
Thomas Wilson, clerk to the cornmissioners, |
Wassosee, (his x mark), |
Walter Adair, |
John Jolly, (his x mark), |
John Speirs, interpreter, (his x mark) |
The Gourd, (his x mark), |
A. McCoy, interpreter, |
Spring Frog, (his x mark), |
James C. Bronaugh, Hospital Surgeon U.S.Army |
John D. Chisholm, |
Isham Randolph, captain First Redoubtables, |
James Rogers, |
Wm. Meriwether, |
Wawhatchy, (his x mark), |
Return J. Meigs, agent Cherokee Nation |
Attalona, (his x mark), |
|
Kulsuttchee, (his x mark), |
|
Tuskekeetchee, (his x mark) |
|
Chillawgatchee, (his x mark), |
|
John Smith, (his x mark), |
|
Toosawallata, (his x mark) |
|
Spain had title to the land West of the 100th meridian and South
of the Red River by terms of the Adams-Onis' Treaty of 1819.
Within two years, however the Mexican revolution had given the
Mexican government a permanent hold upon former Spanish territory
Southwest of the U.S.
The Treaty of Doak's Stand 1820, about 1,000 CHOCTAW moved from
their ancestral homes East of the Mississippi to West of the
Mississippi in the then Arkansas Territory. This provided a new
Eastern boundary for the CHOCTAW settlements on a line extending
North from the mouth of the Little River to the Arkansas River.
In 1824 Congress fixed the Western boundary of the Arkansas
Territory on a line of 40 miles West of the Southwest corner of
Missouri. As surveyed by John C. Brown, the new Arkansas boundary
cut through the lower Kiamici River near the stream's mouth and
crossed West of the Three Forks area. This act was a clear
violation by the United States of the Treaty of Doak's Stand - 1820
The Arkansas delegate to Congress, HENRY W. CONWAY, protested the
New Arkansas Treaty line of 1824. Declaring in a letter to
Secretary of War JOHN C. CALHOUN that such a boundary would cut
off a large number of Arkansas citizens (who should have NOT
settled on Indian land in the first place ..prs) from the
protection of Arkansas.
Treaty of 2nd June 1825.
"The Tetons, Yanctons, and Yanctonies, and bands of the
Sioux, admit the right of the United States to regulate their
trade."
-Treaty of 2nd June 1825. Osage Nation, at Clarke. Arkansas
"Fifty-four tracts of one mile square each, of the land
ceded by this treaty, shall be laid off under the direction of
the President of the United States, and sold, for the purpose of
raising a fund, to be applied for the support of schools for the
education of the Osage children."
Treaty of 2nd June 1825. Osage Nation, at Clarke. Arkansas
"The United States agree to furnish at Clarke, for the use
of the Osage nation, a blacksmith and tools to mend their arms,
and utensils of husbandry, and engage to build them a horse-mill
or water-mill; also to furnish them with plows," etc. -Ibid. |
-Treaty of 3rd June 1825. Kansas Nation.
"The United States, immediately after the ratification of
this convention, shall cause to be furnished to the Kansas
nation, 300 head of cattle, 300 hogs, 500 domestic fowls, three
yoke of oxen and two carts, with such implements of husbandry as
the Superintendent of Indian Affairs may think necessary; and
shall employ such persons to aid and instruct them in agriculture
as the President of the United States may deem expedient; and
shall provide and support a blacksmith." |
-Treaty of 3rd June 1825. Kansas Nation.
"Thirty-six sections of good land on Big Blue River, shall
be laid out under the direction of the President of the United
States, and sold for the purpose of raising a fund to be applied,
under the direction of the President, to the education of the
Kansas children within their nation." -Ibid.
President JOHN QUINCY ADAMS appointed JAMES S. CONWAY to re-
survey the new line, and on Nov. 02, 1825, the survey work begun
at Fort Smith, Arkansas. It was completed on Dec. 07. 1825.
It's interesting to note that the 1825 CONWAY SURVEY was
inaccurate. Some 52 years later, [1877] and after a long diplomatic
struggle, PETER P. PITCHLYNN Principal of the CHOCTAW NATION (1864-1866)
obtained passage of an Act of Congress to authorize a new survey.
HENRY E. McKEE United States surveyor, ran the line "due South" in
April and May of 1877, not for the purposes of recovering land
for the CHOCTAWS, but as a basis for payment of damages.
According to McKEE'S 1877 survey, the establised in 1825 crosed
the Red River West of the Treaty line by 4 miles, 16 Chains and
deprived the CHOCTAW NATION some 136,204.02 acres.
The CHOCTAW NATION was paid $62,102 ($2.19 per acre) for land
given the the State of Arkansas by error in 1825. Of the sum
awarded to the CHOCTAW NATION, however, 30 percent ($186,306)
was taken for attorney fees and 20 percent ($124,204) to pay
the expenses of the Chief PETER P. PITCHLYNN delegation,
leaving about $31,051 left for the tribe.
Because of white squatters into the Arkansas Territory, a new
treaty of Treaty of 1825 required the CHOCKTAWS to ceded to the
United States all of its land in the Arkansas Territory and move
farther West to the present day Oklahoma. Land as follows:
All land lying East of a line beginning on the
Arkansas River 100 paces East of Fort Smith, and running thence
due South to the Red River.
The United States also agreed to pay an annual sum of $6,000 to
the CHOCKTAW NATION forever, and will remove all white
citizens from the newly defined CHOCKTAW NATION TERRITORY, and
will prevent future settlement of United States citizens on
CHOCKTAW land. |
This same Treaty of 1825 caused the OSAGES ceded to the United
States their property, North of the Canadian River and remove to
the the new Western Indian Territory, (Oklahoma)
The CHEROKEE - Treaty of May 06, 1828. required the removal of
the Cherokee's who owned some 7 million acres of CHEROKEE land in
the Verdigris Grand and Arkansas Valley of the Arkansas Territory
to move farther West to the Western Indian Territory (present day
Oklahoma) boundary lines was defined as follows:
The CHEROKEE line, from the 37th parallel to 36
degrees 30', was the west boarder of Missouri. From the Southwest
corner of Missouri, the boundary to be a straight line to the
intersection of the CHOCTAW boundary on the Arkansas River.
The legislature of Georgia passed an Act Dec. 19, 1829 appropriating
a large area of the Cherokee Nation incroporating it in the territory
of the state, and adding it to the Counties of Carrol, DeKalb, Gwinnett,
Hall, and Habersham. The act extended the laws of the state over this
section of the Cherokee Nation and provided that from and after the
first of the following June all persons living theirin should be subject to
all the State of Georgia laws.
INDIAN REMOVAL ACT, 1830
Once President ANDREW JACKSON signed the Indian Removal Act on 28
May 1830. Andrew Jackson, (1767-1845) Democrate from SC. became
President in 1829. On 8th Dec. he sent Congress his first
message, and in it he endorced the removal of Indians from eastern
America, "voluntary, for it would be cruel and unjust to compel
them to abanden the graves of their fathers and seek a home in a
distant land." He mentioned paticulary, specifically the Cherokees.
By the Treaty of "DANCING RABBIT CREEK in 1830",
the CHOCTAWS ceded All their land east of the Mississippi to the
United States. In exchanged they received the land in the
Southeast corner of the WESTERN INDIAN TERRITORY (Oklahoma) lying
between the western boarder of Arkansas and the 100th meridian,
with the Red River as the Southern boundary and the Canadian-
Arkansas rivers as their Northern limit.
