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Title: Talking Walls


1
Talking Walls
  • Jeff Bishop
  • July 10, 2006

2
When was America first settled?
3
Human settlement
  • Paleoindian Period (ca. 12,0008000 B.C.)
  • Archaic Period (ca. 80001000 B.C.)
  • Woodland Period (ca. 1000 B.C.A.D. 1000)
  • Mississippian Period of North Georgia (ca. a.d.
    10001540)

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  • Rangel on Ulibahali a very fine village close
    to a large river.
  • Sept. 1540
  • Elvas large timber sunk deep and firmly into
    the earth, having many long poles the size of the
    arm, placed crosswise to nearly the height of a
    lance, with embrasures, and coated with mud
    inside and out, having loop-holes for archery.
  • Rangel said that, at a distance, such timbers
    looked like a fine wall or rampart and that
    such stockades are very strong.

9
  • Elvas Ten or twelve chiefs came to him on the
    road, from the Cacique of that province,
    tendering his service, bearing bows and arrows
    and wearing bunches of feathers.
  • There were many Indians lying in wait for them
    planning to rescue the chief of Coça from the
    Christians because they were his subjects, said
    Rangel. They had determined to wrest the Cacique
    of Coça from his power, should that chief have
    called on them, reports Elvas.
  • But instead the chief of Coça ordered the
    Indians to lay aside their arms, and it was
    done, said Rangel.

10
  • As usual, DeSoto required food, labor, and women.
    After some words between him and the Governor,
    proffering mutual service, he gave the tamemes
    that were requisite and thirty women as slaves,
    said Elvas. Rangel reports that only twenty
    women were given, but agrees that the discussions
    were peaceful.

11
  • DeSoto lost two men here, a Spaniard and a black
    man. The white man, a gentleman of Salamanca
    named Mancano, was apparently quite taken with
    the local cuisine. The grapes, Rangel said, were
    as good as those grown in the vineyards of
    Spain. And while they had reported that in Coosa
    they had eaten very good ones, these of
    Ulibahali were the best.

12
  • Elvas agrees it was the grapes that got him.
    Mancano strayed off in search of the grapes,
    which are good here, and plenty, he said, and he
    was lost.
  • Rangel noted that Mancano had kept by himself
    for some time, walking alone and melancholy. He
    had asked the other soldiers to leave him to
    himself, and he went missing shortly thereafter.
    So it was impossible to say whether Mancano had
    left DeSotos group of his own will or whether
    he lost his way.
  • The other man, Johan Biscayan, a negro, who
    spoke Spanish and who belonged to Captain Johan
    Ruiz Lobillo, was also missing. said Rangel.

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  • Davila Padilla
  • It was Gods will that they should soon get
    within sight of that place which had been so far
    famed and so much thought about (Coosa) and, yet,
    it did not have above thirty houses, or a few
    more. There were seven little hamlets in its
    district, five of them smaller and two larger and
    Coza itself, which name prevailed for the fame it
    had enjoyed in its antiquity. It looked so much
    the worse to the Spaniards for having been
    depicted so grandly, and they had thought it to
    be so much better. Its inhabitants had been said
    to be innumerable, the site itself as being wider
    and more level than Mexico, the springs had been
    said to be many and of very clear water, food
    plentiful and gold and silver in abundance,
    which, without judging rashly, was that which the
    Spaniards desired most. Truly the land was
    fertile, but it lacked cultivation. There was
    much forest, but little fruit, because as it was
    not cultivated the land was all unimproved and
    full of thistles and weeds. Those they had
    brought along as guides, being people who had
    been there before, declared that they must have
    been bewitched when this country seemed to them
    so rich and populated as they had stated. The
    arrival of Spaniards in former years had driven
    the Indians up into the forests, where they
    preferred to live among the wild beasts who did
    no harm to them, but whom they could master, than
    among the Spaniards at whose hands they received
    injuries, although they were good to them. Those
    from Coza received the guests well, liberally,
    and with kindness, and the Spaniards appreciated
    this, the more so as the actions of their
    predecessors did not call for it ... Every day
    little groups of them went searching through the
    country and they found it all deserted and
    without news of gold ...

