Opothleyaholo and the Loyal Muskogee: Their Flight to Kansas in the Civil War

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McFarland, 2000 - History - 250 pages
In 1861, Lt. William Averell was dispatched to Indian Territory on a secret mission intended to close the forts that protected the Creeks, Seminoles, Chickasaws, Choctaws, and Cherokees. The South immediately seized the opportunity to woo the Indian nations to the Confederacy. The South anticipated some trouble with John Ross, the Cherokee chief, but expected little difficulty from the other tribes. But they had forgotten about a leader of the Muskogees, called Creeks by the whites, named Opothleyaholo.
Opothleyaholo had endured the Trail of Tears in 1836, when the Creek had been uprooted from their homelands in Alabama and Georgia and sent to the Arkansas Territory. Despite hardships, they eventually prospered in the new territory. As the Civil War approached, Opothleyaholo fully understood the strategic importance of the Indian Territory to the Confederacy and knew that an alliance with its government would undoubtedly lead to the demise of his people. Despite his distrust of the American government, which consistently broke their promises to the Indian nations, he sided with the United States and fought bravely, only to be deserted by its troops when he needed them most. Retreating to southern Kansas during the worst winter in memory, at least 240 of his followers--men, women, and children--died in Wilson County, Kansas, in 1862. This is the story of a little-remembered part of the years leading up to the Civil War and the bravery and misfortune of the Indian tribes in the conflict.

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Contents

Acknowledgments
1
The Wolf Has Come
7
Opothleyaholo and the Muskogees
10
The Europeans Invade
17
Annihilation at Horseshoe Bend
23
Georgias 1802 Compact
29
The Indian Springs Treaty
34
Execution of Chief McIntosh
43
Resettlement and Recovery
95
Kansas Territorys Border War
104
Secession Begins
111
Southern Emissaries in Indian Territory
120
Lt Averells Secret Mission
124
Alliance with the Confederacy
136
Indian Territory Isolated from Union
145
Look to the Beaver Road
158

The Investigation of General Gaines
48
Opothleyaholo Meets President Adams
55
A New Treaty
61
Andrew Jackson and Indian Removal
74
West Toward Indian Territory
85
A Place Called Roes Fork
174
The Indian Home Guards
192
We Are the Color of the Earth
210
Bibliography
237
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