The CHOCTAWS, agreed to arrange for moving as many members of the
East Mississippi tribe as possible "during the falls of 1831
and 1832," and the rest during the fall of 1833. After the
three years, nearly 13,000 CHOCTAWS had relocated and about 7,
000 remained in Mississippi.
In a series of removals the CHOCTAWS traveled West by various
routes, in some instance using riverboats for a part of the
journey. Although they endured great hardships on the road West,
their travel was, perhaps less painful than the suffering of
tribes that moved a longer distance.
The CHEROKEE were fighting in the Courts. In the case of the
Cherokee Nation vs. The State of Georgia (1831), President
Andrew Jackson effectively supported a state rights position (and
asserted his independence of the Supreme Court). Despite two
United States Supreme Court decisions (1831 and 1832) upholding
the rights of the Cherokee nation against the state of Georgia,
which was attempting to destroy Cherokee sovereignty and take the
CHEROKEE Indians' land, President Andrew Jackson refused to
intervene on behalf of the Indians. This ruled that the Indians
were no longer to be regarded as independent nations but rather
as "dependent domestic nations," subject to regulation by
the federal government.
SENECAS: INDIAN REMOVAL ACT, 1830 In 1831 the Senecas of the
Sandusky Vally, exchanged their Ohio land for some 67,000 acrees
of land lying North of the new CHEROKEE NATION, (present day
Oaklahoma) and received 60,000 adjoining the Seneca tract already
in the INDIAN TERRITORY
Chief JOHN ROSS of the CHEROKEE led a delegation to Washington
(1832-33) to plead the Cherokee cause, but to no avail, the
extinction was on. State officials in Florida, Alabama, Georgia,
Tennessee, and Mississippi sided with the Federal Government.
They offered no relief from white encroachment on Indian lands.
The CREEK removal was marked by war within the tribe and terrible
suffering during "migration". Creek Chief WILLIAM McINTOSH
was executed in 1825 for ceding CREEK land without tribal
consent. The Treaty of Washington in 1832 required for the
cession of all CREEK land east of the Mississippi and settlement
of the tribe to present day Oklahoma.
Another Treaty of 1833 defined the boundaries of CREEK lands:
The Northern line, which was the Southern boundary of the CHEROKEE,
began at a distance of 25 miles from the Arkansas River and extended
West to the 100th meridian. The Western line lay along the Mexican boundary, and
the Southern limit was the Canadian River. The Eastern line was
the results of compromise with the CHEROKEES, negotiated by the
STOKES Commission in 1833.
The CREEK migration was complicated by warfare, since most bands
resisted the process of the removal. Like the CHEROKEES the
CREEKS suffered because of bitter controversy within the tribe
over these unfair practices.
The CREEKS Indians, of Muskhogean linguistic stock, were
accustomed from early times to adopting fragment groups into the
tribe. The CREEK NATION, in present day Oklahoma, later contained
Indians from the KOSATI, HITCHITI, NATCHEZ, APALACHICOLA,
ALABAMA, TUSKEGEE, and YUCHI (Euchee) tribes. All of these tribes
except the YUCHIS belong to the Muskhogean language group.
JAMES GADSDEN reached an agreement with a party of SEMINOLES at
Payne's Landing, Florida in 1832. The "Treaty" required
that the SEMINOLES should send an advance party to the CREEK
lands in West Oklahoma, and if the advance party should be
satisfied with the country and "the favorable disposition of
the CREEKS to reunite with the SEMINOLES as one people," the
removal agreement should be binding.
At Fort Gibson, (present day Oklahoma), reluctant consent of the
SEMINOLE advance party was incorporated in a brief
"treaty" which purported to be a completion of the Payne's
Landing Agreement. In Florida, the SEMINOLE tribe leaders
objected strongly to migration, and the attempt to remove them by
force resulted in a costly War. (See SEMINOLE WAR 1835-1842) Most
of the SEMINOLES were removed between 1836 and 1842
Perhaps the SEMINOLE removal was the most Cultural Shock of all.
For 7 years this Civilized of the 5 tribes fought
against the United States Government's orders to leave the coastal
area of Florida for the wasteland of Oklahoma. Most SEMINOLE bands
traveled by boat from the Florida coast to New Orleans and then
by river steamers to Littler Rock, AK. or farther upstream. The
final stage was accomplished by wagon. The SEMINOLE tribe was
reduced by one-third as a result of the war and the hardships
of the long journey.
The Treaty of Ponitoc, 1832 the CHICKASAWS ceded All their land
East of the Mississippi to the U.S. The CHICKASAW sent an advance
party to explore CHOCTAW land in the WESTERN INDIAN TERRITORY.
This later would be the Treaty of Doaksville, 1837
In 1832, the QUAPAWS moved from the Red River Valley to a tract
of 96,000 acres of land North and East of the CHEROKEES in the
INDIAN TERRORTY.
The Treaty of New Echota, Georgia on Dec. 29, 1835, in which the
United States and a small CHEROKEE tribal faction John Gunter,
Andrew Ross, Boudinot, Major Ridge, son John Ridge and Stand
Watie among others agreed for removal of ALL the remaining
members of the East CHEROKEE tribe to relocate to the land West
of Arkansas and Missouri, that had been assigned to the Western
CHEROKEES. They sold some 2.83 million (7 million acres) of
Eastern Cherokee land. In article 16th stipulated that the
Eastern Cherokee "shall remove to the new homes within two years
from the ratification of the treaty."
The New Echota treaty went to the Senate, where debate was heavy.
Chief John Ross of the Western Cherokees was bitterly opposed to
this treaty, supplied a petition bearing 16,000 signatures. There
were not 16,000 Cherokees living in the East, and of those
actually living there, half were children; nevertheless, the
petition was entered. John Ross opposed ratification on the
grounds that the treaty did not carry the signatures of the
principal Cherokee officials and was not backed by the Cherokee
people. Most senators were convinced that this was so; however,
President Andrew Jackson was pressing hard, and on 17 May 1836,
the treaty was ratified by a margin of one vote. President
Jackson proclaimed it law on 23 May 1836.
See: 1830 Debates
An additional tract of land in Kansas was conveyed to the
CHEROKEE in consideration of the payment of $500,000 ($1.60 per
acre) to the United States. This area, 25 miles wide and
extending 50 miles along the Western boarder of Missouri (800,000
acres) was known as "Neutral Lands". The CHEROKEE Outlet,
in Oklahoma Territory was provided as per Article 2 of the New
Echota Treaty this was assurance to the CHEROKEE NATION of a
"perpetual outlet west, and free and unmolested use of all
the country west of said 7 million acres."
|
Treaty of New Echota, 1835-36.
Dec. 29,1835.1 7 Stat., 478.1 Proclamation, May 23, 1836.
Articles of a treaty, concluded at New Echota in the State of Georgia on the
29th day of Deer. 1835 by General William Carroll and John F.. Schermerhorn
commissioners on the part of the United States and the Chiefs Head Men and
People of the Cherokee tribe of Indians.
WHEREAS
the Cherokees are anxious to make some arrangements with the
Government of the United States whereby the difficulties they have experienced
by a residence within the settled parts of the United States under the jurisdiction
and laws of the State Governments may be terminated and adjusted; and with a
view to reuniting their people in one body and securing a permanent home for
themselves and their posterity in the country selected by their forefathers with-
out the territorial limits of the State sovereignties, and where they can establish
and enjoy a government of their choice and perpetuate such a state of society as
may be most consonant with their views, habits and condition; and as may tend
to their individual comfort and their advancement in civilization.
And whereas a delegation of the Cherokee nation composed of Messes.
