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Removal and the Legacy
[177]The articles of removal of the 1830 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek were
set into motion immediately. By 1831 and 1832 when Removal was in full force
mixed bloods still maintained their positions of trust and authority within the
tribe. During Removal the percentage of mixed-blood captains -- the headmen and
leaders of the organized emigrant bands bound for the new Indian nation -was
greater than their percentage within the overall population of the tribe (see
Chart 22). Their understanding of the English language and the ways of Americans
became even more valuable as the bands of emigrants made their way into western
Arkansas and present day Oklahoma. As the emigrants reported to the government
agents west of the Mississippi River a note of each arrival was entered in a
journal in order to establish eligibility for the year's supplies granted in the
Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek (see Appendix B).
[178] Prior to the emigrants' departure from Mississippi federal officials had
conducted a census to ascertain not only a population count but also to obtain
available information about individual land holdings and improvements. Popularly
called the Armstrong Roll, this census indicated sizes of families and also
identified some mixed bloods (see Appendix A). The Armstrong Roll also contained
the geographical locations of the Indians, documenting the fact that many mixed
bloods and full bloods either lived together in the same or adjoining household
or as close neighbors, while others lived in communities made up exclusively of
full bloods or exclusively of mixed bloods.1
The full blood Indian wives of countrymen and mixed bloods preferred living near
their full blood Choctaw relatives if possible. Since their husband's influence
and power often stemmed from the wife's family connections, which were enhanced
by proximity, the family unit normally remained near the traditional home.
This pattern eventually did change as some mixed bloods moved from the
traditional home grounds to better farm and grazing lands. But even at the time
of Removal many families, such as the mixed-blood Andersons, Juzans, and Favres,
remained on their old holdings. There also was a large degree of family
interaction between mixed bloods[179] and full bloods as they participated in
joint ventures. The many anecdotal accounts of Cushman, J.F.H. Claiborne,
Halbert and Gaines indicate that mixed blood rode alongside full blood during
the Tecumseh incidents in 1811, the Creek War, and the Jackson campaigns at
Pensacola and New Orleans in 1814 and 1815. Most mixed bloods and full bloods
were in agreement at the signing of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek, and on
into Removal there was no exclusive division of powers and influence along
quantitative bloodlines. Both full bloods and mixed bloods held high positions.
In fact there is a long and documented history of cooperation, co-existence, and
cohabitation between what outsiders have viewed as two separate groups. Most of
the writings of the mixed bloods before and after removal indicate their strong
identity, not as mixed bloods, but as Choctaw.
In earlier days a cultural chasm did exist between some mixed bloods and full
bloods within the Choctaw Nation. Where the boundaries of two societies met, a
dynamic, acculturative synthesis occurred. From the earliest periods-- when
traders settled in the tribe with their obvious practical advantages of foreign
language and trading acumen to the exodus from Mississippi -- a constant,
gradual process of cultural syncretism changed the several peoples coexisting in
Choctaw country into a more homogenous whole. Full blood Indians learned some
French, Spanish, and English words and customs, while white countrymen acquired
a taste for corn and ball games along with Choctaw phrases and[180] Indian
wives. Many Indian customs such as binding infant's heads to achieve fattened
shape which was considered particularly desirable, infanticide, lex talionis,
scaffolding the dead then "bonepicking" the remains of the deceased, and other
practices either disappeared or were altered through pressure from missionaries
and white or mixed-blood relatives. The tribe was gradually adopting some
western ways.
By the time of Removal the culture of the Choctaw Indians already changed
appreciably from that found by DeSoto in the sixteenth century. A major change
lay in the number of mixed bloods contained within the tribe, which
conservatively can be estimated at around fifteen to twenty percent, and
liberally at over thirty percent. Should that count seem high, it is wise to
remember that Jedidiah Morse in his 1822 report on Indians stated that the
Cherokee nation "by actual enumeration of the Agent in 1809, was 12,395
Cherokees, half of whom were of mixed blood..."2 Although the number of mixed
bloods in the Choctaw Nation was not as high as in the Cherokee Nation, it was
high enough to cause major cultural changes at a time when the tribe was
experiencing great stress from the forces in favor of Indian Removal.