17
  • Woe is our nation! their descendants later
    recalled in a myth about the destruction of
    Coosa. We were the greatest of all the nations
    our tus-e-ki-yas were numerous, reaching out and
    known and dreaded the world over. But it is not
    so now great is the humiliation that has fallen
    on us. Shame and humiliation is now our portion.

18
  • Cherokees 1760s
  • Coosawattee
  • Ustanauli
  • Hightower

19
  • Thomas Petitt, a mixed-blood Cherokee, reported
    in 1829 that
  • Toward the close of the Revolutionary War,
    General Pickens, with an army, burnt the towns of
    Chota ... He was taken prisoner with his mother
    and many others, but the general left him and his
    mother in the Nation when he took most of the
    prisoners away with him.
  • John Wright, a white man married to a Cherokee,
    also said in 1829
  • About the close of the Revolutionary War,
    General Andrew Pickens of South Carolina and old
    General (Elijah) Clark of Georgia marched an army
    into the Nation and penetrated the country as far
    down the Etowah as the Oostanaula, into the
    latter river. He was then a boy in the Hightower
    Village. The inhabitants run and left their town
    but the army did not cross the river at that
    place nor attack the Hightower Village.

20
  • A Cherokee named Rain Crow remembered After the
    close of the Revolutionary War, his father, for
    fear of the whites, fled from Seneca, South
    Carolina to a new Cherokee town at the confluence
    of the Etowah and Oostanaula rivers in Georgia.
    The town previously the Coosa town of Ulibahali
    -- was now known as Hightower or Etowah Old
    Town. Even though it was acknowledged as an old
    site, white man John Wright reported that when he
    came there in about 1770 there was no
    respectable village at that place.

21
  • Richard Dick Rowe, a mixed-blood Cherokee, said
    in 1829 that
  • His father many years ago lived up the Holston
    and when he was a small boy about the close of
    the Revolutionary War, the war between the whites
    and the Cherokees became very oppressive to the
    Cherokees, so much so, that his father removed
    the family to the south side of the Etowah or
    what is commonly called the Hightower, where his
    father considered them safe.

22
  • The Creeks were still living there when the
    Cherokees came.
  • At the time they settled there, there was a
    small Creek village ... His father had not been
    there a year when the Creek village broke up and
    moved down the country to the Newyorker villages
    on the Tallapoosa.
  • When Rain Crow came to Hightower he was a small
    boy and did not travel much. But even as a boy
    he knew that Creeks still lived on the south side
    of the Etowah, and joined by an ever increasing
    number of Cherokee refugees on the north side.
  • The Creeks agreed, he said, that should the
    whites drive the Cherokees from their towns, they
    might go and settle on the south side of the
    Etowah River, where they would be out of reach.
    The Creeks, Rain Crow said, never gave them the
    land, only allowed them to live there on these
    conditions.

23
  • John Sevier, whom the Cherokees knew as
    Nolichucky Jack, was notorious for his scorched
    earth raids into these Cherokee towns. Now, in
    the fall of 1793, he was leading another punitive
    raid of 800 volunteers against the Cherokee he
    wound up fighting a decisive battle at the very
    spot visited by DeSoto and the Coosa chief 150
    years earlier.

24
  • I marched in pursuit of the large body of
    Indians, Sevier reported. He and his party of
    about 700 militiamen marched straight for the
    heart of the Cherokee Nation, reaching the
    capital town of Oostanaula on Oct. 14.
  • We there made some Cherokee prisoners, who
    informed us that John Watts headed the army
    lately out on our frontiers, said Sevier. The
    prisoners informed him that the warriors came
    from Turkey Town (modern day Centre, Alabama),
    Salacoa ( just below Fairmount), Coosawattee
    (Carters Lake), and several other principal
    towns. The Cherokee warriors almost to a man
    (were) out, joined by a large number of the upper
    Creeks, who had passed through Oostanaula only a
    few days before Seviers arrival.