John Ross,
Richard Taylor,
Danl. McCoy,
Samuel Gunter, and
William Rogers.
with full
power and authority to conclude a treaty with the United States did on the 28th
day of February 1835 stipulate and agree with the Government of the United
States to submit to the Senate to fix the amount which should be allowed the
Cherokees for their claims and for a cession of their lands east of the Mississippi
river, and did agree to abide by the award of the Senate of the United States them-
selves and to recommend the same to their people for their final determination.
And whereas on such submission the Senate advised "that a sum not exceeding
five millions of dollars be paid to the Cherokee Indians for all their lands and
possessions east of the Mississippi river."
And whereas this delegation after said award of the Senate had been made,
were called upon to submit propositions as to its disposition to be arranged in a
treaty which they refused to do, but insisted that the same "should be referred to
their nation and there in general council to deliberate and determine on the subject
in order to ensure harmony and good feeling among themselves."
And whereas a certain other delegation composed of
John Ridge,
Elias Boudinot,
Archilla Smith,
S. W. Bell,
John West,
Wm. A. Davis, and
Ezekiel West,
who represented that portion of the nation in favor of emigration to the Cherokee
country west of the Mississippi entered into propositions for a treaty with John
F. Schermerhorn commissioner on the part of the United States which were to be
submitted to their nation for their final action and determination:
And whereas the Cherokee people at their last October council at Red Clay,
fully authorized and empowered a delegation or committee of twenty persons of
their nation to enter into and conclude a treaty with the United States commis-
sioner then present, at that place or elsewhere and as the people had good reason
to believe that a treaty would then and there be made or at a subsequent council
at New Echota which the commissioners it was well known and understood, were
authorized and instructed to convene for said purpose; and since the said delegation
have gone on to Washington city, with a view to close negotiations there, as
stated by them notwithstanding they were officially informed by the United
States commissioner that they would not be received by the President of the
United States; and that the Government would transact no business of this nature
with them, and that if a treaty was made it must be done here in the nation, where
the delegation at Washington last winter urged that it should be done for the purpose
of promoting peace and harmony among the people; and since these facts
have also been corroborated to us by a communication recently received by the
commissioner from the Government of the United States and read and explained
to the people in open council and therefore believing said delegation can effect
nothing and since our difficulties are daily increasing and our situation is rendered
more and more precarious uncertain and insecure in consequence of the
legislation of the States; and seeing no effectual way of relief, but in accepting
the liberal overtures of the United States.
And whereas Geni William Carroll and John F. Schermerhorn were appointed
commissioners on the part of the United States, with full power and authority to
conclude a treaty with the Cherokees east and were directed by the President to
convene the people of the nation in general council at New Echota and to submit
said propositions to them with power and authority to vary the same so as to meet
the views of the Cherokees in reference to its details.And whereas the said
commissioners did appoint and notify a general council of the nation to convene at
New Echota on the 21st day of December 1835; and informed them that the
commissioners would be prepared to make a treaty with the Cherokee people who
should assemble there and those who did not come they should conclude gave
their assent and sanction to whatever should be transacted at this council and the
people having met in council according to said notice.
Therefore the following articles of a treaty are agreed upon and concluded
between William Carroll and John F. Schermerhorn commissioners on the part of
the United States and the chiefs and head men and people of the Cherokee nation
in general council assembled this 29th day of Deer 1835.
ARTICLE 1.
The Cherokee nation hereby cede relinquish and convey to the
United States all the lands owned claimed or possessed by them east of the
Mississippi river, and hereby release all their claims upon the United States for
spoliations of every kind for and in consideration of the sum of five millions of
dollars to be expended paid and invested in the manner stipulated and agreed
upon in the following articles But as a question has arisen between the commissioners
and the Cherokees whether the Senate in their resolution by which they
advised: "that a sum not exceeding five millions of dollars be paid to the
Cherokee Indians for all their lands and possessions east of the Mississippi river"
have included and made any allowance or consideration for claims for spoliations
it is therefore agreed on the part of the United States that this question shall be
again submitted to the Senate for their consideration and decision and if no
allowance was made for spoliations that then an additional sum of three hundred
thousand dollars be allowed for the same.
ARTICLE 2.
Whereas by the treaty of May 6th 1828 and the supplementary
treaty thereto of Feb. 14th 1833 with the Cherokees west of the Mississippi the
United States guarantied and secured to be conveyed by patent, to the Cherokee
nation of Indians the following tract of country " Beginning at a point on the old
western territorial line of Arkansas Territory being twenty-five miles north from
the point where the territorial line crosses Arkansas river, thence running from
said north point south on the said territorial line where the said territorial line
crosses Verdigris river; thence down said Verdigris river to the Arkansas river;
thence down said Arkansas to a point where a stone is placed opposite the east or
lower bank of Grand river at its junction with the Arkansas; thence running south
forty-four degrees west one mile; thence in a straight line to a point four miles
northerly, from the mouth of the north fork of the Canadian; thence along the said
four mile line to the Canadian; thence down the Canadian to the Arkansas; thence
down the Arkansas to that point on the Arkansas where the eastern Choctaw
boundary strikes said river and running thence with the western line of Arkansas
Territory as now defined, to the southwest comer of Missouri; thence along the
western Missouri line to the land assigned the Senecas; thence on the south line
of the Senecas to Grand river; thence up said Grand river as far as the south line
of the Osage reservation, extended if necessary; thence up and between said
south Osage line extended west if necessary, and a line drawn due west from the
point of beginning to a certain distance west, at which a line running north and
south from said Osage line to said due west line will make seven millions of acres
within the whole described boundaries. In addition to the seven millions of acres
of land thus provided for and bounded, the United States further guaranty to the
Cherokee nation a perpetual outlet west, and a free and unmolested use of all the
country west of the western boundary of said seven millions of acres, as far west
as the sovereignty of the United States and their right of soil extend:
Provided however That if the saline or salt plain on the western prairie shall
fall within said limits prescribed for said outlet, the right is reserved to the United
States to permit other tribes of red men to get salt on said plain in common with
the Cherokees; And letters patent shall be issued by the United States as soon as
practicable for the land hereby guarantied."
And whereas it is apprehended by the Cherokees that in the above cession
there is not contained a sufficient quantity of land for the accommodation of the
whole nation on their removal west of the Mississippi the United States in
consideration of the sum of five hundred thousand dollars therefore hereby covenant
and agree to convey to the said Indians, and their descendants by patent, in fee
simple the following additional tract of land situated between the west line of the
State of Missouri and the Osage reservation beginning at the southeast comer of
the same and runs north along the east line of the Osage lands fifty miles to the
northeast comer thereof; and thence east to the west line of the State of Missouri;
thence with said line south fifty miles; thence west to the place of beginning;
estimated to contain eight hundred thousand acres of land; but it is expressly
understood that if any of the lands assigned the Quapaws shall fall within the aforesaid
bounds the same shall be reserved and excepted out of the lands above granted
and a pro rata reduction shall be made in the price to be allowed to the United
States for the same by the Cherokees.
ARTICLE 3.
The United States also agree that the lands above ceded by the
treaty of Feb. 14 1833, including the outlet, and those ceded by this treaty shall
all be included in one patent executed to the Cherokee nation of Indians by the
President of the United States according to the provisions of the act of May 28
1830. It is, however, agreed that the military reservation at Fort Gibson shall be
held by the United States. But should the United States abandon said post and
have no further use for the same it shall revert to the Cherokee nation. The United
States shall always have the right to make and establish such post and military
roads and forts in any part of the Cherokee country, as they may deem proper for
the interest and protection of the same and the free use of as much land, timber,
fuel and materials of all kinds for the construction and support of the same as
may be necessary; provided that if the private rights of individuals are interfered
with, a just compensation therefor shall be made.
