|
Jefferson, Mixed Bloods and Frontier Defense
[102]By the beginning of the nineteenth century at least two major changes had
altered the political environment affecting the Choctaw Indians. Within the
Choctaw tribe several countrymen were beginning to exert influence in tribal
decisions. Although not yet accepted as equals to the chiefs, white men such as
Nathaniel Folsom and John Pitchlynn were respected and utilized as counselors in
negotiations between the tribe and American officials. External to the tribe,
the United States had negotiated the Treaty of San Lorenzo in 1795 with Spain
and assumed economic hegemony over the tribes which mainly resided on lands
north of the thirty-first parallel.
Because this 1795 treaty agreed to American control of Indians within the newly
recognized borders, the following year President Washington named Benjamin
Hawkins, a senator from North Carolina and Revolutionary War veteran, to the
post of Superintendent of Southern[103] Indians.1
Washington's successor, John Adams, later oversaw the creation of Mississippi
Territory and named a puritanical, New England Federalist, Winthrop Sargent, to
be its governor and share with Hawkins the responsibility for Indian matters in
the region.
The state of world affairs was in great flux at the turn of the new century:
France exerted efforts to reacquire its Louisiana territories lost to Britain
earlier in the French and Indian War; the United States was on the brink of war
with revolutionary France which resented Jay's Treaty in 1795 with England; and
Spanish officials in West Florida continued to oppose American expansion into
the Gulf region. In essence the United States was just beginning to feel the
economic pressures created by the Anglo-French clash brought about by the French
Revolution and the ascendancy of Napoleon Bonaparte to leadership in France.
Since the United States actively traded with England as well as France the
growing strife in Europe was economic bad news.
The presidential election of 1800 added another element of tension to foreign
and domestic American[104] affairs. President Thomas Jefferson's successful campaign
to unseat the Federalist Party from control of the presidency and the Congress
resulted in an overwhelming number of Jeffersonian Republicans being elected to
the national legislature. As his Republican government began to address its
newly assumed obligations in Mississippi Territory it became apparent that
lingering boundary misunderstandings with the tribes within the territorial
boundaries would have to be resolved. Jefferson also desired permission from the
Indian tribes to build and improve roads from the commercially critical New
Orleans area to American settlements further north in Tennessee and the
Carolinas. He was also keenly aware that the free navigation of the Mississippi
River and the unhampered access of the major port terminus at New Orleans were
crucial to the economic health of Americans living beyond the Appalachians.
Indeed this "Mississippi question" would be a major concern of his first
administration.
The president expressed his accord with earlier Federalist policies when he
decided to expand the system of Indian factories, or trading houses, so as to
interdict commerce between Southern Indians and commercial trading firms in
Spanish West Florida along[105] the southern border of Mississippi Territory.2
He knew that the British firm of Panton, Leslie and Company, controlled by John
Forbes after Panton's death in 1801, had extensive and effective trade
relationships with the bordering tribes, relationships that Spain encouraged and
subsidized in order to maintain influence with the tribes.3
Accordingly Jefferson entered into a series of four treaty talks with the
Choctaw tribesmen in a
multi-purposed effort to achieve his desire for stability and harmony. In
keeping with his stated goal of only replacing Federalists who were less than
effective in their government positions, Jefferson replaced the unpopular
Winthrop Sargent with a republican, William Charles Cole Claiborne as governor
of Mississippi Territory. But he allowed Benjamin Hawkins to remain on as agent
to the Creeks, naming Republican Silas Dinsmoor as agent to the Choctaw tribe in
1802.
The new president demonstrated his trust in Hawkins by naming him along with
General James Wilkinson[106] as commissioners to treat with the Southeastern
Indians1801. Secretary of War Henry Dearborn advised the commissioners that:
"After completing your negotiation
with the Chickasaws, you will proceed to
Natchez to hold a treaty with the
Choctaws. The Choctaws may be considered
one of the most powerful nations of
Indians within the limits of the United
States: and a pacific and friendly
disposition in and towards them should
be cultivated as well as from principles
of policy as of humanity.... The ill
humor which propositions for further
cessions sometimes awaken in them may be
in greater or less degree excited by
those which you are herein charged with
making. It will therefore be incumbent
on you to introduce the desires of the
Government in such a manner as will
permit you to drop them as you may find
them illy received, without giving the
Indians an opportunity to reply with a
decided negative, or raising in them
unfriendly and inimical dispositions.
You will state none of them in the tone
of demands ...."4
The talks with the Choctaw Indians began
with the Treaty of Fort Adams in 1801 which
reaffirmed the 1765 cession of the Natchez
District by the Choctaw chiefs to the
English after the French and Indian war. The
treaty also cleared up a boundary
misunderstanding near the Yazoo River's
junction with the Mississippi, and acquired
Choctaw permission for the improvement of
the Natchez Trace for use by the Americans
traveling between New[107] Orleans and Nashville,
Tennessee. Since the road also passed
through Chickasaw lands in the northern
sector of the territory, a separate treaty
had been held earlier with that tribe to
obtain permission to improve the path.5
However, Jefferson had more on his mind than
boundaries and permission for a road. He was
keenly aware of the influence exercised upon
the Indians by the large British trading
firm of Parton, Leslie and Company operating
out of Pensacola and Mobile with the
approval of the Spaniards.