25
  • The warriors had made for a town at the mouth
    of the Coosa River, Sevier was told, for
    Hightower.
  • We, after refreshing the troops, marched for
    that place, taking the path that leads to that
    town, along which the Creeks had marched, in five
    large trails, Sevier said. This would have led
    them through Oothcaloga and what is known today
    as Adairsville and Shannon, then southwest along
    what is now called Old Calhoun Road.
  • On the afternoon of Oct. 17, Sevier and his
    troops arrived. Sevier ordered Col. Kelly to take
    his regiment and cross the Etowah River, but the
    Creeks and a number of Cherokees had intrenched
    themselves to obstruct the passage, he reported.

26
  • Col. Kelly and his men went down the river half
    a mile below the ford and began to cross at a
    private place, where there was no ford, Sevier
    said. Kelly and some of his men began to swim
    across and the Indians, discovering this
    movement, immediately left their intrenchments
    and ran down the river to oppose their
    passage...
  • Walking Stick corroborated this episode in
    testimony given Dec. 21, 1829
  • A group of Cherokees met the whites on the Etowah
    River about one mile above the mouth of the
    Oostanaula, Walking Stick said. A party of
    Cherokees met the general and fought him and he
    turned back again and recrossed the Etowah.
    Walking Stick was among a group of 100
    reinforcements who arrived too late.

27
  • But it was a diversion tactic a lure. As soon
    as the Indians left their entrenchments, Capt.
    Evans immediately with his company of mounted
    infantry strained their hoses back to the upper
    ford and began to cross the river, said Sevier.
  • Very few had got to the south bank before the
    Indians, who had discovered their mistake,
    returned and recieved them furiously at the
    rising of the bank, said Sevier. An engagement
    instantly took place and became very warm, and
    notwithstanding the enemy were at least four to
    one in numbers, besides the advantage of
    situation, Capt. Evans with his heroic company
    put them in a short time utterly to flight.
  • The Indians left several dead on the ground,
    Sevier said, but carried others away both on
    foot and on horse. Bark and trails of blood from
    the wounded were to be seen in every quarter.

28
  • The encampment fell into our hands, with a
    number of their guns, many of which were of the
    Spanish sort, with budgets, blankets and match
    coats, together with some horses. We lost three
    men in this engagement, which is all that have
    fell during the time of our route, although this
    last attack was the fourth the enemy had made
    upon us, but in the others repulsed without loss.
  • After the last engagement we crossed the main
    Coosa, then proceeded on our way down the main
    river near the Turnip Mountain, destroying in our
    way several Creek and Cherokee towns, which they
    had settled together on each side of the river,
    and from which they have all fled with apparent
    precipitation, leaving almost everything behind
    them. Neither did they after the last engagement
    attempt to annoy or interrupt us on our march, in
    any manner whatever. I have got reason to believe
    their ardor and spirit was well checked.
  • The party flogged at Hightower were those which
    had been out with Watts. There are three or four
    men slightly wounded and two or three horses
    killed, but the Indians did not, as I heard of,
    get a single horse from us the time we were out.
    We took and destroyed nearly 300 beeves, many of
    which were of the best and largest kind. Of
    course their losing so much provision must
    distress them very much.
  • Many women and children might have been taken,
    but from motives of humanity I did not encourage
    it to be done, and several taken were suffered to
    make their escape. Your Excellency knows the
    disposition of many that were out on this
    expedition, and can readily account for this
    conduct.