[181]The diplomatic disposition of the Choctaw people which permitted them
calmly to accept cultural evolution and change, and the growing number of
mixed-blood tribal members who quickly grasped the idea that the American
government's policies of "civilization" could enhance Choctaw self-sufficiency
and wealth, made for consistent relations from Washington's administration
through Jackson's nearly half a century later. A major factor during this time
was the changing ratio of Indians to white settlers on the Southern frontier,
especially along the Mississippi River and most particularly around New Orleans
and the Gulf region. As long as the settlers remained in the minority the
American administrations followed a policy of pacification of the Indians
through liberal trade agreements and monetary reward for those headmen and
chiefs willing to accommodate the Americans. And it was not simply a matter of
American officials tempting the Indian "children" with bribes; the cultural
practices of the Southern tribes strongly favored acceptance of those traders
and civil officials (including the earliest Frenchmen, Spaniards, Englishmen
through the American commissioners in the 1820s) who offered gifts.
Although it is easy for modern commentators to affix moral labels to the
gift-giving which almost always accompanied any major trading session or treaty
talk, the practice was one for which the Indian tribesmen were as much
responsible as were the Europeans who used the accepted[182] Native American
practice to effect trade agreements and military alliances. To assume that the
tribal leaders were gulled into unfair pacts is to embrace the most crass sort
of ethnocentrism which insults the intelligence and civilization of the Indians
in question.
The fact that the Choctaw tribe existed in harmony and peace with the European
occupiers of their territory from the early days of the eighteenth century
through the first third of the nineteenth century is a tribute to their
diplomatic acumen and maturity. There is little doubt that the tribe slowly lost
territory to the several foreign governments which held the Gulf region, but it
is also a fact that the tribe only relinquished peripheral lands upon which it
had only tentative claims until the very last when it ceded its heartland at the
Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek in 1830. In all, that is an enviable record when
compared to the fate of Indian populations earlier in Mexico and South America
or those plains Indians in the United States after the Civil War; both of the
latter groups were overwhelmed in short order by superior military technology
and strength. The Choctaw chose diplomacy over war and thereby lengthened their
existence and identity as a people.
The tribe's toleration of white traders also eased the friction which always
exists between distinct and separate cultures in early contact with each other.
The intermarriages and resulting mixed-blood progeny only made the bonds of
identity and similarity stronger as the[183] traders' children were welcomed
into the tribe. It is at this point, when an easily acculturated group of mixed
bloods began to appear within the tribe, that some historians manufacture a
schism between this new "breed" of Indian and their full-blood relatives. Except
for a few isolated cases of family friction, which is common enough even in
un-mixed societies, the record is silent in regard to any such schism. Instead,
the extant evidence shows co-existence and community between these peoples.
Some students of American Indians have retroactively constructed a post-removal
western social stigma towards mixed bloods, which simply did not exist to any
measurable degree during the eighteenth century among the Choctaw Indians. In
fact one finds a very different Indian culture in the trans-Mississippi west,
than in the cis-Mississippi region prior to Removal. In this case the image of
the pre-Removal Choctaw tribe would be viewed through quite distorted lenses and
could easily be misinterpreted.
As the number of Choctaw mixed bloods grew so did the ease with which the United
States officials were able to introduce "civilizing" programs to the tribe. This
study shows that during treaty talks often it was the mixed-blood advisors to
the chiefs who recognized the commercial attraction of such things as cotton
gins and iron works. As early as 1802 a cotton gin existed in Chickasaw country
(at the site of Cotton Gin Port) and expectations were high[183] among the
Choctaw mixed bloods that they might obtain the same for their use.3
It was also the mixed bloods who early in the nineteenth century desired
schools, and therefore the missionaries who came with them. In nearly every case
of Choctaw acceptance of Jefferson's proffered tools of civilization, one finds
mixed bloods at the head of the line. Of course Jefferson's program for the Old
Southwest included much more than mere Indian pacification and assimilation. To
a much greater degree he recognized the palpable weakness of the Southern
frontier and acted on several fronts to strengthen it. On the diplomatic front
he entered into negotiations with the Spaniards who controlled the Gulf Coast
and the Mississippi River and later, after extended diplomacy, was able to buy
Louisiana from France. On the home front he was keenly aware that the
frontiersmen had to provide their own defense and mapped out a plan of prudent
purchases of strategic Indian lands along the Mississippi River in order to make
lands available for settlement. This influx of settlers, he opined, would put in
place a militia able to defend itself and the Mississippi[185] River valley from
any foreign enemy.4
The Choctaw mixed bloods were an important element allowing the partial
acceptance of Jefferson's policy in the Indian lands of Mississippi Territory.
