
After the war bitterness remained between the two groups. Henry Timberlake took three Cherokee to London to convince all of the friendship just declared, 1765.
The
Anglo-Cherokee War (1758–1761) (Cherokee:"war with those in the red coats" or "war with the english"), also known (from the Anglo-European perspective) as the
Cherokee War, the
Cherokee Uprising, the
Cherokee Rebellion, was a conflict between
British forces in
North America and
Cherokee Indians during the
French and Indian War. The British and the Cherokee were formally allies at the start of the war, but each party repeatedly suspected the other of betrayal. Tensions between English-American settlers and the Cherokee increased during the 1750s.
Prelude
If
James Mooney is correct, the first conflict of the Cherokee with the British occurred in 1654 when a force from
Jamestown Settlement supported by a large party of
Pamunkey attacked a town of the "Rechaherians" (referred to as the "Rickohakan" by German traveller James Lederer when he passed through in 1670) that had between six and seven hundred warriors, only to be driven off.
After siding with the
Province of South Carolina in the
Tuscarora War of 1711-1715, the Cherokee turned on their erstwhile British allies in the
Yamasee War of 1715-1717 along with the other tribes until switching sides again midway, which ensured the defeat of the latter. They remained staunch allies of the British until the
French and Indian War of 1754-1763.
At the outbreak of the war, the Cherokee were staunch allies of the British, taking part in such far-flung campaigns as those against
Fort Duquesne (at
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) and the
Shawnee of the
Ohio Country. In 1755, a band of Cherokee 130-strong under
Ostenaco (
Ustanakwa) of
Tomotley (
Tamali) took up residence in a fortified town at the mouth of the
Ohio River at the behest of their fellow British allies, the Iroquois.
For several years, French agents from
Fort Toulouse had been visiting the
Overhill Cherokee on the
Hiwassee and
Tellico Rivers, and made in-roads into those places. The strongest pro-French Cherokee leaders were Mankiller (
Utsidihi) of
Great Tellico (
Talikwa), Old Caesar of Chatuga (
Tsatugi), and Raven (
Kalanu) of
Great Hiwassee (
Ayuhwasi). The
First "Beloved Man" (
Uku) of the nation,
Kanagatucko (
Kanagatoga, or "Stalking Turkey", aka 'Old Hop'), was himself very pro-French, as was the nephew who was succeeded at his death in 1760,
Standing Turkey (
Kunagadoga).
The former site of the
Coosa chiefdom during the 16th century Spanish explorations was reoccupied in 1759 by a
Muscogee contingent under Big Mortar (
Yayatustanage) in support of the pro-French Cherokee in Great Tellico and Chatuga, and as a step toward his planned alliance of Muscogee, Cherokee,
Shawnee,
Chickasaw, and
Catawba, which would have been the first of its kind in the South. Though such an alliance did not come into being until Dragging Canoe, Big Mortar still rose to be the leading chief of the Muscogee after the French and Indian War.
Early stages
The Anglo-Cherokee War was initiated in 1758 by
Moytoy (
Amo-adawehi) of
Citico in retaliation for mistreatment of Cherokee warriors at the hands of their British and colonial allies. Moytoy's horse-stealing began the domino effect that ended with the murders of Cherokee hostages at
Fort Prince George near
Keowee and the massacre of the garrison of
Fort Loudoun near
Chota.
Those two connected events catapulted the whole nation into war until the actual fighting ended in 1761, with the Cherokee led by
Oconostota (
Aganstata) of Chota (
Itsati),
Attakullakulla (
Atagulgalu) of
Tanasi, Ostenaco of Tomotley, Wauhatchie (
Wayatsi) of the Lower Towns, and Round O of the Middle Towns.
During the second year of the French and Indian War, the British had sought Cherokee assistance against the
French enemies and their Indian allies.
This came after they had accurate reports that the French were planning to build forts in Cherokee territory as they had already done with Ft. Charleville at the Great Salt Lick (now
Nashville, Tennessee, on the middle
Cumberland River), Ft. Toulouse, near the present
Montgomery, Alabama, Ft. Rosalie at
Natchez, Mississippi, Ft. St. Pierre at
Yazoo, Mississippi, and Ft. Tombeckbe on the
Tombigbee River). After the Cherokee agreed to be their allies, the British hastened to build forts of their own, completing
Fort Prince George near
Keowee (in South Carolina) among the Lower Towns; in 1756,
Fort Loudoun near
Chota at the mouth of the
Tellico River; and Fort Dobbs in the midst of the Hill and Valley towns west of
North Carolina. Once the forts were built, the Cherokee raised 400 warriors to fight in western
Virginia under
Ostenaco.
Oconostota and
Attakullakulla led another large group to attack Fort Toulouse, located in present-day
Alabama.