29
  • From Hughes Reynolds Coosa River Valley
  • The last sentence in this report was evidently
    intended to cover up a matter that happened
    immediately after the Battle of Etowah. An Indian
    woman who had been taken prisoner with her child
    was standing close by a wounded officer of
    Seviers army. The officer said irritably, Take
    her out of my sight. One of the officers
    friends raised his gun and shot the woman dead.
    He then grasped the child by the legs and dashed
    its brains against a tree.

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The Cherokee Way
  • The Seven Clans (Wolf, Deer, Bird, Paint, Blue
    Savannah, Wind/ Twisters / Longhair, Wild Potato)
  • Matrilineal
  • Blood Law

33
White Encroachment
  • The Traders / intermarriage / dependence on trade
    goods
  • The Federal Road
  • Inns / Taverns / Ferries
  • The 1802 Compact Agreement with GA
  • The Civilization Program.
  • Missions
  • Acculturation / Constitution / New Echota
  • Clans abolished 1820. Blood law abolished.
  • Loss of land / Trade deficits / bribes

34
The Ross-Ridge Feud
35
Removal
  • Nearly every time anthropologist Charles Hudson
    refers to the removal of the Southeastern Indians
    from their eastern homelands, he puts the word
    removal, in quotation marks. Removal, he
    said, is a gentle, almost antiseptic word for
    one of the harshest, most crudely opportunistic
    acts in American history. It was act that could
    only have been perpetrated on a conquered people.

36
  • May 24, 1838 (began on 26th)
  • In GA, 10 forts and five camps
  • Fort Means, located on a spring-fed creek along
    the old Cass County / Floyd County line (one land
    lot west of the current Bartow / Floyd line),
    served as the collection point for 467 Cherokee
    prisoners. Capt. John Means commanded 68 men from
    here.
  • Camp Scott in Western Floyd County.

37
  • Wm. Cotter spoke for most Georgians when he said
    the whites had a perfect right to demand
    immediate Cherokee removal
  • Mississippi was admitted as a State and had
    been in possession of her territory for
    twenty-one years. Alabama, admitted in 1819, had
    been in possession of her territory nineteen
    years. Much-maligned Georgia had been kept from
    her rights thirty-six years, from 1802 to 1838.
    Take notice of this when you see in encyclopedias
    and other books that Georgia is charged with
    robbing the Indians of their lands.

38
  • Cotter sets the scene
  • The spring of 1838 opened most beautifully.
    There was no cold weather after the first of
    March. Vegetation advanced without any backsets
    from cold. The buds burst into leaves and
    blossoms the woods were green and gay and merry
    with the singing birds. The Indians started to
    work in their fields earlier than ever before.
    ... That spring you could see the smoke of their
    log heaps or piles of ashes where the boys had
    been. Fence corners and hedgerows were cleaned
    out. The ground was well plowed and the corn
    planted better than ever before. Soon it was
    knee-high and growing nicely. They cultivated
    only the richest bottoms.
  • After all the warning and with the soldiers in
    their midst, the inevitable day appointed found
    the Indians at work in their houses and in their
    fields. It is remembered as well as if it had
    been seen yesterday, that two or three dropped
    their hoes and ran as fast as they could when
    they saw the soldiers coming into the field.
    After that they made no effort to get out of the
    way. The men handled them gently, but picked them
    up in the road, in the field, anywhere they found
    them, part of a family at a time, and carried
    them to the post.

39
  • There are few records of the round-up that the
    Cherokees themselves recorded, but a woman named
    Oo-loo-cha, the widow of Sweet Water, wrote the
    following remembrance on Mar. 5, 1842
  • The soldiers came and took us from our home.
    They first surrounded our house and they took the
    mare while we were at work in the fields and they
    drove us out of doors and did not permit us to
    take anything with us, not even a second change
    of clothes. Only the clothes we had on. And they
    shut the doors after they turned us out. They
    would not permit any of us to enter the house to
    get any clothing, but drove us off to a fort that
    was built at New Echota. They kept us in the fort
    about three days and then marched us to Rosss
    Landing. And still on foot, even our little
    children. They kept us for about three days at
    Rosss Landing and sent us off on a boat to this
    country.