Evidence of discussions concerning the
American desire to limit Choctaw trade with
Mobile and Pensacola trading houses occurs
in part in a reply the Choctaw chief
Buc-Shun-Abbe made to the commissioners at
Fort Adams:
Buc-Shun-Abbe: I am a factor, and
have been so for a long time; my
merchant is in Mobile; I have traded for
him till I am become old. I am a man of
one heart, and of one mind. White people
make a number of fine things; my mind is
not to be changed for these fine things;
and, if the people at Mobile are not
able to supply us, I do not wish to look
to other people to supply us. We are
old; we cannot take all the supplies
that may be offered to us; the trade of
the Choctaw nation is my object; I do
not look for any trade from this
quarter. We wish that no people may,
from this quarter, cross the road we
have granted, with trade to us; we
receive our supplies from another[108]
quarter, and must make our remittances
there. There are a number of people
wanting to trade, from this quarter. We
do not wish the people of Bayou Pierre,
and Big Black, and Walnut Hills, to
purchase skins from the red people. We
do not apply for that trade; 'tis a
trade interfering with ours, and
stealing our property, who trade from
other places. These people may introduce
a trade of liquor amongst us, that may
cause the death of red people, which has
happened lately, at Natchez, for which
we are sorry. I want our father to send
us iron wedges, and hand-saws, and
augers.6
The chief almost contradicted himself in
an effort to remain loyal to his Mobile
trade connections and still obtain presents
in the form of tools for agreeing to the
proposed road requested by the United
States. Another chief, Mingo Hom-Massatubbey,
also desired American implements and
know-how, stating:
"I understand that such things are to
be furnished us; I wish, therefore, as
we have half breeds, and others
accustomed to work, that ploughs may be
sent us, weeding hoes, grubbing hoes,
axes, hand-saws, augers, iron wedges,
and a man to make wheels, and a small
set of blacksmith's tools, for a red
man. Father (the President of the United
States:) We have a number of warriors
who use their guns for a living; I
understand your goods are cheap; I wish
you to send us on a supply trade; I do
not want this trade here; this is a
strange land; I want the store at Fort
Stoddart, or Fort St. Stephens. Father:
I hold your talks strong, I hope you
will hold ours fast, also;[109] (i. e. grant
what we ask.)"7
Hom-Masstubbey apparently was more open
to the introduction of a factory and
probably had no commercial ties with Panton,
Leslie and Company. The Choctaw delegation
also included several countrymen (traders
themselves) and mixed bloods who were
allowed to state their positions for the
record. Edmond Folsom stated that:
"Mingo Hom-Massa-Tubba's [spelling
varies throughout the document] talk is
mine, except, that he has forgot to ask
for cotton cards; my people already make
cloth; I know the advantage of it, and
request that good cotton cards may be
sent us."8
The countrymen and mixed bloods were
demonstrating a growing interest in the
production of cotton, a crop which would
soon produce gigantic profits for some of
them and ironically set the stage for a
demand for cotton land which would help lead
to Indian removal three decades later. A
self-professed mixed blood, Robert McClure
was even more explicit in asking for tools
with which to process cotton:
[110]"A gin is a thing I asked for long
ago; it was once offered to my nation,
and refused by our chiefs; I asked for
it last July, but have received no
answer; I now ask for it again; if this
will be granted, I wish to know, soon. I
am glad to hear it is the wish of our
father, the President, to teach us to do
such things as the whites can do. The
sooner those things are supplied, the
better, for, by long delay, they may
grow out of our young people's minds.
We, half-breeds and young men, wish to
go to work, and the sooner we receive
those things, the sooner we will begin
to learn. I want a blacksmith sent to
the Lower town district, with a good set
of tools, which may not be at the
disposal of the smith, but remain with
us, should he go away. Some of our young
people may learn to use these tools, and
we wish them to remain for the use of
the district. My reason for asking this,
is, that our interpreter may die, and
our agent be recalled by his superior,
and another sent us, who may not live at
the same place, and may wish to remove
the tools; we wish them to remain to us
and our children. We red people do not
know how to make iron and steel; we wish
our father to send us these, with the
smith, &c. And when presents are sent
on, we wish a true inventory of all the
presents, that we may know when we are
cheated, and that the invoice may be
lodged with one of our chiefs."9
McClure only understood the economic
necessity of constructing a gin, he also
realized the practicality of having a
resident blacksmith. His pragmatism was
further displayed by his shrewd demand for
ownership of the tools to remain with the
tribe and his request for inventories.
Obviously Wilkinson and Hawkins were not
dealing with a group of simple natives.
[111]Shortly after the Treaty of Fort Adams was
signed secretary Dearborn wrote W. C. C.
Claiborne, then governor of Mississippi
Territory, explaining the administration's
policy and stressing the need to carry on
trade with the Indians as mandated by the
Trade and Intercourse Act of 1802:
"It is the ardent wish of the
President of the United States, as well
from a principle of humanity, as from
duty and sound policy that all prudent
means in our power should be
unremittingly pursued for carrying into
the benevolent views of Congress
relative to the Indian nations within
the jurisdiction of the United States.