ARTICLE 4.
The United States also stipulate and agree to extinguish for the
benefit of the Cherokees the titles to the reservations within their country made
in the Osage treaty of 1825 to certain half-breeds and for this purpose they hereby
agree to pay to the persons to whom the same belong or have been assigned
or to their agents or guardians whenever they shall execute after the ratification
of this treaty a satisfactory conveyance for the same, to the United States, the sum
of fifteen thousand dollars according to a schedule accompanying this treaty of
the relative value of the several reservations.
And whereas by the several treaties between the United States and the Osage
Indians the Union and Harmony Missionary reservations which were established
for their benefit are now situated within the country ceded by them to the United
States; the former being situated in the Cherokee country and the latter in the
State of Missouri. It is therefore agreed that the United States shall pay the
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions for the improvements
on the same what they shall be appraised at by Capt. Geo. Vashon Cherokee sub-agent
Abraham Redfield and A. P. Chouteau or such persons as the President of
the United States shall appoint and the money allowed for the same shall be
expended in schools among the Osages and improving their condition. It is
understood that the United States are to pay the amount allowed for the reservations
in this article and not the Cherokees.
ARTICLE 5.
The United States hereby covenant and agree that the lands
ceded to the Cherokee nation in the forgoing article shall, in no future time without
their consent, be included within the territorial limits or jurisdiction of any
State or Territory. But they shall secure to the Cherokee nation the right by their
national councils to make and carry into effect all such laws as they may deem
necessary for the government and protection of the persons and property within
their own country belonging to their people or such persons as have connected
themselves with them: provided always that they shall not be inconsistent with
the constitution of the United States and such acts of Congress as have been or
may be passed regulating trade and intercourse with the Indians; and also, that
they stall not be considered as extending to such citizens and army of the United
States as may travel or reside in the Indian country by permission according to
the laws and regulations established by the Government of the same.
ARTICLE 6.
Perpetual peace and friendship shall exist between the citizens of
the United States and the Cherokee Indians. The United States agree to protect
the Cherokee nation from domestic strife and foreign enemies and against intestine
wars between the several tribes. The Cherokees shall endeavor to preserve
and maintain the peace of the country and not make war upon their neighbors
they shall also be protected against interruption and intrusion from citizens of the
United States, who may attempt to settle in the country without their consent; and
all such persons shall be removed from the same by order of the President of the
United States. But this is not intended to prevent the residence among them of
useful farmers mechanics and teachers for the instruction of Indians according to
treaty stipulations.
ARTICLE 7.
The Cherokee nation having already made great progress in civ-
ilization and deeming it important that every proper and laudable inducement
should be offered to their people to improve their condition as well as to guard
and secure in the most effectual manner the rights guarantied to them in this
treaty, and with a view to illustrate the liberal and enlarged policy of the
Government of the United States towards the Indians in their removal beyond the
territorial limits of the States, it is stipulated that they shall be entitled
to a delegate in the House of Representatives of the United States whenever Congress
shall make provision for the same.
ARTICLE 8.
The United States also agree and stipulate to remove the
Cherokees to their new homes and to subsist them one year after their arrival
there and that a sufficient number of steamboats and baggage-wagons shall be
furnished to remove them comfortably, and so as not to endanger their health,
and that a physician well supplied with medicines shall accompany each detachment
of emigrants removed by the Government. Such persons and families as in
the opinion of the emigrating agent are capable of subsisting and removing themselves
shall be permitted to do so; and they shall be allowed in full for all claims
for the same twenty dollars for each member of their family; and in lieu of their
one year's rations they shall be paid the sum of thirty-three dollars and thirty-three
cents if they prefer it. Such Cherokees also as reside at present out of the
nation and shall remove with them in two years west of the Mississippi shall be
entitled to allowance for removal and subsistence as above provided.
ARTICLE 9.
The United States agree to appoint suitable agents who shall
make a just and fair valuation of all such improvements now in the possession of
the Cherokees as add any value to the lands; and also of the ferries owned by
them, according to their net income; and such improvements and ferries from
which they have been dispossessed in a lawless manner or under any existing
laws of the State where the same may be situated.
The just debts of the Indians shall be paid out of any monies due them for their
improvements and claims; and they shall also be furnished at the discretion of the
President of the United States with a sufficient sum to enable them to obtain the
necessary means to remove themselves to their new homes, and the balance of
their dues shall be paid them at the Cherokee agency west of the Mississippi. The
missionary establishments shall also be valued and appraised in a like manner
and the amount of them paid over by the United States to the treasurers of the
respective missionary societies by whom they have been established and
improved in order to enable them to erect such buildings and make such improvements
among the Cherokees west of the Mississippi as they may deem necessary
for their benefit. Such teachers at present among the Cherokees as this council
shall select and designate shall be removed west of the Mississippi with the
Cherokee nation and on the same terms allowed to them.
ARTICLE 10.
The President of the United States shall invest in some safe and
most productive public stocks of the country for the benefit of the whole
Cherokee nation who have removed or shall remove to the lands assigned by this
treaty to the Cherokee nation west of the Mississippi the following sums as a permanent
fund for the purposes hereinafter specified and pay over the net income
of the same annually to such person or persons as shall be authorized or appointed
by the Cherokee nation to receive the same and their receipt shall be a full discharge
for the amount paid to them viz: the sum of two hundred thousand dollars
in addition to the present annuities of the nation to constitute a general fund the
interest of which shall be applied annually by the council of the nation to such
purposes as they may deem best for the general interest of their people. The sum
of fifty thousand dollars to constitute an orphans' fund the annual income of
which shall be expended towards the support and education of such orphan children
as are destitute of the means of subsistence. The sum of one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars in addition to the present school fund of the nation shall
constitute a permanent school fund, the interest of which shall be applied annually
by the council of the nation for the support of common schools and such a
literary institution of a higher order as may be established in the Indian country.
And in order to secure as far as possible the true and beneficial application of the
orphans' and school fund the council of the Cherokee nation when required by
the President of the United States shall make a report of the application of those
funds and he shall at all times have the right if the funds have been misapplied to
correct any abuses of them and direct the manner of their application for the purposes
for which they were intended. The council of the nation may by giving two
years' notice of their intention withdraw their funds by and with the consent of
the President and Senate of the United States, and invest them in such manner as
they may deem most proper for their interest. The United States also agree and
stipulate to pay the just debts and claims against the Cherokee nation held by the
citizens of the same and also the just claims of citizens of the United States for
services rendered to the nation and the sum of sixty thousand dollars is appropriated
for this purpose but no claims against individual persons of the nation
shall be allowed and paid by the nation. The sum of three hundred thousand dollars
is hereby set apart to pay and liquidate the just claims of the Cherokees upon
the United States for spoliations of every kind, that have not been already satisfied
under former treaties.
ARTICLE 11.
The Cherokee nation of Indians believing it will be for the interest
of their people to have all their funds and annuities under their own direction
and future disposition hereby agree to commute their permanent annuity of ten
thousand dollars for the sum of two hundred and fourteen thousand dollars, the
same to be invested by the President of the United States as a part of the general
fund of the nation; and their present school fund amounting to about fifty thousand
dollars shall constitute a part of the permanent school fund of the nation.
ARTICLE 12.
Those individuals and families of the Cherokee nation that are
averse to a removal to the Cherokee country west of the Mississippi and are
desirous to become citizens of the States where they reside and such as are qualified
to take care of themselves and their property shall be entitled to receive their
due portion of all the personal benefits accruing under this treaty for their claims,
improvements and per capita; as soon as an appropriation is made for this treaty.