They were given a Jeffersonian-Republican Indian Agent in Silas Dinsmoor from
1802 until the War of 1812, and one of their major interpreters, the countryman
John Pitchlynn, also espoused the American ideology or cause. He is on record as
being antagonistic to the emigrant Tory royalists who fled to Indian country
during and after the American Revolution. He had family ties to Georgia and the
Carolinas, and he was in agreement with nearly all requests made by the United
States of the tribe. His sons later, after the Creek War, were very instrumental
in helping American treaty commissioners persuade and cajole more and more
territory from their tribal kinsmen. They communicated with Andrew Jackson from
time to time and were in agreement with the overt Jeffersonian policy of
acquiring land for settlement and militia purposes.
As a result of this pro-American sentiment among leading mixed bloods who had
strong family ties to tribal[186] chiefs, the tribe itself remained friendly to
the United States and fought alongside American militiamen throughout the Gulf
theatre of the War of 1812 and the Creek War which was encompassed by the larger
conflict. The long standing American policy of amity had produced dividends from
the Choctaw and their cousins the Chickasaw.
During this period when Jefferson actively pursued cessions from the Choctaw, he
was quite sensitive to the possibility of offending them through too blatant an
approach and ordered his functionaries to use tact and diplomacy in their
dealings with the tribe. Although he has been accused of following an extortive
policy of running the Indians into debt to force cessions, there is no record
that such a practice followed among the Choctaw tribe. Instead there exists much
evidence indicating that the Choctaw factory, one of the largest trading houses,
was operated under strict business restraints and only offered credit in small
amounts and then only to reputable individuals. Jefferson plainly instructed
that the factories were to be operated as non-profit organizations meant mainly
to pacify the Indians they served and to further interdict Indian trade with
foreigners below the thirty-first parallel in West Florida. The few debts that
were allowed by the Choctaw factors were never used as leverage in any treaty
talks. The only time debt is mentioned is in regard to foreign traders or when
the tribe itself asked that debt be excused or otherwise ameliorated.[187] There
is even a sense of government reluctance in the various treaty talks to forgive
any Choctaw his individual debts. The debts were fairly equally shared by full
blood and mixed blood alike, with no noticeable favoritism being practiced by
the factors.
The leading mixed bloods often were traders themselves. Some, such as the
venerable Ben James, had earlier been aligned with the Spanish and British
trading houses out of Pensacola and Mobile. Others, such as John Pitchlynn, Jr.,
entered into Indian trade later when the government trading houses were
terminated by legislation in the early 1820s. This mixed-blood propensity for
trade and
business was a major reason of their importance to the tribe, for most of the
tribe were strongly attracted to American and European trade goods. Most tribal
traders were considered wealthy and honorable husbands for Choctaw women from
influential families.
But trade and economics were not the only forces operating on the tribe during
this time. Between 1786, when the tribe recognized the United States as its main
political partner at the Treaty of Hopewell, and the Removal of the 1830s,
several other important factors also operated upon the tribe. The entire period
was a time when great social change was sweeping Europe in the form of the
French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. The tribe certainly felt the winds of
change as the Spanish power in the region was weakened to the point of
ineffectiveness; their French[188] allies of a half-century sold Louisiana and
then retired from the local military and diplomatic field. After the British
presence was neutered by Jackson's defeat of Packingham at New Orleans in 1815,
the Choctaw chiefs did not need augury and superhuman perception to understand
that the United States was emerging as the primary political and military power
in the region. The self-evident fact was buttressed by the chiefs' own
perspicacity and the wise counsel of their mixed-blood kinsmen.