The provisions made by Congress, under
the heads of intercourse with the Indian
Nations, and for establishing trading
houses among them &c, have for their
objects not only the cultivation and
establishment of harmony and friendship
between the United States and the
different nations, but the introduction
of civilization, by encouraging and
gradually introducing the arts of
husbandry and domestic manufactories
among them."10
Later that year Jefferson again
commissioned James Wilkinson to untangle
similar boundary questions further east
along the Tombigbee and Alabama Rivers in
the Tensaw region.11
Wilkinson met with Choctaw leaders[112] in 1802
at Fort Confederation (old Fort Tombeckbe)12
on the Tombigbee River and received the
approval of the attending Choctaw chiefs
(appearing in the treaty as Tuskona Hoopoio,
Mingo Pooskoos, Mingo Pooskoos 2d, and
Poosha Mattahaw) to reaffirm the area
earlier ceded to Great Britain in 1765 and
later held by Spain. Wilkinson also obtained
the chiefs' agreement to "make such
alterations in the old boundary line near
the mouth of the Yazou river, as may be
found convenient."13
The following summer, in 1803, Wilkinson
again met with a Choctaw delegation and more
precisely delineated the bounds of the
Tombigbee area which was claimed by the
United States. This Treaty of Hoc
Buckintoopa (the Choctaw name for the bluffs
at Fort St. Stephens) actually took very
little land from the tribe, and like the
preceding treaties with the United States
cannot reasonably be considered a cession
treaty.14
Jefferson moved very cautiously in his
negotiations with the Choctaw tribe and
during his first administration did not seek
major land cessions. Actually he placed a
higher premium on peace with the Indians
than on the[113] acquisition of land, although he
definitely wished to pursue land cessions
and stated in a letter to Andrew Jackson in
1803 that "I am myself alive to the
obtaining, of lands from the Indi1ndiansall
HONEST and PEACEABLE means..." [emphasis
Jefferson's].15
At the time Jefferson was already forming a
strategy of obtaining Indi1ndiands along the
Mississippi River in order to have the free
acreages necessary to attract a population
large enough to support a militia.16
Fearing war between France and Great
Britain, Jefferson explained to Claiborne
that he wanted to:
"...press on the Indians...the
extension of our purchases on the
Mississippi from the Yazoo upwards; and
to encourage settlement along the whole
length of that river, that it may
possess on its own banks the means of
defending itself, and presenting as
strong a frontier on our western as we
have on our eastern border."17
During the summer of 1803 General
Wilkinson wrote to[114] Choctaw agent Silas
Dinsmoor that "the president wants land on
the Mississippi to form a barricade of hardy
yeomanry on that so1itary frontier...."18
Jefferson's concern over the French
re-acquisition of Louisiana and possible
future friction with Napoleon should he
colonize the territory and control the port
of New Orleans was pronounced and Jefferson
went so far as to consider an alliance with
Great Britain should the French move in the
direction of Louisiana.19
Jefferson felt that in such circumstances
war with France would be inevitable and
acted on several fronts to deter the event
and to be amply prepared for it should its
prevention be impossible. Added to this
concern over France was the abrupt
revocation of the right of deposit at the
port of New Orleans by local Spanish
officials in 1802, an event[115] which caused
Jefferson great political concern as his
frontier constituents along the "Western
waters" raised a republican ruckus over the
economic situation inflicted upon them by
the Spaniards.
Jefferson also remained sensitive to the
need for amity with the Southern Indians.
Hearing of their possible confederation in
order to negotiate as a group he wrote
Benjamin Hawkins:
"From your communication and from
information derived from other sources
it appears that a cession for certain
general purposes is contemplated by the
Creeks, Choctaws, Cherokees, and
Chickasaws -- it is doubtful whether we
ought not to oppose by all the prudent
means in our power such a combination
and confederacy, as it will undoubtedly
render those nations much more
formidable than they otherwise would be,
and they would have less to fear in
their own opinions from a war with the
United States, and would consequently
render a general peace between them and
us less secure. It would be much more
desirable to see them dividing their
respective territories among the people
of their several principle towns with
Boundaries distinctly marked, and that
each town should have complete control
over their lands respectively, and then
that a division should take place of
certain proportions of each town
sufficient for the purposes of
cultivation among the individual
families thereof -- Prior to such
divisions it would on many accounts be
very desirable that the boundaries
between the respective Nations should be
ascertained and marked."20
Beset by this array of problems Jefferson[116]
immediately acted to resolve them. An early
and obvious goal was to pacify and befriend
the populous Indian tribes in Mississippi
Territory and surrounding areas. Any country
which had the alliance of the Indian tribes
would undoubtedly be in a superior strategic
position should either war or increased
border tension occur. A second goal
addressed the necessity of obtaining Indian
lands to attract a militia-minded
population; this was a delicate undertaking
because the primary goal of Indian amity
could not be jeopardized and therefore land
cessions took on a secondary priority.
Thirdly Jefferson sought to ease the growing
tension with both France and Spain by
diplomacy and began a series of talks with
the Spanish government aimed at opening
Mississippi Territory rivers to free
navigation into the Gulf of Mexico and also
began to discuss with French officials the
possible purchase of West Florida and the
port city of New Orleans.
Aside from treaty negotiations and
international diplomacy Jefferson continued
to pursue the policy of establishing trading
factories in the Indian nations in order to
secure their friendship and allegiance,
knowing it would be impossible for the
United States to restrict Indian trade with
the West Florida trading houses unless an
alternative entrepot was established by the
Americans in proximity to the Indian
settlements. After some[117] deliberation
Jefferson decided to place the Choctaw
factory at Fort St. Stephens approximately
fifty miles north of the thirty-first
parallel on the Tombigbee River.21
In so doing he set the stage for a series of
border incidents between American shipping
bound up the Tombigbee River for Fort
Stoddert and Fort St. Stephens and the
Spanish officials at Mobile. These incidents
would eventually play a major role in
Jefferson's seeking the purchase of West
Florida and New Orleans from France.
Although Spanish officials in West Florida
agreed to the placement of the factory on
the Tombigbee River, they began a consistent
policy of slowing and disrupting the passage
of ships and boats through Mobile.22
They also exerted economic pressure in the
form of tariffs as high as twenty-five
percent on cargo bound for the American
citizens north of the boundary who were
dependent on the Tombigbee River for
commerce. This[118] Spanish pressure on Mobile
River trade increased after the Louisiana
Purchase when Jefferson insisted that West
Florida, as far east as the Perdido River,
was a part of that purchase. From 1802, when
the Choctaw factory was authorized, until
the War of 1812, the Americans residing on
this political island -- surrounded by the
Choctaw and Creek Indians to the North,
West, and East and Spaniards to the South --
reacted to Spanish economic leverage with
strident petitions to the territorial and
national legislatures as well as blatant
threats to overrun the sparsely manned
outpost at Mobile.23
The Spanish government maintained that the
1795 Treaty of San Lorenzo did not guarantee
navigation of the Rivers flowing through
West Florida from Mississippi Territory to
the Gulf, and that the Spaniards were only
extracting legal import/export duties on
goods passing through Mobile. Officials of
the United States countered that the treaty
did allow provision of the Indian factory
and troops garrisoned along the border at
Fort Stoddert on the Tombigbee River.
[119]The Spaniards also continued to maintain
intercourse with some elements inside the
Choctaw and Creek nations in violation of
the 1795 treaty. They entertained
delegations from those tribes in Mobile and
Pensacola from time to time and were not
without fault in the resulting tensions
between American settlers (both white and
mixed-blood) and some Indi1ndiantions,
especially the Creek Red Sticks.