Such heads of Cherokee families as are desirous to reside within the States of
No. Carolina Tennessee and Alabama subject to the laws of the same; and who
are qualified or calculated to become useful citizens shall be entitled, on the
certificate of the commissioners to a preemption right to one hundred and sixty acres
of land or one quarter section at the minimum Congress price; so as to include
the present buildings or improvements of those who now reside there and such as
do not live there at present shall be permitted to locate within two years any lands
not already occupied by persons entitled to pre-emption privilege under this
treaty and if two or more families live on the same quarter section and they desire
to continue their residence in these States and are qualified as above specified
they shall, on receiving their pre-emption certificate be entitled to the right of
pre-emption to such lands as they may select not already taken by any person
entitled to them under this treaty.
It is stipulated and agreed between the United States and the Cherokee people
that:
John Ross,
James Starr,
George Hicks,
John Gunter,
George Chambers,
John Ridge,
Elias Boudinot,
George Sanders,
John Martin,
William Rogers,
Roman Nose Situwake, and
John Timpson.
shall be a committee on the part of the Cherokees to
recommend such persons for the privilege of pre-emption rights as may be
deemed entitled to the same under the above articles and to select the missionaries
who shall be removed with the nation; and that they be hereby fully empowered
and authorized to transact all business on the part of the Indians which may
arise in carrying into effect the provisions of this treaty and settling the same with
the United States. If any of the persons above mentioned should decline acting or
be removed by death; the vacancies shall be filled by the committee themselves.
It is also understood and agreed that the sum of one hundred thousand dollars
shall be expended by the commissioners in such manner as the committee deem
best for the benefit of the poorer class of Cherokees as shall remove west or have
removed west and are entitled to the benefits of this treaty. The same to be delivered
at the Cherokee agency west as soon after the removal of the nation as possible.
ARTICLE 13.
In order to make a final settlement of all the claims of the
Cherokees for reservations granted under former treaties to any individuals
belonging to the nation by the United States it is therefore hereby stipulated and
agreed and expressly understood by the parties to this treaty-that all the
Cherokees and their heirs and descendants to whom any reservations have been
made under any former treaties with the United States, and who have not sold or
conveyed the same by deed or otherwise and who in the opinion of the commissioners
have complied with the terms on which the reservations were granted as
far as practicable in the several cases; and which reservations have since been
sold by the United States shall constitute a just claim against the United States
and the original reserve or their heirs or descendants shall be entitled to receive
the present value thereof from the United States as unimproved lands. And all
such reservations as have not been sold by the United States and where the terms
on which the reservations were made in the opinion of the commissioners have
been complied with as far as practicable, they or their heirs or descendants shall
be entitled to the same. They are hereby granted and confirmed to them-and
also all persons who were entitled to reservations under the treaty of 1817 and
who as far as practicable in the opinion of the commissioners, have complied
with the stipulations of said treaty, although by the treaty of 1819 such reservations
were included in the uncoded lands belonging to the Cherokee nation are
hereby confirmed to them and they shall be entitled to receive a grant for the
same. And all such reserves as were obliged by the laws of the States in which
their reservations were situated, to abandon the same or purchase them from the
States shall be deemed to have a just claim against the United States for the
amount by them paid to the States with interest thereon for such reservations and
if obliged to abandon the same, to the present value of such reservations as
unimproved lands but in all cases where the reserves have sold their reservations or
any part thereof and conveyed the same by deed or otherwise and have been paid
for the same, they their heirs or descendants or their assigns shall not be considered
as having any claims upon the United States under this article of the treaty
nor be entitled to receive any compensation for the lands thus disposed of. It is
expressly understood by the parties to this treaty that the amount to be allowed
for reservations under this article shall not be deducted out of the consideration
money allowed to the Cherokees for their claims for spoliations and the cession
of their lands; but the same is to be paid for independently by the United States
as it is only a just fulfillment of former treaty stipulations.
ARTICLE 14.
It is also agreed on the part of the United States that such warriors of the
Cherokee nation as were engaged on the side of the United States in
the late war with Great Britain and the southern tribes of Indians, and who were
wounded in such service shall be entitled to such pensions as shall be allowed
them by the Congress of the United States to commence from the period of their
disability.
ARTICLE 15.
It is expressly understood and agreed between the parties to this
treaty that after deducting the amount which shall be actually expended for the
payment for improvements, ferries, claims, for spoliations, removal subsistence
and debts and claims upon the Cherokee nation and for the additional quantity of
lands and goods for the poorer class of Cherokees and the several sums to be
invested for the general national funds; provided for in the several articles of this
treaty the balance whatever the same may be shall be equally divided between all
the people belonging to the Cherokee nation east according to the census just
completed; and such Cherokees as have removed west since June 1833 who are
entitled by the terms of their enrollment and removal to all the benefits resulting
from the final treaty between the United States and the Cherokees east they shall
also be paid for their improvements according to their approved value before
their removal where fraud has not already been shown in their valuation.
ARTICLE 16.
It is hereby stipulated and agreed by the Cherokees that they
shall remove to their new homes within two years from the ratification of this
treaty and that during such time the United States shall protect and defend them
in their possessions and property and free use and occupation of the same and
such persons as have been dispossessed of their improvements and houses; and
for which no grant has actually issued previously to the enactment of the law of
the State of Georgia, of December 1835 to regulate Indian occupancy shall be
again put in possession and placed in the same situation and condition, in reference
to the laws of the State of Georgia, as the Indians that have not been dispossessed;
and if this is not done, and the people are left unprotected, then the
United States shall pay the several Cherokees for their losses and damages
sustained by them in consequence thereof. And it is also stipulated and agreed that
the public buildings and improvements on which they are situated at New Echota
for which no grant has been actually made previous to the passage of the above
recited act if not occupied by the Cherokee people shall be reserved for the public
and free use of the United States and the Cherokee Indians for the purpose of
settling and closing all the Indian business arising under this treaty between the
commissioners of claims and the Indians.
The United States, and the several States interested in the Cherokee lands,
shall immediately proceed to survey the lands ceded by this treaty; but it is
expressly agreed and understood between the parties that the agency buildings
and that tract of land surveyed and laid off for the use of Colonel R. J. Meigs
Indian agent or heretofore enjoyed and occupied by his successors in office shall
continue subject to the use and occupancy of the United States, or such agent as
may be engaged specially superintending the removal of the tribe.
ARTICLE 17.
All the claims arising under or provided for in the several articles of this
treaty, shall be examined and adjudicated by such commissioners as
shall be appointed by the President of the United States by and with the advice
and consent of the Senate of the United States for that purpose and their decision
shall be final and on their certificate of the amount due the several claimants they
shall be paid by the United States. All stipulations in former treaties which have
not been superseded or annulled by this shall continue in full force and virtue.
ARTICLE 18.
Whereas in consequence of the unsettled affairs of the
Cherokee people and the early frosts, their crops are insufficient to support their
families and great distress is likely to ensue and whereas the nation will not, until
after their removal be able advantageously to expend the income of the permanent
funds of the nation it is therefore agreed that the annuities of the nation
which may accrue under this treaty for two years, the time fixed for their removal
shall be expended in provision and clothing for the benefit of the poorer class of
the nation and the United States hereby agree to advance the same for that purpose
as soon after the ratification of this treaty as an appropriation for the same
shall be made. It is however not intended in this article to interfere with that part
of the annuities due the Cherokees west by the treaty of 1819.