Far from being immature children who did not really understand the complexities
of modern international tensions, the chiefs were experienced men who viewed the
American political structure first-hand when they visited Jefferson in
Washington in 1804 and later in 1825. Some of the same individuals were on both
trips and certainly recognized the changes of economic growth and demographics,
which had transpired during the two decades. Some of the children of leading
mixed bloods and full bloods attended academies and schools outside the nation
and returned to explain that world to their brothers and kinsmen back home. The
mixed bloods and full bloods sensed the futility of actively opposing American
expansion and generally resigned themselves to eventual assimilation or Removal.
Added to these considerations were the teachings of the missionaries and their
admonishments to do things "the American way." Although they entered the area
late and did not become a major force until the 1820s, the missionaries[189]
acted as a catalyst for change within the tribe. As each ancient practice, such
as scaffolding the dead, was eradicated, the tribe became less Choctaw and more
American. As each Bible verse was learned and each English lesson mastered, the
tribe as a distinct Indian culture became less viable. All of the old ways not
in consonance with the missionaries' concept of the Christian ethic were slowly
and steadily silenced. The practices of witch killing, infanticide, lex talionis,
rainmaking, and so on, all succumbed to "civilizing" pressures. At a time when
whites had not yet entered into heated debates over their own practices of
abortion, mercy killing, and faith healing, the old Indian ways seemed quite
primitive. But one bright event still shines out of the missionary effort, that
of creating an alphabet and syllabary of the Choctaw language. Originally
intended to ease the task of forcing the Christian Bible upon the non-English
speaking tribesmen, the endeavor resulted in preserving the language for
posterity and thus saved a crucial facet of Choctaw culture and identity. The
Christian religion, like the other forces acting upon the tribe, enjoyed the
dual role of destroyer and preserver.
Of all the factors operative upon the tribe only the ideological and political
pressures rivaled economics. As the mixed bloods ascended to position of
leadership within the three tribal districts in the state of Mississippi in the
aftermath of the Creek War, they brought their mixed[190] ideological views with
them. They understood and respected old tribal ways, but they also favored
changes such as the election of chiefs by the leading men of each district along
the lines of the American electoral system, envisioned and created the Choctaw
Lighthorse police force along militia lines and began the enforcement of laws by
this more European and American method of social control, and moved in the
direction of unifying the three autonomous districts of the Choctaw Nation into
one democratic chiefdom.
The mixed bloods were not alone in their desire to "modernize" Choctaw ways.
Even the vaunted full-blood chief Mushalatubbe once considered throwing his hat
into the white political ring and running for a state legislative office. But it
was the mixed bloods who found it easiest to adopt American ways. After Removal,
Greenwood Leflore did become a Mississippi legislator and prosperous cotton
planter, thus realizing the Jeffersonian goal of evolving from Indian to yeoman
farmer and beyond.
This changeover was not without its conflicts and intertribal tension. These two
chiefs, Leflore and Mushalatubbee, along with Nituckachee, Little Leader, and
others, vied for some degree of control of the tribe. Although some historians
simplify the struggle as a racial one between mixed and full bloods,
correspondence and records indicate that the misunderstandings were regional and
sectional in nature. A major misreading of history occurs when historians
attempt to moralize about the clash [191] between Leflore and Mushalatubbe in
the late 1820s, some siding with Mushalatubbee's "strong" stance against
Leflore's "despotic" machinations. Both men fall far short of hero status, yet
certainly cannot be called villains. Both pursued what they considered to be
noble aspirations; both were also guilty of cupidity and self-interest. In
essence, they were human. Mushalatubbee seemed much more concerned about his
personal pension and land for his relatives and friends than about the
disappearing Choctaw culture. Leflore was not shy about seeking power, but after
the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek, which he helped orchestrate, he was stung by
the tribal reprimand, which demanded his resignation in October 1830. His ouster
from office was perhaps the most patently unifying act the tribe affected prior
to Removal and foreshadowed later unifying efforts in Indian Territory.