The trading firm of Panton, Leslie and
Company also added pressure on the
Jeffersonian administration when John Forbes
attempted to obtain a land cession from the
Choctaw nation for debts due the company.24
Forbes realized that he would be unable to
compete with the United States for the
Choctaw peltry trade and began seeking a
settlement from the tribe for accumulated
debts in excess of forty thousand dollars.25
Using an earlier land cession with the Creek
Indians as a model, Forbes suggested that
the Choctaw tribe might cede to his company
enough land to satisfy their obligation.
Late in 1804 the secretary of war advised
Choctaw agent Dinsmoor that the tribe
desired to make a cession of land to satisfy
Forbes' request. The[120] secretary suggested
that the fair value of land might be
assessed at fifty times the amount of the
value of peltry the tribe had taken from it
annually.26
During a meeting in Washington, D. C.
between Jefferson and a Choctaw delegation
the president stated:
"It is at the request which you sent
me in September, signed by Puckshanubbee
and other chiefs, and which you now
repeat, that I listen to your
proposition to sell us lands. You say
you owe a great debt to your merchants,
that you have nothing to pay it with but
lands, and you pray us to take lands,
and pay your debt. The sum you have
occasion for, brothers, is a very great
one. We have never yet paid so much to
any of our red brethren for the purchase
of lands. You propose to us some on the
Tombigby, and some on the Mississippi.
Those on the Mississippi suit us well.
We wish to have establishments on that
River, as resting places for our boats,
to furnish them provisions, and to
receive our people who fall sick on the
way to or from New Orleans, which is now
ours in that quarter therefore we are
willing to purchase as much as you will
spare.27
Jefferson in this talk clearly indicated
his preference for land along the
Mississippi River, land upon which he hoped
to raise a militia for defensive purposes.
The fact that the Louisiana Purchase had
already been consummated did not allay his
fears for the safety of the[121] Mississippi
valley. This was still nearly a decade
before the War of 1812 and British troops
and influence had not yet been uprooted from
the upper Mississippi watershed, plus the
vagaries of the war in Europe caused
Jefferson to add caution to his frontier
policy.
If Jefferson had hoped to remove Spanish
obstacles to navigation on the Mobile River
with the Louisiana Purchase he was soon
disillusioned as Spain emphatically
reasserted its claim to that region and
began reinforcing her troops in Spanish
territory west of the Mississippi River
along the vaguely defined watershed between
the Mississippi and the Sabine Rivers. Spain
fully intended to defend its borders with
the United States; Jefferson requested in
late 1805 a solution to the West Florida
problem and even favored military action
against Spain.28 Louisiana Territory
governor Claiborne had been advising
Jefferson that Spain had territorial
ambitions which included the west bank of
the Mississippi River and had recommended
military action against Spain in West
Florida.29
Jefferson went so far as to consider the
establishment of a military colony in
Louisiana[122] because he feared Spanish
incursions into the area.30
All of these conflicts along the United
State!' southern and western borders
buttressed Jefferson's desire for an
in-place militia settlement along the
Mississippi River. In a far-ranging letter
to William Henry Harrison, Governor of
Indi1ndianaritory, Jefferson wrote as early
as 1803:
...be prepared against the occupation
of Louisiana, by a powerful and
enterprising people [the French], it is
important that, setting less value on
interior extension of purchases from the
Indians, we bend our whole views to the
purchase and settlement of the country
on the Mississippi, from its mouth to it
northern regions, that we may be able to
present as strong a front on our western
as on our eastern border, and plant on
the Mississippi itself the means of its
own defense. We now own from 31 [degrees
of latitude] to the Yazoo, and hope this
summer [1803] to purchase what belongs
to the Choctaws from the Yazoo up to
their boundary, supposed to be about
opposite the mouth of the Acanza
[Arkansas]."31
Jefferson thus articulated the
interesting policy change whereby the United
States would relax its efforts to acquire
interior lands from the tribesmen and begin
to seek lands on its borders. Even after the
Louisiana[123] Purchase Jefferson had reason to
fear possible incursions into the
Mississippi valley from Spain, France, or
England and never ceased his program of
seeking Indi1ndiansions along the
Mississippi River region. He further stated
to Harrison that:
"We wish at the same time to begin in
your quarter, for which there is at
present a favorable opening. The
Cahokias extinct, we are entitled to
their country by our paramount
sovereignty. The Piorias, we understand,
have all been driven off from their
country, and we might claim it in the
same way; but as we understand there is
one chief remaining, who would, as the
survivor of the tribe, sell the right,
it is better to give him such terms as
will make him easy for life, and take a
conveyance from him. The Kaskaskias
being reduced to a few families, I
presume we may purchase their whole
country for what would place every
individual of them at his case.... Thus
possessed of the rights of these tribes,
we should proceed to the settling of
their boundaries with the Poutewatamies
and Kickapoos; claiming all doubtful
territory...."32
Even by 1805 Jefferson had not ceased to
worry about the Spanish forces on both sides
of New Orleans and wrote Natchez planter
William Dunbar that: "In the present state
of things between Spain and us, we should
spare nothing to secure the friendship of
the Indians[124] within reach of her."33
In that statement Jefferson addressed the
Indians west of the Mississippi, but his
dilemma of needing Indian land while all the
time having to be very sensitive to Indian
feelings is plainly evident and applicable
as well to the Indians in Mississippi
Territory. Jefferson restated in general his
Indian policy in a letter to Doctor Hugh
Williamson, a North Carolina politician, not
long before the Louisiana Purchase:
"Although I do not count with
confidence on obtaining New Orleans from
France for money, yet I am confident in
the policy of putting off the day of
contention for it till we have lessened
the embarrassment of debt accumulated
instead of being discharged by our
predecessors, till we obtain more of
that strength which is growing on us so
rapidly, and especially till we have
planted a population on the Mississippi
itself sufficient to do its own work
without marching men fifteen hundred
miles from the Atlantic shores to perish
by fatigue and unfriendly climates. This
will soon take place."34
Blaming his Federalist predecessors for
allowing the nation to remain dangerously in
debt, Jefferson explained how planning and
strategy could economically allow an
adequate defense of the Mississippi valley
by encouraging[125] settlement on soon to be
obtained Indi1ndiands in the region.
