TENNESSEE HISTORY Classroom
FULL HISTORY STORIES


The Trail of Tears


In 1815, a small Cherokee boy was playing along the Chestatee River in Northern Georgia when he picked up a colored rock and brought it home to show his mother. The Cherokee knew what gold was and the mother sold it in a nearby village to a trader. The discovery started the first gold rush in American history and earned the envy of the Georgia government. The State of Georgia soon possessed the land by legislative act and pushed the Cherokee boundaries on the west bank of the Chestatee River. It became one of the most defining moments in Cherokee culture and one of the darkest moments in America’s history.



In the fall of 1820 in New Echota, Ga., the Cherokee people began one of the greatest social transformations ever witnessed in world history. They replaced their tribal system with a Republican form of government and adopted a constitution. The nation was divided into eight districts and made up with a national committee and a national congress with tribal representatives elected to limited terms.
They created positions for President and built council houses in each of the eight districts, where a judge and marshal were appointed. Their decision backed up by the "Light Horse" units assigned to the marshal. Laws were created by the tribal government levy and collect taxes to support road building and schools. They also made laws regulating liquor traffic, the conduct of slaves, and ended the practice of polygamy. They required whites to have licenses for farming and other business enterprises and required all marriages to be conducted in legal ceremonies.
In addition, they did away with the right of blood revenge and passed all capital punishment judgments to the central government. Above all, a law was made declaring any Cherokee guilty of treason and subject to execution if land was sold to whites without the complete approval of the Cherokee government.
The invention of the Cherokee syllabus by Sequoyah in the following years propelled the new Republic forward at amazing speed. From 1820 to 1829, the Cherokee developed a working societal government that was patterned after the United States and designed to legally protect their rights as citizens and landowners. In 1828, however, gold was "discovered" in Ward’s Creek near Dahlonega, Ga. and the fate of the Cherokee Republic was in question.
President-elect Andrew Jackson was replacing John Quincy Adams and in his inaugural address approached the subject of Indian removal to the western lands. Georgia – knowing they had an ally in Jackson- – immediately passed an act extending its authority over all Cherokee territory. In 1830, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act giving Jackson the authority to exchange eastern lands for those in the west with the purpose of requiring all Native Americans in the southeastern United States to be removed to lands west of the Mississippi.
The Georgia legislature seized the opportunity and declared all Cherokee laws null and void and took away their rights to testify against whites in legal proceedings. They could not assemble, hold councils, or dig for gold on their own land. That very act encouraged white thugs to burn homes, pillage businesses, and kill without reprisals – so long as no two white men could testify against them. Cherokee miners found digging gold on their own land were seized and imprisoned. Their equipment destroyed and lands seized. Whites who lived among the Cherokee were required to take a loyalty oath to Georgia and those who refused were subject to four years imprisonment. A number of arrests were made, including the printer of the Cherokee Phoenix and two Christian missionaries named Samuel A. Worcester and Elizur Butler. Both men stated in their defense they were U.S. citizens and no loyalty oath was required of them, as they had received permission from the President of the United States and the Cherokee government to perform their duties. Georgia rejected their arguments and sentenced the men to four years hard labor in prison.
The Cherokee had sought to block the Act and Georgia by taking their case to the U.S. Supreme Court. Chief Justice John Marshal and the residing Justices had dismissed the first case brought by the Cherokee against the State of Georgia in 1831 reasoning they had no jurisdiction because the tribe was not officially recognized as a foreign government.
In 1832, the Court heard Worcester versus Georgia and handed down a decision upholding Cherokee sovereignty– declaring the Cherokee were subject to Federal jurisdiction and Georgia could not pass any laws that encroached on Cherokee territory. They also ordered that Worcester be released from prison.
Georgia, however, defiantly refused to honor the Court’s decision and President Andrew Jackson is reported to have remarked: "Marshal made the decision, now let him enforce it." Jackson’s refusal to enforce the Supreme Court’s ruling led to anarchy in the Cherokee territories. Worcester wasn’t released from prison until a year later at the Governor’s request.
To prevent the outright destruction of his government, Cherokee Chief John Ross had no option but to desert New Echota and fall back to his peoples’ ancient lands in Tennessee. The tribe established its final capitol at the Red Clay Council grounds and began trying to reestablish order within the tribe.
Pressure continued to be placed on the Cherokee to move to the western lands. As with most young Republics, radical elements existed within the tribe that was antagonized by whites wishing to remove the tribe from the southeast.
The subject of peaceable relocation was debated in Red Clay Council meetings and met with strong division among the clans. Political murders were also increasing in the region and this led to rival elements developing within the tribe.
In February 1835, two Cherokee groups met with the U.S. Government. The official National delegation was headed by Chief John Ross who was prepared to fight for the Cherokee to remain in their ancestral lands. The other was headed by sub chief Major Ridge, whose delegation had grown tired of the constant struggle and wanted to make a treaty that would allow for the removal of the Cherokee.