ARTICLE 19.
This treaty after the same shall be ratified by the President and
Senate of the United States shall be obligatory on the contracting parties.
In testimony whereof, the commissioners and the chiefs, head men, and people
whose names are hereunto annexed, being duly authorized by the people in
general council assembled, have affixed their hands and seals for themselves, and
in behalf of the Cherokee Nation.
I have examined the foregoing treaty. and although not present when it was
made, I approve its provisions generally, and therefore sign it.
L/S Wm. Carroll,
|
J. F. Schermerhorn, |
Signed and sealed in presence of:, |
Major Ridge, his x mark, [L.S.] |
Western B. Thomas, secretary. |
James Foster, his x mark, [L.S.] |
Ben. F. Currey, special agent. |
Tesa-ta-esky, his x mark, [L.S.] |
M. WoIfe Batman, 1st Lt., 6th UA Army Inf. disbursing agent. |
Charles Moore, his x mark, [L.S.] |
Jon. L. Hooper, Lt., 4th., USA. Inf. |
George Chambers, his x mark, [L.S.] |
C. M Hitchcock, M. D., assistant surgeon, U.S.A. |
Tah-yeske, his x mark, [L.S.] |
G. W. Currey, |
Archilla Smith, his x mark, [L.S.] |
Wm. H. Underwood, |
Andrew Ross, [L.S.] |
Cornelius D. Terhune, |
William Lassley, [L.S.] |
John W. H. Underwood |
Cae-te-hee, his x mark , [L.S.] |
In compliance with instructions of the council at New Echota, we sign this Treaty. |
Te-gah-e-ske, his x mark, [L.S.] |
Stand Watie, |
Robert Rogers, [s/o John & Sarah, L.S.] |
John Ridge |
John Gunter, [L.S.] |
March 1, 1836. |
John A. Bell, [L.S.] |
Witnesses: |
Charles F. Foreman, [L.S.] |
Elbert Herring, |
William Rogers, [s/o John & Sarah] [L.S.]
| Alexander H. Everett, |
George W. Adair, [L.S.] |
John Robb, |
Elias Boudinot, [L.S.] |
D. Kurtz, |
James Starr, his x mark, [L.S.] |
Wm.Y. Hansell, |
Jesse Half-breed, his x mark, [L.S.] |
Samuel J. Potts, |
|
Jno. Litle, |
|
S. Rockwell. |
Dec. 31,1835.1 7 Stat., 487.
Whereas the western Cherokees have appointed a delegation to visit the eastern
Cherokees to assure them of the friendly disposition of their people and their
desire that the nation should again be united as one people and to urge upon them
the expediency of accepting the overtures of the Government; and that, on their
removal they may be assured of a hearty welcome and an equal participation with
them in all the benefits and privileges of the Cherokee country west and the
undersigned two of said delegation being the only delegates in the eastern nation
from the west at the signing and sealing of the treaty lately concluded at New
Echota between their eastern brethren and the United States; and having fully
understood the provisions of the same they agree to it in behalf of the western
Cherokees. But it is expressly understood that nothing in this treaty shall affect
any claims of the western Cherokees on the United States.
In testimony whereof, we have, this 31st day of December, 1835, hereunto set
our hands and seals.
James Rogers, (Seal)
John Smith, his x mark, (Seal)
Delegates from the western Cherokees. Test:
Ben. F. Currey, special agent.
M. W. Batman, first lieutenant, USA Sixth Infantry,
Jno. L. Hooper, lieutenant, USA Fourth Infantry,
Elias Boudinot.
|
Article 20.
The United States do also hereby guarantee the payments of all unpaid just
claims upon the Indians, without expense to them, out of the proper funds of the
United States, for the settlement of which a cession or cessions of land has or
have been heretofore made by the Indians in Georgia. Provided the United States
or the State of Georgia has derived benefit from the said cession or cessions of
land without having made payment to the Indians therefore .-It is hereby howev-
er further agreed and understood, that if the Senate of the United States disap-
proves of this article it may be rejected with-out impairing any other provision of
the treaty, or affecting the Indians in any manner whatever.
[Signed] A. McCoy, Clerk
[Signed] W.B. Thomas, Secry
In compliance with the unanimous request of the Committee of the Cherokee
Nation in General council assembled, it is consented and agreed by the
Commissioner on the part of the United States that the foregoing shall be added
as a supplemental article to the Treaty under the express condition and stipulation
that if the President or Senate of the United States disapprove of this article
it may be rejected without impairing any other provision of this treaty or affecting
the Indians in any manner whatever.
[Signed] J.F. Schermerhorn |




Proclamation, May 23,1836; [March 1, 1836 .1 7 Stat., 488.1]
Supplementary articles to a treaty concluded at New Echota, Georgia,
December 29, 1835, between the United States and Cherokee people.
Andrew Jackson, President of the United States. To all and singular to whom
these presents shall come, - Greeting:
WHEREAS
the undersigned were authorized at the general meeting of the
Cherokee people held at New Echota as above stated, to make and assent to such
alterations in the preceding treaty as might be thought necessary, and whereas the
President of the United States has expressed his determination not to allow any
pre-emptions or reservations his desire being that the whole Cherokee people
should remove together and establish themselves in the country provided for
them west of the Mississippi river.
ARTICLE 1.
It is therefore agreed that all the pre-emption rights and reserva-
tions provided for in articles 12 and 13 shall be and are hereby relinquished and
declared void.
ARTICLE 2.
Whereas the Cherokee people have supposed that the sum of five
millions of dollars fixed by the Senate in their resolution of--day of March,
1835, as the value of the Cherokee lands and possessions east of the Mississippi
river was not intended to include the amount which may be required to remove
them, nor the value of certain claims which many of their people had against
citizens of the United States, which suggestion has been confirmed by the opinion
expressed to the War Department by some of the Senators who voted upon the
question and whereas the President is willing that this subject should be referred
to the Senate for their consideration and if it was not intended by the Senate that
the above-mentioned sum of five millions of dollars should include the objects
herein specified that in that case such further provision should be made therefor
as might appear to the Senate to be just.
ARTICLE 3.
It is therefore agreed that the sum of six hundred thousand dollars shall
be and the same is hereby allowed to the Cherokee people to include
the expense of their removal, and all claims of every nature and description
against the Government of the United States not herein otherwise expressly provided
for, and to be in lieu of the said reservations and pre-emptions and of the
sum of three hundred thousand dollars for spoliations described in the 1st article
of the above-mentioned treaty. This sum of six hundred thousand dollars shall be
applied and distributed agreeably to the provisions of the said treaty, and any surplus
which may remain after removal and payment of the claims so ascertained
shall be turned over and belong to the education fund. But it is expressly understood
that the subject of this article is merely referred hereby to the consideration
of the Senate and if they shall approve the same then this supplement shall
remain part of the treaty.
ARTICLE 4.
It is also understood that the provisions in <---
Article 16, for the
agency reservation is not intended to interfere with the occupant right of any
Cherokees should their improvement fall within the same. It is also understood
and agreed, that the one hundred thousand dollars appropriated in article 12 for
the poorer class of Cherokees and intended as a set-off to the pre-emption rights
shall now be transferred from the funds of the nation and added to the general
national fund of four hundred thousand dollars so as to make said fund equal to
five hundred thousand dollars.
ARTICLE 5.
The necessary expenses attending the negotiations of the aforesaid treaty and \
supplement and also of such persons of the delegation as may sign
the same shall be defrayed by the United States.