The sectionalism existing within the Choctaw tribe in the early 1800s also
underwent a period of nationalism remarkably parallel to the white American and
European experiences of the time. Although much attention has been directed to
the fuss and bluster of such Choctaw sectional disputes as one section sending
more students to Kentucky than did another, or how the treaty annuities should
be divided, the rise of Leflore to position of Chief of all the Choctaws was a
very important event. It demonstrated that the leading mixed and full bloods
could compromise and reach common decisions beyond sectional interests. It a1so
helped[192] set the stage for Removal, but that should be viewed in the light of
the near certainty of Removal by the late 1820s. Better to say that Removal
occurred in spite of Choctaw unification rather than because of it. Of course
when negotiations began, the sectional interests of the several chiefs were
quite pronounced, but Leflore's earlier identity as chief helped him sway the
other leading men into accepting the treaty. Choctaw unification thus paved the
way for the speedy passage of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek. The pressures
for removal were so great at the time- from the state of Mississippi, from the
federal government, from many tribal members (mixed and full blood), and even
from some missionaries, especially the Methodists- that a treaty would have been
soon effected even in the absence of a Leflore. Removal was an event brought
about by complex forces operating over decades, not the sellout of one
individual, or clique, in the signing of one treaty.
Considering that the many forces behind Removal had been building for years, it
is also a bit simplistic to conjure up a super villain in the person of Andrew
Jackson and point to him as the supreme nemesis of the American Indian. The
Choctaw nation venerated Jackson and looked to[193] him for fair play and
justice before and during Removal.5
Jackson was certainly less than infallible in his Indian policy, but he always
referred to the Choctaw Indians in the kindest terms as allies on the field of
battle. Jackson's image suffers from the alcoholic malfeasance of Choctaw Agent
William Ward whose failure to register properly those tribesmen desiring to
remain on their homesteads in Mississippi led to what was perhaps the most
inhumane aspect of Removal, the loss of land by the several thousand Choctaws
wishing to remain legally on their ancestral lands.
There seems to be some pervasive element in the human persona, which drives it
to single out "great men" and "villains" as prime movers in historic events; yet
in Indian Removal it was really the American government acting on a longstanding
American policy, which led to the Removal of the Southern Indians. No deviate or
perverse personality was the actuator of those deeds the country would later
view as distasteful. Analysis of the events of the time suggest that if Andrew
Jackson had never been elected president, another frontiersman or westerner
would have been elected in his stead because the populace of the country wanted
that[194] kind of president to represent their views in Washington. Almost any
westerner elected to the presidency in the late 1820s would have yielded to
pressures from the growing South and West to bring about Indian Removal; it was
what the average citizen there wanted.
The arguments for and against Indian Removal in the United States mainly were
geocentric; most of the opposition to Removal came from Northeastern spokesmen
and legislators who used idealistic moral issues to pursue pragmatic regional
arguments. Growing Southern and Western populations reduced the relative
importance and political power of other regions of the country. When Mississippi
and Alabama evicted their resident Indian tribes there was an economic boom as
land speculators poured into the region bringing the chronicled "flush times"
with them. As the prime cotton lands in the Delta region of northwest
Mississippi, and the Black Belt region of northeast Mississippi and northwest
Alabama, became available to planters, the fabled antebellum South took shape,
slavery rapidly spread across the former Mississippi Territory, and the storm
clouds of the Civil War began gathering on the horizon. Indian Removal therefore
can be viewed as an integral part of the surge in the slave-based Southern
plantation economy. It can also be viewed as part of a regionally dichotomous
rhetoric, which led to, increased sectionalism.
[195] The Choctaw tribe mainly sympathized with the Southern defense of slavery
and condoned the "peculiar institution" itself. Many leaders of the tribe owned
slaves and the practice continued within the tribe after Removal; by the time of
the American Civil War the tribe found itself as much Southern as Indian and
became embroiled in the hostilities. Indeed the values and politics of the
Choctaw tribe after Removal can just as easily be viewed as Southern as Indian.