The Ridge party began negotiations that would sell all claims in Cherokee lands for the sum of $3, 250,000. Chief Ross discovered the Ridge negotiations and repudiated them saying the lands would not be sold for a price less than $20 million, which was rejected by the U.S. Senate as too excessive. Ridge’s party was then officially sanctioned for negotiations. Ridge’s final settlement with the U.S. Government was $4.5 million. The deal was completed and signed on March 15, 1835, but only with the stipulation that it must have the full approval of the Cherokee Council.
When the full Cherokee Council assembled at Red Clay in October 1835, the treaty was rejected – even by Major Ridge and Elias Boudinot, who had negotiated the agreement. During this meeting, the council issued a proclamation stating they would assemble the entire tribe at New Echota to negotiate a treaty and those who didn’t attend would accept whatever was agreed upon by those in attendance. When the Council learned that the Washington officials could not negotiate on any treaty except the one Ridge’s Party had agreed to in Washington, Chief Ross dispatched a delegation to the nation’s capitol.
Before their departure, however, the Georgia State guard invaded the Cherokee territory, destroyed the presses of the Cherokee Phoenix and crossed over into Tennessee, where they seized Ross and all of his papers. John Payne, who was at Ross’ home collecting cultural and historical information on the Cherokee, was also seized and both were taken to Georgia. They were never informed of charges or reasons for arrest and were released a few days later – the papers and records destroyed.
For two months, tribal members were threatened and bribed to attend the scheduled December meeting. When the treaty was finally signed on Dec. 15, 1835, it was estimated that only 700 out of a population of 17,000 attended. The treaty was signed by then-Tennessee Governor William Carroll and Rev. J.F. Schermerhorn as official federal commissioners and twenty Cherokee – the most prominent tribal members being Major Ridge and Phoenix publisher Elias Boudinot.
Principal Chief John Ross nor any other elected officials of the tribe were present at the meeting. In fact, it passed by only one vote. To those present and to many residents of the affected states who heard about it later, they knew it was a rigged meeting and were repulsed that such a small minority could speak for an entire tribe.
After some more "modifications" by the Senate, the treaty was formally adopted on May 23, 1836. An official census taken a year earlier had shown 16, 542 Cherokee living in Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, and Tennessee. In addition, there were also 1,592 slaves, and 201 whites intermarried with Cherokee. The treaty called for their removal to begin two years from the date of signing, but the official Cherokee Council rejected the treaty and refused to leave their homes. Seeing the beginnings of a revolt on his hands, President Andrew Jackson banned all communication from Ross on the treaty. He then dispatched and called out state troops to enforce the agreement. His generals, however, balked at the orders and the Tennessee militia refused to aid them in disarming the Cherokee. The fact that the tribe had been sold out by a minority of their people did not set well with the militia members who had fought alongside the Cherokee in the War of 1812 and other campaigns.
The grumbling soon reached into the Nation’s capitol and became a political issue with David Crockett and Henry Clay leading the opposition. Jackson – seeing it was going to take armed force to remove the Cherokee – put General Winfield Scott in charge of the operations, who began to build fortifications in the Cherokee country to start the round up. When President Martin Van Buren took over as President, it became clear to the Cherokee they were going to be removed at gunpoint if necessary.
General Scott dispatched his soldiers into the Cherokee country. Men were rounded up in fields while working, women and children were ripped from their homes, and all others were taken where they stood and marched to the makeshift forts. There they were crowded together in horrid conditions and processed for removal.
During the round up, a Cherokee named Tsali, "Charley", his wife, brother and three sons were rounded up and marched towards the stockades with the others. During the march, a soldier prodded Tsali’s wife with a bayonet to make her walk faster. Tsali said something in Cherokee to the others and continued walking until opportunity presented itself. On a word, the men sprang on the soldiers and, during the brief struggle, one of the soldiers was killed. The other soldiers escaped from the Cherokees and reported what had happened.
General Scott immediately dispatched troops to round up Tsali, but was finding the Cherokee removal to be more difficult than he first expected. Hundreds of Cherokee escaped from the stockades daily and those who didn’t starve to death managed to survive on roots and what food they could gather in the mountains.
While thousands of soldiers scoured the mountains of Southern Appalachia for the fugitives, the remainder of the tribe was formed into marching lines, put in boats and wagons and forced from the southeast.
During the Cherokee removal of 1838-39 more than 4,000 Cherokee lost their lives to disease, hunger, and cold. The winter was remembered and chronicled as one of the worst on record. Thousands were buried along the trail where they fell and the tribe was pushed onward to Oklahoma leaving no time to mourn for their loved ones. The wife of Principal Chief John Ross also lost her life in the journey to Oklahoma. When Chief Ross arrived, however, he turned his attention to his people and led them in building a new home and reforming their government.
Tsali and his family had fled into the mountains with the others and hid from the soldiers. It was the last straw for removal politics and the states’ citizens were ready to revolt themselves against the cruelties they witnessed against the Cherokee by the Federal soldiers. Tennessee state government was in turmoil as Governor Sam Houston had left office to join the Cherokee family, which had adopted him as a child. With most of the tribe in removal and out of the region, General Scott issued a make-peace proclamation that stated: "if the Cherokee would turn over Tsali and his family for punishment, the rest would be allowed to remain until their case could be heard by the U.S. Government."