Jefferson was even more direct in a letter
to Orleans Territory governor Claiborne in
May of 1803:
"I think it also all important to
press on the Indians, as steadily and
strenuously as they can bear, the
extension of our purchases on the
Mississippi from the Yazoo upwards; and
to encourage a settlement along the
whole length of that river, that it may
possess on its own banks the means of
defending itself, and presenting as
strong a frontier on our western as we
have on our eastern border. We have
therefore recommended to Governor
Dickinson taking on the Tombigbee only
as much as will cover our actual
settlements, to transfer the purchase
from the Choctaws to their lands
westward of the Big Black, rather than
the fork of Tombigbee and Alabama, which
has been offered by them in order to pay
their debt to Panton and Leslie. I have
confident expectations of purchasing
this summer a good breadth on the
Mississippi, from the mouth of the
Illinois down to the mouth of the Ohio,
which would settle immediately thickly;
and we should then have between that
settlement and the lower one, only the
uninhabited lands of the Chickasaws on
the Mississippi; on which we could be
working at both ends."35
Jefferson plainly spells out his policy
of peripheral land acquisition while
cautioning his territorial officials to move
slowly and sensitively when seeking cessions
from tribes within their jurisdiction.
Jefferson's desire to attract a population
to the Old Southwest as a defensive measure
was matched by the sentiments of local
settlers in the Tombigbee district[126] who
submitted in the fall of 1803 a petition to
the national legislature praying that lands
in the region be granted to local settlers
in small tracts rather than be sold. Their
memorial read in part:
" ...an effective militia is the
pride and dependence of American
freemen....But your memorialists regret,
that we cannot boast of such means of
protection....if the lands are sold ,
they will be held in large quantities by
the rich, which will render the
settlement thin and exposed to invasion;
whereas, if they are granted to actual
settlers, they will be held in small
tracts by the poor, which will render
the settlement more compact and
impenetrable."36
Of the memorial's more than five hundred
signers at least a dozen are known
countrymen and mixed bloods of the Creek and
Choctaw tribes; many other names appearing
on this document have the same surnames as
mixed bloods in the area, but have not been
positively identified as members of those
families. The appearance of mixed-blood
signers of such memorials demonstrates the
dual role played by these frontiersmen -- on
the one hand they advised the Choctaw chiefs
in their relations with the American
government, on the other they considered
themselves American citizens and utilized
fully their[127] right to petition the government
for redress of grievances. Future research
should uncover the mixed-blood identities of
many more of these southern yeomen and
further demonstrate their widespread
influence in both worlds.
Although Jefferson outlined most of his
Indian land acquisition policy prior to the
fruition of the Louisiana Purchase he did
not change direction after obtaining that
territory from Napoleon, rather he continued
to seek Mississippi River cessions
throughout both terms as president. In his
second inaugural address Jefferson expanded
on his logic of settling the Mississippi
valley:
I know that the acquisition of
Louisiana has been disapproved by some
from a candid apprehension that the
enlargement of our territory would
endanger its union. But who can limit
the extent to which the federative
principle may operate effectively? The
larger our association the less will it
be shaken by local passions; and in any
view is it not better that the opposite
bank of the Mississippi should be
settled by our own brethren and children
than by strangers of another family?
With which should we be most likely to
live in harmony and friendly
intercourse?37
Jefferson switched from a one-bank to a
two-bank policy of land settlement along the
Mississippi River. He applied similar logic
toward a possible cession from the[128] Ottawa
Indians in the upper Mississippi Valley in
1808.38
And when commissioners Silas Dinsmoor and
James Robertson, at the Treaty of Mount
Dexter in 1805, failed to obtain Choctaw
cessions along the Mississippi River and
obtained lands along the Tombigbee instead,
Jefferson refused to offer the treaty to the
Senate and pigeon-holed it until other
defense-minded considerations caused him to
resurrect it early in 1808 when it was
finally ratified. Then in the middle of an
economic war between France and England,
Jefferson declared his famous embargo and
further stiffened his defenses along the
Great Lakes and further south along the
Thirty-first parallel, a move which included
acceptance of the vast Choctaw land cession
from the old Natchez district eastward to
the Tombigbee River.39
Although the approximately four million acre
cession at Mount Dexter was not ratified
until 1808 and not surveyed until 1809-1810
it nevertheless attracted a wave of settlers
into the Tombigbee region and added[129]
measurably to the size of the militia forces
in Mississippi Territory in the War of 1812.40
Between 1801 and 1809 the Jefferson
administration negotiated and approved
thirty-one treaties, thirteen with the
Southeastern Indi1ndians eighteen with other
tribes, mainly in the upper Mississippi
valley. The only treaties ceding significant
areas of land along the Mississippi were
with the Kaskaskia at Vincennes in 1803, the
Piankshaw at Vincennes in 1804, the Sauk and
Fox Indians at St. Louis in 1804, and the
Great and Little Osage Indians at Fort
Clark, Louisiana Territory, in 1808. The
major river stretch from the Yazoo northward
was not obtained from the Choctaw tribe
until later at the Treaty of Doaks Stand in
1820.41
Although Jefferson continued to pursue his
stated goal of Mississippi River settlement,
he accepted many cessions in the interior,
especially along[130] the demographic frontiers
in both the Old Northwest and Southwest
Territories.
