
Gilder Lehrman Document Number:
GLC00782.11.01
Title: to William Rabun
Author: Jackson, Andrew (1767-1845)
Year: 1818/05/07
Place: Fort Gadsden, Florida
Type of document: Letter signed
Quotation: "The warriors of that village was with me
fighting the battles of our country"
Description: Asks that Rabun, governor
of Georgia, arrest for murder Captain Obediah Wright. Wright had destroyed a
Chehaw village and murdered several of its inhabitants, while many of its
members were aiding him in his expedition against the Seminole Indians during
the first Seminole War.
Full Text: Andrew Jackson. Letter signed: 7 miles outside
of Fort Gadsden, to Governor William Rabun, 1818 May 7. 2 p. Line? of march?
Pensacola, 7 miles outide of Fort Gadsden May 7th 1818 Sir, I have this moment
received by express the letter of Genl. Glascock, a copy of which is enclosed,
detailing the base, cowardly and inhuman attack on the old women and men of the
Chehaw Villages, whilst the warriors of that village was with me fighting the
battles of our country against the common enemy, and at a time too when
undoubted testimony had been obtained and was in my possession and also in the
posession of General Glascock, of their innocence of the charge of killing Leigh
& the other Georgian at Cedar Creek. That a Governor of a State should assume
the right to make war against an Indian tribe in perfect peace with and under
the protection of the United States; is assuming a responsibility, that I trust
you will be able to excuse to the government of the United States, to which you
will have to answer, and through which I had so recently passed, promising the
aged that remained at home my protection and taking the warriors with me on the
campaign is as unaccountable as strange. But it is still more strange that there
could exist within the U. States as cowardly monster in human shape, that could
violate the sanctity of a flag when borne by any person, but more particularly
when in the hands of a superannuated Indian chief worn down with age. Such base
cowardice and murderous conduct as this mans action affords has not its
paral[l]el in history, and shall meet with its merited punishment. You Sir as
Governor of a State within my Military Division have no right to give a military
order whilst I am in the field, and this being an open and violent infringement
of the treaty with the creek Indians[,] Capt. Wright must be prosecuted and
punished for this outrageous murder, & I have ordered him to be arrested and
confined in [2] irons until the pleasure of the President of the United States
is known upon the subject. If he has left Hartford before my order reaches him,
I call upon you as Governor of Georgia to aid in carrying into effect my orders
for his arrest and confinement, which I trust will be afforded, and Capt. Wright
brought to condign punishment for this unprecedented murder. It is strange that
this hero had not followed the trail of the murderers of your citizens, it would
have lead to Mickasooky, where we found the bleeding scalps of your Citizens,
but there might have been more danger in this; than attacking a village
containing a few superannuated women and men, and a few young women without arms
or protectors. This act will to the last ages fix a stain upon the character of
Georgia. I have the honor to be with due respect yr. [illegible] Andrew Jackson
Major Genl. comdg His Excellency William Rabun Gov. State of Georgia
Annotation: In December 1817, President James Monroe
authorized General Andrew Jackson to lead a punitive expedition against the
Seminole Indians in Florida, who used the Spanish colony as a jumping off point
for raids on settlements in Georgia. The Seminoles actually consisted of several
groups, including Muskogee-speaking Creek Indians, Mikawuki-speakers, and
fugitive slaves. Jackson was assisted in his Florida expedition by a Creek
people from southwestern Georgia known as the Chehaws. While Chehaw men had
fought in Florida, the Georgia state militia killed Chechaw villagers--an act
condemned by Jackson in the following letter. Acting on reports of attacks on
white settlers by other Creeks, the state militia, under Captain Obediah Wright,
attacked and burned a Chehaw village, killing at least seven Indians. Captain
Wright was eventually imprisoned for this attack, but later escaped and
disappeared. This fascinating document underscores the complexity of relations
between whites and Indians, the state and federal governments, and state militia
and national army authorities.
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