In 1758 the Cherokee participated in the taking of
Fort Duquesne (present-day
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.) Feeling their effort unappreciated,
Kanagatucko, then the
leading chief of the Cherokee, ordered his warriors home. Later a contingent of Cherokee warriors (under
Moytoy of Citico) accompanied Virginian troops on a campaign against the
Shawnee of
Ohio Country. During the expedition, the enemy proved elusive. After several weeks, the
Tuscarora contingent left, while that of the Cherokee dwindled. The Cherokee and Virginians fell to fighting each other, with the Virginians' defeating the Cherokee, killing and scalping about 20 of them. Later, the Virginians claimed the scalps as those of Shawnees and collected bounties for them.
War
While some Cherokee leaders still called for peace, others led retaliatory raids on outlying pioneer settlements. The Cherokees finally declared open war against the British in 1759, fighting independently and not as allies of
France. A number of
Muskogee under Big Mortar moved up to Coosawatie, the original
Coosa chiefdom at the time of
de Soto. These people had long been French allies in support of the Cherokee pro-French faction at Great Tellico.
The governor of
South Carolina,
William Henry Lyttelton raised an army of 1,100 men and marched to confront the Lower Towns of the Cherokee, which quickly agreed to peace. Two Cherokee warriors accused of the murder of white settlers were turned over for execution. Twenty-nine chiefs given as hostages were imprisoned at Fort Prince George.
Governor Lyttleton returned to Charleston, but the Cherokee were still angry and continued to attack frontier settlements into 1760. In February of 1760, the Cherokees attacked Fort Prince George in an attempt to rescue their hostages. The fort's commander was killed. His replacement executed all of the hostages and fended off the attack. The Cherokee also attacked the town of
Fort Ninety Six, but it withstood the siege. Lesser posts in the South Carolina backcountry did fall to Cherokee raids.

Timberlake's "Draught of the Cherokee Country".
Governor Lyttleton appealed to
Jeffrey Amherst, the British commander in North America, who sent
Archibald Montgomerie with an army of 1,200 troops (
the Royal Scots and the
77th Regiment of Foot (Montgomerie's Highlanders)) to South Carolina. Montgomerie's campaign razed some of the Cherokee Lower Towns, including
Keowee. It ended with a defeat at Echoee (Itseyi) Pass when Montgomerie tried to enter the Middle Towns territory. Later in 1760, the
Overhill Cherokee defeated the British colonists at
Fort Loudoun (Tennessee) and took it over.
In 1761, Montgomerie was replaced by
James Grant. He led an army of 2,600 men, the largest force to enter the southern
Appalachians to date against the Cherokee. His army moved through the Lower Towns, defeated the Cherokee at Echoee Pass, and proceeded to raze about 15 Middle Towns, burning fields of crops along the way.
Treaties
In November 1761, the Cherokee signed a peace treaty with Virginia and another with South Carolina the following year. Lt.
Henry Timberlake, Sgt.
Thomas Sumter, an African slave, and the interpreter William Shorey traveled into the Overhills to deliver a copy of the treaty with Virginia to the Cherokee. Timberlake's diary and map of his journey (
see to the right of text), were published in 1765. His diary contained what historians assessed was an accurate description of Cherokee culture.
Pro-French Standing Turkey was deposed and replaced as First Beloved Man with pro-British Attakullakulla.
John Stuart became British Superintendent of Indian Affairs for the Southern District, out of Charlestown, South Carolina, and was the main contact of the Cherokee with the British government. His first deputy, Alexander Cameron, lived among them, first at Keowee, then at Toqua on the Little Tennessee, while his second deputy, John McDonald, set up a hundred miles to the southwest on the west side of Chickamauga River, where it was crossed by the
Great Indian Warpath.
During the war, a number of major Cherokee towns were destroyed by the army under British general
James Grant and never reoccupied, most notably
Kituwa, the inhabitants of which migrated west and took up residence at
Great Island Town on the
Little Tennessee River among the
Overhill Cherokee.
Aftermath
In the aftermath of the overall war,
Louisiana Territory east of the
Mississippi went to the British along with Canada, while Louisiana west of the Mississippi went to Spain; in return,
Florida went to Britain, which divided it into
East Florida and
West Florida.
After the conclusion of the treaties,
Henry Timberlake visited
London with three Cherokee leaders: Ostenaco, Standing Turkey, and Wood Pigeon (
Ata-wayi). The Cherokee visited the
Tower of London, met the playwright
Oliver Goldsmith, drew massive crowds, and had an audience with
King George III. On the way, their interpreter William Shorey died, making communication nearly impossible. Hearing of the Cherokees' warm welcome in London, South Carolinians viewed their reception as a sign of imperial favoritism at the colonists' expense, especially in view of the
Royal Proclamation of 1763 prohibiting settlement west of the
Appalachian Mountains, laying the foundation of one of the major irritants for the colonials leading to the Revolution.
See also