There were other areas of Jeffersonian
Indian policy where results diverged from
stated goals. In a famous letter to Indiana
Territorial governor William Henry Harrison
in 1803 Jefferson stated:
"To promote this disposition to
exchange lands, which they have to spare
and we want, we shall push our trading
uses, and be glad to see the good and
influential individuals among them run
in debt, because we observe that when
these debts get beyond what the
individuals can pay, they become willing
to lop them off by cessions of lands."42
Historians have misconstrued this
statement by Jefferson as evidence of his
design to drive Indians into debt in order
to immorally extract land from them.43
In the Old Southwest there is little
evidence to support this practice. To the
contrary, factors were actually admonished
to limit debt. When Thomas Peterkin was
chosen as factor for the Chickasaw factory
secretary Dearborn advised him:
"The price of the several articles of
merchandize [sic] should be as uniform
as[131] possible, and to avoid disputes and
ultimate loss, no credit should be
given, excepting in extraordinary cases
and to men of note and distinction."44
Indeed among the Choctaw patrons of the
St. Stephens factory there were very few
debts allowed, and strict business practices
were followed by the factors there. It is
important to remember that Jefferson was in
the midst of negotiating a cession of land
from the Choctaw tribe in order to repay
debts due to the house of Panton, Leslie in
Pensacola and Mobile. These debts definitely
were not American in origin, but had been
accumulated mainly by the old trader and
countryman Ben James and his family over a
period of years.45
Jefferson was also aware that the Spanish
officials in West Florida had earlier given
permission to Panton. Leslie, and Company to
accept a land cession from the Creeks as
satisfaction for outstanding debts.
Some two and a half years later, in 1805,
when such a policy would doubtlessly have
been in full operation, secretary Dearborn
wrote Hawkins about factory "debts due from
the Creeks, including white people in the
Creek country," and instructed him to "take
proper[132] measures, in concert with the Chiefs
of the Creek nation, for collecting said
debts...."46
Since the Creeks had just signed a treaty in
New York two weeks prior to this letter and
did not sign another until the Treaty of
Fort Jackson after the Creek War it is not
likely that Hawkins coerced them with
outstanding debt.
Though Jefferson may have recognized an
interesting and legal method of obtaining
lands for defensive purposes through Indian
debt, a further reading of his letter to
Harrison yields evidence of other
considerations. In the very next sentence
following his suggestion to allow Indians to
run up debts he says:
"At our trading houses, too, we mean
to sell so low as merely repay us cost
and charges, so as neither to lessen or
enlarge our capital. This is what
private traders cannot do, for they must
gain: they will consequently retire from
the competition, and we shall get clear
of this pest without giving offence or
umbrage to the Indians. In this way our
settlements will gradually circumscribe
and approach the Indians, and they will
in time either incorporate with us as
citizens of the United States, or remove
beyond the Mississippi. The former is
certainly the termination of their
history most happy for themselves; but,
in the whole course of this, it is
essential to cultivate their love."47
From the above statement Jefferson
obviously desired to[133] obtain 1ndian lands,
but not at the expense of amity. He also
identified the private trader as a "pest"
and indicated that the government factory
system has as one of its primary goals the
eradication of private trade influence among
the tribes. It is imperative to realize that
Jefferson was mainly referring to traders
out of West Florida and Canada in the above
statement, because private American traders
were granted licenses and did conduct
business with some tribes.48
So it is necessary to read foreign traders
where Jefferson merely says traders,
although American traders were often guilty
of providing illegal liquor and otherwise
"corrupting" the Indian's morals. Evidently
the overriding concern with private traders
was their possible connections to foreign
powers.
The need for an in-place militia in the
lower Mississippi valley became even more
evident to Jefferson during the Fall of 1806
when he had to take action against the
infamous Burr expedition which was
neutralized by a contingent of the
Mississippi Territorial militia near
Natchez. Burr took advantage of a parole and
fled incognito to the Tombigbee area where
he was recognized and re-arrested by county
officials.[134]
Not only did Jefferson have to exercise
vigilance against Indian nations and foreign
powers, he also had to beware of frustrated
politicians attempting to use regional
unrest for their individual purposes.
There were also communications between
Jeffersonian war department officials
involved in Indian affairs in Washington, D.
C. and factors at St. Stephens indicating
that they were operating at a loss.49
After Jefferson invoked his embargo in 1808
the factories suffered losses and the
factors were instructed to retain the easily
spoiled deerskins rather than ship them.
Secretary of Indian Trade John Mason advised
the factors in a circular:
"Under the present depression of the
general Embargo, sometime since laid by
congress, it is hopeless to expect a
sale at the sea Ports & to expect them
is impracticable until times change then
it is useless to accumulate them in the
hands of our agents at Orleans and
elsewhere, where they can not be so well
taken care of as at the Factories. After
receipt of this letter then you will be
pleased to send off no more Deerskins
from your Factory this spring or summer
unless differently directed by me, but
you will retain them.... The furs and
other skins you will continue to send
off as usual."50
[135]For all practical purposes the embargo
seriously hampered the business of the
factories in the south where deerskins were
a major part of the trade. Even though the
embargo was repealed in the spring of 1809,
secretary Mason was seeking, later that
year, ways to dispose of the accumulation of
deerskins. Mason wrote to Choctaw factor
George S. Gaines:
"Under the present state of
difficulty in selling at the sea port
Towns our Peltries in the usual
way...sell to Messrs. Forbes & Co. for
Cash or on short credit if
unquestionably secured, all the
Deerskins you have on hand provided it
can be done on terms to save the trading
house -- or [sell] to any other persons
in your part of the country in which
case you will remit proceeds to Joseph
Saul at Orleans.... If you cannot make
sales you must retain and preserve the
skins at the factory till better times."51
Throughout the hundreds of letters
exchanged between the Southeastern factories
and Jeffersonian officials concerned with
Indian trade there is nothing included which
could be construed as a policy to lure
Indians into debt. Rather there is an
abundance of evidence suggesting instead
that officials were sorely pressed to keep
the system solvent and were quite reluctant
to extend credit. Although debt is mentioned
in the Treaty of 1825 and again in the
Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek in 1830, in
neither case is it used as leverage by the[136]
government to effect the treaty. In 1825
factory debt was a bargaining tool
apparently used by the Choctaw delegation,
and its forgiveness was balanced by the
American request of the tribe to release the
government from obligations to erect a
factory west of the Mississippi River. In
1830 the debt mentioned in the treaty refers
to Choctaw debt contracted with George S.