In testimony whereof, John F. Schermerhorn, commissioner on the part of the
United States, and the undersigned delegation have hereunto set their hands and
seals, this first day of March, in the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-six.
|
Andrew Ross, [L.S.] |
J. F. Schermerhorn [L.S.] |
William Rogers, [L.S.] |
Major Ridge, his x mark, |
John Gunter, [L.S.] |
James Foster, his x mark, |
John A. Bell, [L.S.] |
Tah-ye-ske, his x mark, |
Jos. A. Foreman, [L.S.] |
Long Shell Turtle, his x mark, |
Robert Sanders, [L.S.] |
John Fields, his x mark, |
Elias Boudinot, [L.S.] |
James Fields, his x mark, |
Johnson Rogers,[s/o John & Sarah] [L.S.] |
George Welch, his x mark, |
James Starr, his x mark, |
James Rogers, [L.S.] |
Stand Wade, [L.S.] |
John Smith, his x mark. |
John Ridge, [L.S.] |
|
Witnesses: |
Signed and sealed in presence of |
|
Western B. Thomas, Secy |
Elbert Herring, |
Ben F. Currey, Special Agent |
Thos. Glascock, |
M. Wolf Balenan, |
Alexander H. Everett, |
Jno L. Hopper |
Jno. Garland, Major, U.S. Army, |
C.M. Hitchcock, M.D. |
C.A. Harris, |
G.W. Currey, |
John Robb, |
Wm. H. Underwood, |
Wm. Y. Hansell, |
Cornelius D. Terhune, |
Sami. J. Potts, |
John W.H. Underwood, |
Jno. Litle, |
|
S. Rockwell, |
|
In compliance with Instructions of the Council at New Echota we sign this
Treaty - March 1st, 1836
[Signed] Stand Watie [L.S.]
[Signed] John Ridge [L.S.]
|
March 14, 1835[l836]
Schedule and estimated value of the Osage half-breed reservations
within the territory ceded to the Cherokees west of the Mississippi,
(referred to in article 5 on the foregoing treaty,) viz:
Augustus Clamont one section $6,000
James " " " 1,000
Paul " " " 1,300
Henry " " " 800
Anthony " " " 1,800
Rosalie " " " 1,800
Emilia D, of Mihanga 1,000
Emilia D, of Shemianga 1,300
$15,000
I hereby certify that the above schedule is the estimated value
of the Osage reservations, as made out and agreed upon with
Col. A. P. Choteau who represented himself as the agent or
guardian of the above reserves.
[signed] J. F. Schermerhorn [L.S.]
Ratification of Treaty -
In the Senate of the United States
May 18th, 1836
|
Resolved, (two thirds of the Senate present concurring)
That the senate do advise and consent to the ratification
of the treaty between the United States of
America and the Cherokee Indians concluded at New Echota the 29th day of
December, 1835, together with the Supplementary articles thereto dated the first
day of March one thousand Eight hundred and thirty six, with the following
amendments thereto:
ARTICLE 17.
lines 2 and 3, Strike Out the words, "by General William Carroll
and John F. Schermerhorn, or "
In the 4th line of the same article after the word "State," insert by an with the
advice and consent of the Senate of the United States.
Strike out the 20th Article which appears as a Supplemental article.
Attest. Walter Lowell, Secretary
Now therefore be it known that I Andrew Jackson President of the United
States of America having seen and considered the said Treaty, and also the
Supplementary Articles thereunto annexed, do, in pursuance of the advice and
consent of the Senate, as expressed in their resolution of the eighteenth day of
May, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-six, accept, ratify, and confirm the
same, with the following amendments thereto, as expressed in the aforesaid
Resolution of the Senate.
In testimony whereof I have caused the Seal of the United States to be here-
unto affixed, having signed the same with my hand.
Done at the City of Washington, this twenty third day of May, in the year of
our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty-six, and of the Independence of
the United States the Sixtieth.
[Signed] Andrew Jackson
By the President
[Signed] John Forsyth
Secretary of State
|
May 23 1838, was the deadline for the Eastern Cherokee "voluntary
removal", the corn of the Eastern Cherokee was knee high and
doing nicely. The thousands of Indians and their slaves were
pleased with it.
CHEROKEE removal parties usually crossed western Kentucky to the
Golconda River on the Ohio River, and moved across the southern
Illinois to the Cape Girardau Ferry on the Mississippi. The
Trail of Tears which Chief John Ross led them on the
terrible this march. He later served as chief of the Western
United Cherokee Nation (Oklahoma) until his death in 1866.
The Trail of Tears which started at Chattanooga, TN.
for the forced exodus of the last Eastern CHEROKEE Indians in
fall of 1838. This was the Overland passage across North
across Tennessee, West across Kentucky, West at the tip of
Illinois, Southwest in Missouri to Arkansas, West across Arkansas
to Fort Gibson in Oklahoma. Many of the people, especially
infants and the elderly, died and were buried along one or
another of the trails. About 4,000 of the men, women and children
of the 15,000 CHEROKEE who made the journey died of disease and
exposure. One of the 14 wagon trains went across central Arkansas
from Chickasaw Bluff (Memphis), which was one of the most
direct routes.
In January, 1837, CHOCTAW and CHICKASAW commissioners met at
Doaksville on the lower Kiamichi River and agreed upon terms of
the CHICKASAW removal. The Treaty of Doaksville in 1837 required
the CHICKASAWS move into a district west of the CHOCTAW
settlement in Oklahoma. The two Indian governments were to be
combined, and members of both tribes were to have the right to
settle in any part of the CHOCTAW Nation. Separate tribe
annuities were to be continued, but all other privileges were
equal.
By the end of 1840 most CHICKASAW had moved into their Oklahoma
district. The KIOWAS and some other western tribes resented the
presence of CHICKASAWS on land which the "Plains Indians"
regarded as their own. Raids by KIOWAS and COMANCHES were
frequent, and the CHICKASAWS were forced to maintain a constant
guard over their livestock and other property. Also they could
not obtain an equal voice in united tribal affairs.
Most CHICKASAWS traveled across Arkansas by wagon, at least part
of the way. Riverboats on the Mississippi, St. Francis, and the
Arkansas Rivers provided a part of the removal facilities. While
the CHICKASAW removal was orderly, disease caused suffering and
death. As well as a loss of personal property and livestock.
Based on census the so-called new CHICKASAW NATION numbered about
4,000.
Detached groups of Indians other than the Five Civilized Tribes,
setled permanently on the lands of the Indians in Eastern INDIAN
TERRITORY (Oklahoma) from time to time. For example, the CHOCTAWS
admitted 19 CATAWBAS from North Carolina in 1851 and granted
full rights of citizenship to 14 of them in 1853.
Other CATAWBAS tribe members settled with the CREEK NATION.
CATAWBAS belong to the Siouan linguistc stock, detached from
kindred tribes on the Plains before written history appeared in
that part of North America.
Major changes in the condition of the CHICKASAW and SEMINOLE
NationS resulted from the Treaty of 1855 & 1886 with the U.S.
Secretary of the Interior ROBERT McCLELLAND and Commissioner of
Indian Affairs GEORGE W. MANYPENNY reconized the principle of
self-goverment in dealing with the two smaller tribes.
By the terms of the CHICKASAW-CHOCTAW Treaty of June, 1855,
CHOCTAW land West of the 98th Merdian was leased to the U.S. to
provide a home for the WICHITAS and "such other tribes of
Indians as the U.S. Government may desire to locate therein"
For the lease consideration the U.S. agrees to pay $600,00 to the
CHOCTAW NATION and $200,000 to the CHICKASAW NATION.
