The full content of this document is only available to subscribing institutions. More information can be found via www.amdigital.co.uk

Collection Reference Number GLC01233.02
From Archive Folder Four documents relating to the Cherokee and the American Civil War 
Title In this letter, Ross, the Cherokee leader, assures President Lincoln of the Cherokees' support for the Union cause
Date 16 September 1862
Author Ross, John (1790-1866)  
Recipient Lincoln, Abraham  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description The author of the following letter, Chief John Ross (1790-1866), joined the Confederacy early in the war, accepted a commission in the Confederate Army, and then switched sides when a federal army invaded the trans-Mississippi West. Also mentions how Cherokee people rallied to the Union.
Subjects American Indian History  Cherokee Indian  President  Civil War  Military History  Union Forces  Government and Civics  
People Lincoln, Abraham (1809-1865)  Ross, John (1790-1866)  
Place written Lawrenceville, New Jersey
Theme The American Civil War; The Presidency; Government & Politics; Native Americans
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Additional Information In 1861, many Cherokees, Chickasaws, Choctaws, Creeks, and Seminoles decided to join the Confederacy, in part because some of the tribes' members owned slaves. In return, the Confederate states agreed to pay all annuities that the U.S. government had provided and let the tribes send delegates to the Confederate Congress. A Cherokee chief, Stand Watie (1806-1871), served as a brigadier general for the Confederacy and did not surrender until a month after the war was over. The author of the following letter, Chief John Ross (1790-1866), joined the Confederacy early in the war, accepted a commission in the Confederate Army, and then switched sides when a federal army invaded the trans-Mississippi West. After the war, these nations were severely punished for supporting the Confederacy. The Seminoles were required to sell their reservation at 15 cents an acre and buy new land from the Creeks at 50 cents an acre. The other tribes were required to give up half their territory in Oklahoma. This land would become reservations for the Arapahos, Caddos, Cheyennes, Commanches, Iowas, Kaws, Kickapoos, Pawnees, Potawatomis, Sauk and Foxes, and Shawnees. In addition, all these nations had to allow railroads to cut across their land. In this letter, Ross, the Cherokee leader, assures President Lincoln of the Cherokees' support for the Union cause. A week and a half later, Lincoln responded in a cautious and lawyerly way, mindful of the fact that Ross had initially sided with the Confederacy. "I shall...cause a careful investigation...to be made," Lincoln wrote. "Meanwhile the Cherokee people remaining practically loyal to the federal Union will receive all the protection which can be given them consistently with the duty of the government of the whole country. I sincerely hope the Cherokee country may not again be over-run by the enemy; and I shall do all I consistently can to prevent it."
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945
Transcript Show/hide