And a similar statement can be made about many white Southerners who had more
than a few Indian cultural traits.
Many Mississippians and Alabamans retained, to a greater or lesser degree, an
"Indianess" which persists to the present day. In other words, Choctaw culture
to some extent also diffused into the culture of the early white settlers in the
Tombigbee River watershed as well as those in the Pearl River watershed, and can
be yet discerned in the rural Mississippi and Alabama border area. The cultural
diffusion was accelerated by the many intermarriages into the white families of
the day and the many mixed bloods who stayed in their traditional homelands
after Removal as "white" Mississippians. The several thousand full blood Choctaw
remaining in Mississippi after Removal helped continue this cultural exchange
via their connections with their mixed-blood cousins.
Folks in the area today still roam the springtime woods in search of the
seasonal mayhaw, the dewberry, the[196] Chickasaw plum, and later in the year
the huckleberry and wild muscadine grape. Spring is still greeted with a
traditional burning of the woods, and the planting of corn is so necessary a
part of the rural South that some white farmers grow it just to give it away in
a manner more ritualistic than altruistic. Hunting season is also a time of
ritualistic preparations when rural and some urban Southern young men take to
the forests to track the deer and turkey which have for centuries filled the
larders of the people living in the region. One can still find the old-fashioned
Indian style homestead yards where every blade of grass is plucked and the sand
and dirt swept clean in order to prevent snakes and vermin from entering the
home. And then there's that ubiquitous high-check-boned Southerner who appears
from Texas to Georgia and readily tells any and all comers that his great-great
grandmother was a Cherokee princess. Even though such evidence is highly
anecdotal, once one begins looking for it, the "Indianness" of the South is
overwhelming.
The further one traces one's roots back into time in the South, the greater the
chance that the records will prove one's ancestors were mixed bloods. Given the
history and fireworks of race relations in the South, the degree of[197] "Indianness"
becomes even more fascinating.6
In view of these conclusions it is easy to see that Indian history cannot be
treated as an isolated, interior occurrence separate from the pressures and
events in American and world history. Indian history is an integral part of
American and international history and was driven by the same events occurring
in the broader arena of world affairs. The enduring message the Choctaw people
of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries have left us is that they were
survivors, not victims.
Choctaw Mixed Bloods
1. This journal can be found on microfilm in the
Lackey Collection, McCain Library, University of Southern Mississippi. It is
distinct from the earlier Armstrong Roll.
2. Jedidiah Morse, A Report On Indian Affairs, (New Haven: S.
Converse, 1822, reprint ed., New York: Augustus M. Kelley, 1970), 152. The
author has not verified these figures mentioned by Morse, but has noted a large
amount of mixed-blood identifications in early Cherokee censuses.
3 For a detailed description of Indian cotton growing, see
Daniel H. Usner, Jr., "American Indians on the Cotton Frontier: Changing
Economic Relations with Citizens and Slaves in the Mississippi Territory,"
Journal of American History, 72 (Sept 1985), 297-317.
4. Dumas Malone in his in-depth six volume study of Jefferson
only touches briefly upon the president's efforts to structure a militia defense
on newly acquired lands, but in Jefferson the President: First Term, 1801-1805,
p. 514, he does acknowledge the work of Mary P. Adams in "Jefferson's Reaction
to the Treaty of San Ildefonso," Journal of Southern History, 21 (May 1955),
173-188, as a needed correction to a historical misunderstanding of Jefferson's
defense policies.
5. Modern Mississippi Choctaw still use a replica of the drum
given the tribe by Jackson as a token of his appreciation after their aid in the
War of 1812 in their ceremonial parades prior to re-enacting the ancient ball
play, and specifically tell their children that the drum was a gift from
Jackson. It is interesting how such rituals transcend even scholarly efforts to
correct the "truth" about Jackson.
6 See Appendix A for the rare documented instances of
Indian/Black mixed bloods. Often the records that are available to indicate
white-red blood mixes are lacking for red-black mixes though such combinations
did exist. In modern times, when documentation of red-black mixtures are
available it usually is for a tri-racial mix of Red, White, and Black.
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
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