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Pursuit of the Seminoles Southward
Pursuit Of The Seminoles Southward. Encounter On The
Hatches Lustee.
Conference And Truce With The Indians. Renewal Of The Treaty Of Payne's Landing.
Neglect On The Part Of The Indians To Comply With Its Provisions. Capture,
Surrender, And Treacherous Seizure Of Various Chiefs. Death Of Osceola. Colonel
Taylor S Campaign.
We have already given more space to the
details of the Florida campaign, than such
ill-advised, ill-conducted, and trivial
operations deserve. We would be the last to
endeavor to detract from the deserved
laurels of many of the brave men who were
engaged in them, while we can but lament
that their lives should have been
sacrificed; less by the weapons of the
savages than by the diseases of the country;
that the public money should have been
squandered; and the whole peninsula so long
kept in a state of agitation and suspense,
when pacific measures might have kept
matters comparatively at rest.
Before the first of January, General Jessup,
marching with his troops from Volusia, with
the cooperation of Colonel Foster,
dispatched from Tampa, ranged the whole
country on the Ouithlacoochee and other
haunts of the Seminoles, and examined the
deep recesses of the Wahoo morass, without
finding an enemy. The Indian trails which
were observed, all led to the unexplored
wilderness of the south. Thither he started
in pursuit of the fugitive Seminoles, on the
d of January (1837). On the succeeding day,
a detachment, under Colonel Cawfield,
surprised Osuchee or Cooper, a Seminole
chief, then encamped at Ahapopka Lake, from
which flows the Ocklawaha. The chief and
several of his warriors were killed, and a
number of prisoners were taken.
The main army, still following the course of
the Indian track, now came to the high ridge
of sandy hills lying directly south of Lake
Ahapopka. The second day after passing these
hills, cattle of the Indians were seen, and
shortly after a scouting party, under
Colonel Henderson, discovered the enemy upon
the borders of the stream of Hatchee Lustee.
The troops instantly charged, and drove them
into the swamp, taking twenty or thirty
prisoners, mostly women and children.
On the same day, another large body of
Indians was discovered a little farther to
the westward, who fled precipitately upon
the approach of troops. One of the Seminole
was found watching by his sick wife, who had
been left as unable to travel. This Indian
was sent the next morning (January 28th) to
invite the Seminole chiefs to a conference.
The army was marched to the border of
Tohopekaliga Lake, (into which empties the
Hatchee Lustee Creek,) and encamped between
its waters and the Big Cypress swamp, to
await the return of the messenger. He made
his appearance on the following day,
bringing intelligence from the hostile
chiefs, who agreed to have a parley. The
first, who presented himself, on the part of
the Seminole, was Abraham, Micanopy s Negro
counselor. Having held a consultation with
General Jessup, he returned to his people;
but three days after, February 3d, escorted
Jumper, Alligator, and two other chiefs to
the camp. It was concluded that a grand talk
should be held, and a new treaty entered
into on the 18th of the month, at Fort Dade,
on the Big Ouithlacoochee. To that
establishment the army immediately repaired,
as it was agreed that hostilities should be
suspended until after the council.
On the 8th of the month, several hundred
Indians, led by Philip, the chief who had
long been the terror of the eastern portion
of the peninsula, attacked Colonel Fanning,
then in the occupation of a station on Lake
Monroe, with a mixed garrison of regulars,
volunteers, and Creeks. The Creek chief
Paddy Carr was of the company. The
assailants were driven off with loss, and,
in their retreat, met a messenger sent by
Micanopy to convey intelligence of the
truce.
Some delays occurred in bringing about the
conference assigned for the 18th, but at
last most of the principal Seminole chiefs
signed a treaty similar to that of Payne s
Landing, whereby they agreed to remove west
of the Mississippi. The United States
government was to make remuneration for the
stock, which must necessarily be left
behind, and to pay stipulated annuities, as
before agreed. There can be but little doubt
that, even on this occasion, the Indians had
no real intention of complying with the
requisitions of government. Few came in on
the days appointed, and rumors were
circulated among them whether actually
believed, or only used as an excuse for
absenting them selves, does not appear that
the whites intended to destroy the whole
tribe as soon as they should be secured on
board the government vessels.