Upon hearing the deal offered, Tsali, his brother, and sons gave themselves up. The Cherokee knew what "punishment" Tsali and his family would receive so, in a last act of defiance, they killed Tsali’s family – sparing the life of his youngest son – and turned the bodies over to Scott. The act denied General Scott the chance to make Tsali an example to the other Cherokee who defied removal. In addition, a Constitutional order secretly went out from the Tribal National Council to execute the men who had made the treaty with the U.S. Government.
Major Ridge, his son, Elias Boudinot, and others were murdered in their homes. The rest fled for their safety. Stand Watie, who was the brother of Elias Boudinot, was also marked for execution by the tribe. He stayed put, however, and vowed vengeance against Chief John Ross.
Both men survived each other’s rage and the feelings against each other began to soften as the Cherokee began making their home in Oklahoma.
The tribe went through serious internal conflicts, but finally resolved their differences. There was some victory in the East as the fugitive Cherokees negotiated for the land upon which their Reservation now sits in the Smoky Mountains –preserving a tribal presence in their ancestral lands. It was little comfort to the Cherokee. Since the turn of the 18th Century, the tribe had seen its numbers cut by two thirds. One third had been lost to smallpox and the other third taken before their eyes in what became known in American history as the Trail of Tears.



The Gold Rush of 1828 was the first in American history and written about in later years by Mark Twain who coined the phrase "There’s gold in them thar hills" as the words attributed to one of the local miners. $6 million dollars in gold was mined in the region and a U.S. Mint was ordered built by Andrew Jackson in Dahlonega to handle the gold. Then-Vice President John Calhoun also built a hotel in the city. The rush on North Georgia continued until gold was discovered at Sutters Mill in California and the Gold Rush of 1949 eclipsed all others before it. While the mine still operates, it productivity has been decreasing rapidly since 1915.
No one act shook Tennessee as did the Cherokee Removal. For many Tennesseans, the Cherokee were seen as everyday citizens who owned homes, farmed, and raised their families like everyone else in those days. They had also witnessed how Georgia, with the aid of the Federal government, was able to take away the constitutional rights of not only the Cherokee, but also the missionaries and other American whites who lived there. Many had family ties with the tribe and had not forgotten their service to Tennessee and America during the War of 1812 and the Creek Wars. Numerous members of the militia walked away from the Army rather than participate in the removal. In fact, the ties were so deep that many aged Cherokee warriors stopped by the Hermitage on their removal to meet and shake hands with Andrew Jackson.
While he had virtually sold them up the river, the Cherokee still remembered him as their old commander and wanted to see him again. The men they saw as traitors in their own ranks were the ones they held accountable for the removal. As mentioned in the story, Sam Houston resigned the Governorship and went on to become an Agent of the Cherokee. Davy Crockett and numerous others noted Tennesseans stood in opposition to Jackson’s illegal removal of the tribe and paid the political price for doing so. Stand Watie went on to become a respected member of the tribe and leader. During the War Between the States he led a brilliant career and achieved the rank of general in the Confederate Army. In fact, he was the last Confederate General to surrender to the Union Army. While the Union had sought to secure their loyalties, Lincoln’s Commanding General in the early part of the conflict was General Winfield Scott- – a name the Cherokee did not remember kindly. After the War Between the States, one battle-hardened Union soldier ironically commented that what the American Army did to the Cherokee was far worse than anything he had seen in his career as a soldier in America’s bloodiest conflict. The Cherokee’s troubles with the U.S. Government continued as they also suffered through the pains of Reconstruction with the rest of the South.
The story of Tsali has been told somewhat differently through the years and is presented in outdoor drama every year in the "Unto These Hills" production on the Qualla boundary in Cherokee. It was only recently through the efforts of Cherokee scholars that the truth of his death was known. Gen. Winfield Scott, who was a prolific politician, wrote of his accomplishments in the Cherokee Removal, but often left out the methods in which he accomplished them. This left many gaps in the history of the removal, but Cherokee historians continue to gather information from old journals and government papers that come into their possession.
The Red Clay Council Grounds were made a Tennessee State Historical Site and is located in southwest Bradley County. The 263-acre Park is historically structured to resemble the original grounds and structures. It is open daily and is one of the most visited historic parks in East Tennessee.
In 1988, 150 years after the Georgia State Government passed laws denying the Cherokee citizenship, they reversed the legislation and presented it to the Eastern Band during the 150th Commemoration of the
Cherokee Removal.
Since then the Cherokee have rebounded and are today the most populous tribe in North America.
They are still working on the establishment of a Heritage Trail marking the route taken by the tribe to Oklahoma. There are numerous historical markers from the respective states showing where the tribe passed on their journey, but they would like to see the trail receive national designation.
In East Tennessee today, The Cherokee now have clear title to land where their ancient capitol Chota used to sit in Monroe County, Tennessee. Ceremonies are still held on the site of the original council house. It is over seen by the Cherokee-owned Sequoyah Birthplace Museum and tours are available of the site.