For consideration of the establishment of a separate CHICKASAW
NATION, the CHICKASAW agree to pay the CHOCTAW NATION $150,000
for:
All land lying, with a Western boundary of the 98th
Meridian, and from the Canadian River on the North to the Red
River to the South; With the Eastern boundary following Island
Bayou River from its mouth to the source of its Eastern Branch,
thence due north to the Canadian River and point of beginning.
The SEMINOLE-CREEK Treaty of 1856, agree to maintain separate
tribal organizations, and the new SEMINOLE NATION shall be:
All land lying with a line beginning due North from
the mouth of the Pond Creek (Ock-hi-appo) on the Canadian River
to the North Fork of the Canadian River; Thence up that stream to
the Southern line of the Cherokee Outlet and West along that line
to the 100th Meridian; Thence down the Canadian River to the
point of Beginning..
One of the great importance to the SEMINOLE NATION was the
provision for separate government, which relieved them from the
domination of the CREEK majority. The U.S. agreed to pay and
construct an SEMINOLE Agency building and to pay $90,000 to cover
the losses involved in the SEMINOLE tribe moving to the new
location. The contract was let to HENRY HOPE of Arkansas and was
constructed "one mile West of the East boundary of the new
SEMINOLE country, and about two miles North of the road recently
laid out by Lieutenant BEALE."
In 1857, 200 WYANDOTTE Indians moved in with the SENECAS. They
were driven North by guerrilla bands during the Civil War, both
SENECAS and WYANDOTTES obtain a reservation in 1865. 2 years
later the WYANDOTTES obtained a reservation of their own, some
21,246 acres along the Northern boundary of the SENECA tract.
In 1859, a band of DELAWARE Indians from Brazos, Texas came to
the Wichita Agency. Their descendants live in communities near
Anadarko and Carnegie, Oklahoma.
RECONSTRUCTION AFTER CIVIL WAR -1865
After the War between the States ended, Pickens County was in
economic distress. Although faring better than the Creeks and
Cherokees the Chickasaws and Chocktaws were in great need of food
and clothing. In addition, the U.S. Federal Government was
anxious and adamant in its efforts to use the Civil War as an
excuse to take more land away from the Indians to form
reservations for other tribes which had not been relocated to the
to the Oklahoma area. Consequently, the U.S. Government initiated
the desire to organize a Territorial Government of the land of
the Five Civilized Tribes. One of the most significant penalties
was that all previous TREATIES WERE NUL and VOID ! !
As a result the Treaty of April 28 1866 was to have a far
reaching effect on the American Indian on the Oklahoma
Reservation:
1. All previous Treaties are nul and void.
2. Railroads were to be granted "Right-of-Way" both north-
south and east-west for construction of railways and depots with
no reimbursement to the Indian tribes.
3. All Black Freedmen are to be adopted into their
master's tribe. If not adopted by the tribe the U.S. Government
will remove them (Blacks) from the Reservation.
4. A consolidation of all Indian Territory government. Delegates
from each tribe or Nation will serve on this governing body.
5. Each Nation shall cede land to the U.S. Government for use in
granting other tribes reservations.
Naturally, in time this Treaty of 1866 resulted in mass intrusion
by other Indians Tribes. A more fatal side effect was that the
white man, with his greedy way coveted the land of the Indian
Nations. Where the Indian used the land, the white man abused and
destroyed nature's blessing.
TREATY of 1866
CHOCTAW - CHICKASAW ceded the 1855 "Leased District" to
the U.S. for $300,000.
CREEK ceded the western half of the Creek land, 3,250 acres for
$975,168 (30 cents per acre). That said land may be sold to such
other civilized Indians as the U.S. may choose to settle thereon.
SEMINOLE, ceded all their land 2,169,080 acres, for $325,362 (15
cents per acre). That said land may be sold to such other
civilized Indians as the U.S. may choose to settle thereon.
SEMINOLES, further agreed to purchase 200,00 acres of land, a
part of the tract recently acquired by the U.S. from the CREEKS
(later the SEMINOLES in 1881, purchased an additional 175,000
acres, enlarging their new home to 375,000 acres)
CHEROKEE, provide that any friendly Indian Tribes, may be settled
on the Cherokee Outlet at a price agreed upon by the Cherokees
and the purchaser. The Cherokee Strip and the Neutral Lands, both
in Kansas shall be sold to the highest bidder, for the benefit of
the Cherokee, at an average price no lower than $1.25 an acre.
Each of the Five Civilized Tribes agreed to admit two (2)
railroads, one rail line running east to west, the other north to
south across tribal lands.
After the Civil War, space was found in the CHEROKEE NATION,
Northeast section for additiona bands: OTTAWAS, WEAS, PEORIAS,
KASKASKIAS, PIANKASHAWS, MIAMIS. Fragments of other tribes
affiliated with these bands were brought in with them in some
instances.
In 1867, a band of DELAWARE Indians were moved by contract from
their reservation in Kansas to the CHEROKEE NATION, Oklahoma.
In 1871 the use of Treaties was terminated by U.S. Government,
and Indians were thereafter governed by Congressional
Legislation, Executive Orders, or Executive Agreements. The U.S.
Congress frequently enacted laws conflicting with the provisions
of Indian treaties, and the whites frequently violated their
terms, thus provoking many of the INDIAN WARS of the 19th
century.
In 1873, the little Oregon band of the MODOCS, were brought in
from Fort McPherson, Nebraska. They were settled on a 4,040
acres, purchased from the SHAWNEE.
Tribal settlements in the Cherokee Outlet, in 1889 were as
follows:
East of the Arkansas River: Osage and Kaw
West of the Arkansas River: Oto, Missouri, Ponca & Tonkawa
Tribal settlements in the Creek & Seminole, land in 1889 were as
follows; Sac, Fox, Pottawatomie, Shawnee, Iowa, & Kickapoo tribes
The Comanche, Kiowa, and Apache tribes occupied a reservation of
more than 3,000,000 acres in extent in the Southeastern part of
the old Cherokee "Leased District" The Cheyenne and
Arapaho Reservation was West of the 98th Meridian and South of
the Cherokee Outlet.
The Unassigned Lands contained 1,887,796 acres, which became the
first area opened to white settlement in 1889.
On Aug. 13, 1946, U.S. Congress created the Indian Claims
Commission (ICC) to adjudicate Indian land claims. The I.C.C.
existed until 1978, after which claims were handled first by the
Court of Claims and, after 1982 by the United States Claims
Court. By 1989, claims totaling nearly $1.4 billion had been
awarded.
File: NA_VOL04.TXT
Revised: Jan. 15, 1995
By: Paul R. Sarrett, Jr. [email protected]
End of File!
These records are part of the "History American Indian Profile©"
by Volume - I. Sarratt/Sarrett/Surratt Family Profile©
Compiled and self Published in Jun. 29, 1993 by Paul R. Sarrett, Jr. with
the assistance of my late mother
Mrs. M. Lucille (WILSON) SARRETT (1917-1987)
The SFA "Work-Books" were compiled by "General, Languages, Tribes, Treaties,
Wars, How to Research NA Ancestors, Bibliographies". In 1996
I started "Up-Loading" this material on the Sarratt/Sarrett/Surratt
Families of America (SFA)© site. ..prs
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Would like to Exchange and Share information on
SARRATT / SARRETT / SURRATT
Families, contact me at:
E-Mail:
Paul R. Sarrett, Jr. Auburn, CA.
Text - Copyright © 1996-2007 Paul R. Sarrett, Jr.
Created: Dec. 01, 1996;
Aug. 10, 2001;
Sep. 10, 2007;