Osceola and Coe Hajo, still pretending that
their endeavor was to collect their people
for transportation, held a great festival or
game at ball near Fort Mellon, upon Lake
Monroe, at the eastern part of the
peninsula. They doubtless chose this place
for gathering their followers, as being at a
safe distance from the point of embarkation
on Tampa Bay. On the d of June, Osceola took
two hundred of his warriors to Tampa Bay,
and, either by force or persuasion, induced
the old king Micanopy, and all the other
Indians who had rendezvoused there in
pursuance of the treaty, to move off again
to the wilderness.
Hearing of this, the commandant at Fort
Mellon, Colonel Harney, made up his mind to
entrap such of the chiefs as were in his
vicinity, under pretence of a conference;
and retaliate upon the Seminoles for their
breach of faith at Tampa, by seizing those
who should appear. Osceola got wind of the
design, and it consequently proved futile.
Fort Mellon and Volusia were abandoned
during this month, the sickness attendant
upon the season having commenced its ravages
among the troops, and the Indians were left
free to roam over that whole portion of the
country, while the settlers whose dwellings
were exposed to their assaults, were forced
to fly to places of protection.
The last of the month, Captain Walton,
keeper of the floating light on Carysford
reef, was killed, together with one of his
assistants, at Key Largos, the most
considerable of the Florida Keys. He had a
garden at this island, and had just landed,
coming from the light, when he and his party
were fired upon. The whole southeastern
seacoast was then in undisturbed possession
of the hostile Indians.
In September, General Hernandez, stationed
at Fort Peyton, a few miles from St.
Augustine, made an expedition to the
southward, and captured the dreaded Philip,
Uchee Billy, and nearly one hundred other
Indians and negroes. Philip s son, coming
with a flag of truce to St. Augustine, was
taken prisoner, and retained in captivity.
Other chiefs and warriors among them
Tustenugge delivered themselves up at Black
Creek, and several cap tures were made at
other points; but the most important
transaction of this autumn whether
justifiable or not was the seizure of
Osceola, Alligator, and six other of the
leading Seminole. They had come into the
neighborhood of Fort Peyton, and sent word
to General Jessup that they desired a
parley.
General Hernandez was deputed to hold the
conference, but the talk of the Indians
being pronounced "evasive and
unsatisfactory," the commander-in-chief
dispatched a force to capture the whole
body; these chiefs accordingly, with over
sixty followers, fell into the hands of
their enemies. The excuse given for this act
was, that the treachery of the Indians upon
former occasions had deprived them of all
claims to good faith on the part of the
whites. Osceola was removed to Charleston,
and died in confinement on the 30th of
January 1838. If he had survived, he was to
have been taken, with other Seminoles, to
the west of the Mississippi.
In the same month, various other captures
were made, until the Indians in bondage at
St. Augustine numbered nearly one hundred
and fifty. The United States forces,
consisting of regulars, volunteers, seamen,
and Indian allies, distributed among the
various posts in Florida at this time, are
set down at little short of nine thousand
men!
Sam Jones, or Abiaca, was, after the capture
of Osceola, one of the most forward of the
Seminole chiefs. He appears to have been
spokesman at a conference held, not far from
this time, between his tribe and deputies
from the Creek nation, bearing proposals and
advice from their celebrated chief John
Ross.
We must next proceed to the campaign of
Colonel Zachary Taylor, the hero of many
battles, and afterwards the distinguished
president of the United States. He left Fort
Gardner, a station sixty miles due east from
Fort Brooke, on Tampa Bay, with some six
hundred troops, to follow the enemy into
their hidden retreats at the south. Pursuing
the course of the Kissimee, the army had
advanced within fifteen miles of the great
lake Okeechobee, on the northern borders of
the unexplored everglades, when intelligence
was obtained from a prisoner, that the
Seminoles were encamped in force on the
eastern shore of the Kissimee Lake. "With a
portion of his army, Colonel Taylor crossed
the river, and hastened to attack the
Indians in the hammock where they were
posted. Never before had the Indian rifles
done more deadly execution, and never had
their warriors evinced more determined
courage. They were with great difficulty
dislodged and dispersed: the number of
killed and wounded on the part of the whites
considerably exceeded that of the Indians,
no less than one hundred and eleven of Col.
Taylor's men being wounded, and twenty-eight
killed.
Indian Races of
North and South America
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Indian Races of North and South America, By Charles De Wolf Brownell, 1865
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