Gaines' private trading house on the
Tombigbee which had been opened when
congress phased out the Indian factory
system in the early 1820s. In the latter
case the tribe retired the debt by selling
two sections of the land it was ceding
anyway.52
Again it seems that although Jefferson
articulated several policy options in
letters to such people as William Henry
Harrison, there was a wide gulf between the
theory and the practice.
Thus the Jeffersonian policy toward the
Choctaw tribe was affected by several
factors, chief among them the need for
continued amity in the face of international
tensions and economic coercica. Jefferson
deliberately sought Indian lands as part of
his militia strategy, but never at the cost
of lost tribal friendships with his
government. This militia strategy, like
Jefferson's plan to run Indians into debt,
never reached full fruition. Yet, of the
two, the militia concept was more fully[137]
pursued and more often discussed. Jefferson
expended much time and energy planning a
defense of the nation's soft southern
frontier. The Sage of Monticello obviously
placed a high priority on the region's
geographical and economic importance and
acted vigorously to secure it.
The president was aided in his program by
the strong agreement of the southern
settlers, many of whom were Choctaw
countrymen and mixed bloods. This latter
group, the mixed bloods, were also aware of
the advantages to be gained from cooperation
with the American government and acted as a
cultural and political span between the two
peoples.
Choctaw Mixed Bloods
1. Absolom H.
Chappell, Miscellanies of Georgia:
Historical, Biographical, Descriptive,
(Columbus, Georgia: Gilbert Printing Co.,
1928), 62-64; Benjamin Hawkins, A Sketch
of the Creek Country, in the Years 1798
and 1799, and Letters of Benjamin Hawkins,
1796-1806 (Spartanburg: The Reprint Company,
1982), combined volume, Sketch, 5-6;
Letters, 9.
2 Francis Paul
Prucha, American Indian Policy in the
Formative Years: The Indian Trade and
Intercourse Acts, 1790-1834, (Lincoln:
University of Nebraska Press 1962), 50.
3 Cotterill, "A
Chapter of Panton, Leslie and Company,"
Journal of Southern History 10
(August 1544i, 3:278; Homer E. Wright, "Diplomacy
of Trade on the Southern Frontier: A Case
Study of the Influence of William Panton and
John Forbes, 1784-1817," (Ph. D.
dissertation, University of Georgia, 1972),
p. 168.
4 Secretary of War to
Commissioners, June 24, 1801, Letters Sent
by the Secretary of War Relating to Indian
Affairs, 1820-24, Record Group 75, National
Archives, microfilm M-15 (hereafter LSSWIA,
M-15).
5 Charles J. Kappler,
comp. and ed., Indian Affairs: Laws and
Treaties; 4 vols. (Washington, D.C.:
Government Printing Office, 1904-29),
2:55-58.
6 American State
Papers, Indian Affairs, 2 vols.,
(Washington: Government Printing Office,
1832-34), 1:662 (hereafter ASP IA).
7 Ibid.
8 Ibid.; see also
Gilbert C. Fite, "Development of the
Cotton Industry The Five Civilized Tribes in
Indian Territory," Journal of Southern
History, 15 (August 1949), 3:342-345.
9 ASP IA, 1:662.
10 Dearborn to
Claiborne, February 23, 1802, LSSWIA. M-15;
Prucha, Formative Years, 50.
11 Secretary of War
to Wilkinson, June 18, 1801, LSSWIA, M-15.
12 Hamilton,
Mobile, 375. This fort was located on the
Tombigee approximately midway between the
Oknuxabee Creek to the north and the Black
Warrior river to the south.
13 Kappler,
Treaties, 2:63.
14 Ibid., 69-70.
15 Andrew A.
Lipscomb, The Writings of Thomas
Jefferson Thomas (Washington, D.C.:
Jefferson Memorial Association, 1904), 20
vols., Jefferson to Jackson, February 16,
1803, 10:357-60.
16 Compare Martin
Abbott, "Indian Policy and Management in
the Mississippi Territory, 1798-1817,"
Journal of Mississippi History, 14 (July
1952): 167; and Jared W. Bradley, "William
C. C. Claiborne, the Old Southwest and the
Development of American Indian Policy,"
Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 33 (Fall
1974): 277.
17. Lipscomb,
Writings, Jefferson to Claiborne, May 24,
1803, 10:390-92.
18 cited in Wright,
"Diplomacy of Trade," p. 180; Wells,
"International Causes of the Treaty of
Mount Dexter," Journal of Mississippi
History 48 (August 1986), 3:177-85.
19 For an extensive
review of regional events leading to the
Louisiana Purchase see: W. Edwin Hemphill, "The
Jeffersonian Background of the Louisiana
Purchase," Mississippi Valley Historical
Review (hereafter MVHR), 22 (June 1935), 2:
177-190; Francis P. Burns, "West Florida
and the Louisiana Purchase: An Examination
Into the Question of Whether It Was Included
in the Territory Ceded by the Treaty of 1303,"
Louisiana Historical Quarterly, 15 (July
1932), 3:391-416; W. M. Sloane, "Napoleon's
Plans for a Colonial System," American
Historical Review, 4 (October 1898),
1:439-55; John Hawkins Napier, 111, "The
Gulf Coast: Key to Jeffersonian Empire,"
Alabama Historical Quarterly, 33 (Summer
1971), 3:98-115.
20 Secretary of War
to Hawkins, May 24, 1803, LSSWIA, M-15.
21 Some Choctaw
Indian leaders desired the new factory be
located at St. Stephens. Mingo Homostubby to
Hawkins, December 15, 1802, Hawkins,
Letters, 404-5; Plaisance, "The Choctaw
Trading House--1803-1822," Alabama
Historical Quarterly 16 (Fall & Winter
1954), 16:393-96. Royal B. Way, "The
United States Factory System for Trading
with the Indians, 1796-1822," MVHR, 6
(September 1919), 2:224. Dearborn directed
General Wilkinson to recommend a site for
the factory. Carter, Territorial Papers,
Mississippi, 5:176.