40
  • Rebecca Neugin was only thee years old when her
    family was taken prisoner by the soldiers, but
    her mother had related what happened that day
  • After they took us away my mother begged them to
    let her go back and get some bedding. So they let
    her go back and she brought what bedding and a
    few cooking utensils she could carry and had to
    leave behind all of our other household
    possessions.

41
  • Brainerd, May 26, 1838 Saturday
  • ...The soldiers at the various posts now
    commenced that work which will doubtless long
    eclipse the glory of the United States....
  • In Georgia were supposed to be about 8,000
    Cherokees. These, in general were taken just as
    they were found by the soldiers, without
    permission to stop either for friends or
    property.
  • As the soldiers advanced toward a ... house,
    two little children fled in fright to the woods.
    The woman pleaded for permission to seek them, or
    wait till they came in, giving positive
    assurances that she would then follow on, and
    join the company. But all entreaties were vain
    and it was not till a day or two after that she
    would get permission for one of her friends to go
    back after the lost children.
  • A man deaf and dumb, being surprised at the
    approach of armed men, attempted to make his
    escape, and because he did not obey and hear the
    command of his pursuers, was shot dead on the
    spot.
  • One man it is said, had shot a deer, and was
    taking it home to meet the joyful calculations of
    his family, when at once he was surprised taken
    prisoner to a fort.
  • Women absent from their families on visits, or
    for other purposes, were seized, and men far from
    their wives and children, were not allowed to
    return, and also children being forced from home,
    were dragged off among strangers. Cattle, horses,
    hogs, household furniture, clothing and money not
    with them when taken were left. And it is said
    that the white inhabitants around, stood with
    open arms to seize whatever property they could
    put their hands on. Some few who had friends to
    speak for them, were assisted afterwards in
    getting some part of their lost goods.

42
  • His fellow missionary, Rev. Evan Jones, said that
    Well-furnished houses were left a prey to
    plunderers, who, like hungry wolves, follow in
    the trail of the captors. These wretches rifle
    the houses, and strip the helpless, unoffending
    owners of all they have on earth....
  • Rev. Jones said it was a painful sight to see
    his fellow whites descend upon the Cherokee
    farms. The property of many has been taken, he
    said, and sold before their eyes for almost
    nothing the sellers and buyers in many cases
    having combined to cheat the poor Indians...

43
  • Butrick continues
  • Thus in two or three days about 8,000 people,
    many of whom were in good circumstances, and some
    rich, were rendered homeless, houseless and
    penniless, and exposed to all the ills of
    captivity.
  • In driving them a platoon of soldiers walked
    before and behind, and a file of soldiers on each
    side, armed with all the common appalling
    instruments of death while the soldiers, it is
    said would often use the same language as if
    driving hogs, and goad them forward with their
    bayonets.
  • One man, on being pricked thus, and seeing his
    children thus goaded on, picked up a stone and
    struck a soldier but for this he was handcuffed,
    and on arriving at the fort, was punished and on
    starting again was whipped a hundred lashes.

44
  • Mooneys famous summary of the round-up also
    mentions families at dinner ... startled by the
    sudden gleam of bayonets in the doorway... These
    families were driven with blows and oaths along
    the weary miles of travel leading to the
    stockades.
  • Men were seized in the fields all along the
    roads. Women were taken from their wheels, and
    children from their play. In many cases, as they
    turned for one last look as they crossed the
    ridge, they saw their homes in flames, fired by
    the lawless rabble that followed on the heels of
    the soldiers to loot and to pillage. So keen were
    these outlaws on the scent that in some instances
    they were driving off the cattle and other stocks
    of the Indians almost before the soldiers had
    started their owners in the other direction.
    Systematic hunts were made by the same men for
    Indian graves to rob them of the silver pendants
    and other valuables deposited with the dead.

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