22. Ibid., 237,
Wilkinson to Secretary of War, August 31,
1803; Emmett Howell Cantwell, "A History
of the Choctaw Trading House, 1802-1822,"
master's thesis, Louisiana State University,
1965, p. 6.
23 Even before the
decision to place the Choctaw factory at St.
Stephens the local residents above the
thirty-first parallel on the Tombigbee were
concerned about their right to navigate into
the Gulf through Mobile. Carter, Territorial
Papers, Mississippi, "Petition to Congress
by Inhabitants of Tombigbee and Tensaw,"
August 1, 1799, 5:70.
24 Robert S.
Cotterill, "A Chapter of Panton, Leslie
and Company," Journal of Southern
History, 10 (August 1944), 3:277.
25 Wright, "Diplomacy
of Trade," p. 181; Wells, "International
Causes," 180.
26 Thus establishing
before the three Choctaw cession treaties
that usufruct was a determining principal in
setting land values.
27 "A talk
delivered by the President of the United
States to a Deputation of Chiefs from the
Choctaw Nation of Indians, January 1804,
LSSWIA, M-15.
28 Jefferson to
Congress, December 6, 1805, American State
Papers, Foreign Relations, 6 vols.
(Washington: Government Printing Office,
1832-61), 2:613 (hereafter ASP FR).
29 Claiborne to
Secretary of War, Oct 5, 1805, ASP FR,
2:191.
30 Everett S. Brown,
"Jefferson's Plan for A Military Colony
in Orleans Territory," MVHR, 8 (1922),
4:373-76.
31 Jefferson to
Harrison, February 27, 1803, Lipscomb,
Writings, 10:371-2; see also James D.
Richardson, A Compilation of Messages and
Papers of the Presidents, 1789-1902, 10
vols. (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
Office, 1896-99), "To the Gentlemen of
the Senate and of the House of
Representatives," January 18, 1803,
1:352-3.
32 Ibid.; also see
Lipscomb, Writings, "Hints on the Subject
of Indian Boundaries, suggested for
Consideration. December 29th, 1802,"
17:373-77 for an in-depth statement by
Jefferson concerning the advisability of
obtaining cessions along the Mississippi
River; see also ASP IA, "To the Senate,"
Dec. 31, 1804, 1:693, re treaty with Sac and
Fox Indi1ndians.
33 Mrs. Dunbar
Rowland, Life, Letters and Papers of
William Dunbar, (Jackson: Press of Miss
Hist Soc, 1930), 175.
34 Jefferson to
Williamson, April 30, 1803, Lipscomb,
Writings, 10:386.
35 Jefferson to
Claiborne, May 24, 1803, Lipscomb, Writings,
10:391-2.
36 Carter,
Territorial Papers, 5:279-287. Among the
leading countrymen signing this memorial
were Hartwell Hardaway, Young Gains, Samuel
Mims. Richard Brashears, and Benjamin
Steadham. The mixed bloods included Tandy
Walker, John Randon, Josiah Fletcher, and
James Randon.
37 Richardson,
Messages and Papers, Second Inaugural
Address, 1:379.
38 ASP IA, "To House
of Representatives," January 30, 1808,
1:752.
39 Although the
location of Mt. Dexter has been debated by
regional historians, the location of the
treaty talk is found on the 1820 Melish map
of Mississippi near present-day Macon in
Noxubee County. It is a highland between the
Noxubee River and the headwaters of the
Pearl River. By no stretch of the
imagination can Mt. Dexter be sited in
Lawrence County near present-day Monticello,
Mississippi as has been claimed by some
regional historians.
40 Wells, "Counting
Countrymen on the Tombigbee," Southern
Historian 4(Spring 1983):2-11; Abiezer Clark
Ramsey, "The Autobiography of A. C.
Ramsey," 1879, mimeo of WPA typescript
at Alabama Archives published by Jean
Strickland, Moss Point, Mississippi, 1986,
contains an account of one family's
migration into the unsurveyed and unratified
Treaty of Mt. Dexter lands along the
Chickasawhay River in Mississippi, 1.
41 Charles C. Royce,
comp., Indian Land Cessions in the United
States (Washington, D.C.: Government
Printing Office, 1900, reprint ed., New
York: Arno Press, 1971), 664, 666, 672, 676.
42 Jefferson to
Harrison, Feb. 27, 1803, Lipscomb, Writings,
10:370.
43 A good example is
Robert S. Cotterill, "Federal Indian
Management in the South, 1789-1825,"
MVHR, 20 (December 1933): 342.
44 Secretary of War
to Peterkin, July 28, 1802, LSSWIA, M-15.
45 See Simpson
letters in Carter, Territorial Papers,
Mississippi, 6:128, 160.
46 Secretary of War
to Hawkins, November 27, 1805, LSSWIA, M-15.
47 Jefferson to
Harrison, February 27, 1803, Lipscomb,
Writings, 10:370.
48 For the presence
of government licensed private traders in
Chickasaw and Choctaw country between 1802
and 1817 See Mississippi Department of
Archives and History, RG 2, v. 41, which
contains bonds of Indian traders.
49 see Secretary of
War to Shee, October 9, 1806, LSSWIA, M-15;
Secretary of Indian Trade to Gaines, March
2, 1808, LSSIT, M-16.
50 Secretary of
Indian Trade to Factors, Circular, March 18,
1808, LSSIT, M-16.
51 Mason to Gaines,
Aug. 14, 1809, LSSIT, M-16.
52 Kappler,
Treaties, 2:213, 318.
Notes About the Dissertation:
Source: Choctaw Mixed Bloods and the Advent of Removal, Dr. Samuel James
Wells, 1987, University of Southern Mississippi. Copyright Dr. Samuel James
Wells, 1987-2009. Used here with permission.
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output.
This site includes some historical materials that may imply negative
stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place.
These items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied.
Free
Genealogy |
Indian
Genealogy |
Choctaw Mixed Bloods
|
|