.C5C5 Mi ^mm '-* v^ %«* "^ • ^^ ^^ "^^ '. "*>. ^^•V, •^, "^^ 6^ : '^ A '^^O^ ,-f- •^""^ ^>^^^^ ,V^\. ^^^i5^.* ,'^ -n-o^ .-^^x. - - -^^.V^^v '^ I ^/ ^^ .* ' .0' '*'- ■n,.o< ft' ^o. ^^•n^ >^V .^^ i.'^ ■<<. .1-' .0^ -o, . . . , , •' ,0' 6 .-l^^ .•v.'-. *-(■ c° .'"■.'•. < \ >'. .<•■ o r ** '■^0^ s.-*"-. ,0^ c " ■■ " « 4- o' t • • > 4 O A .V t* ,_ .^Jgif;^ ./"^ . '^iyi^^ ,/'X '-S«^>*' . ^ ^ 'J-^ ^°--^ .:.OT^. V -^ K?' X •*, .0^ K E P L Y Delegates of the Cherokee Nation TO TlIK DEMANDS OF THE COMMISSIONER OF INDIAN AFFAIRS. Mlay, 18GG. WASHINGTON: GIBSON BROTHERS, PRINTERS. 186(5. O'^c^ c REPLY OF THE DELEGATION Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Washington City, May 12, 186fi. Hon. D. N. Cooley. Commissioner of Indian Affaiis : Sir — The undersigued, Delegates of the Cherokee Natioii, have duly considered the nine several propositions submitted to us by you yesterday, with the statement that unless we acceded substantially to all of them you would decline to make a treaty Nvith our people, but would recommend the President to seek the accomplishment of the purposes in them expressed in some other mode ; whether by act of Congress in violation of our treaties, or by a more direct mode of superior force, yuu did not say. Sincerely desirous of settling, at this time, all subjects requiring fresli treaty stipulations with the Government, and of yielding to it whatever may be proper for our people to concede, we regret that some of these propositions are such as to debar us from assenting to them. The propositions you make as to general amnesty, restora- tion of confiscated property, civil rights, and political privi- leges to disloyal Cherokees, have long since been agreed to in writing by us ; as also the proposition for the sale of the eight hundred thousand acres of neutral lands in Kansas ; and the reception as citizens of all Oherokees in North Carolina and other States. Your proposition " that we will deal as liberally with the t'reedmen as the Choctaws and Chickasaws have done," inas- much as we have no knowledge of the provisions made by those tribes for their freedmen. is to our mind somewhat obscure. But as to that, we may say that, as our Legislature passed the first law of emancipation of this century, and as we have rei)eatedly proposed to you and the Secretary of the Interior to make most liberal provision for our iVeednieu in huids and school funds, we have no doubt that any arrange- ment the Government would ask for their benefit would be freely conceded by us. Therefore, on five out of nine of tiie propositions of your ultimatum, there was, when y<'U made it, no substantial disagreement. As nur protracted efforts to make a treaty have failed because of your demanding our assent to the other four j)ropositions, we will present them verbafiin, witli our reasons for refusing assent, so that there may be no misaj)j)re]ien8ion now or hereafter on the subject. They are : 1st. '• Right of way to railroads east and west, north and south, irifh Uheral grants of lands." Tile country west of the ninty-seventh ilegree, W. longi- tude, and the Cherokee " neutral lands," (botli which tracts comprise about nine millions of acres,) wliiili we have agreed t<» cede to the (iovernmcnt on the terms jireserihed by the Secretary of the Interior, may, wiien ceded, be disposed o{ by it in aid nf railroads, if it see fit. Through the country proposed to Ite reserved l»y us. Iieing Jil)out Hcvcn miliidns ut' acres east of the ninty-seventh th-gree of hmgitudc in the lii give right <»f way and grounds for depots, maihine shops, cVc, to rail- roads, from north to .s..uth and east to west. If we were to make the grants of alternate sections for five miles on each side of each road, with a compensatory grant to supply deficiencies reaching for ten miles on each side, as heretofore proposed hy you, a tide of white population would set in upon us, which would begin by settlement on these railroad lands, be followed by disturbances with our people and col- lisions with our national authorities, and probably end by forcing ns from a country conveyed to us by patent in fee simple by the Government — guaranteed to us as a permanent refuge from incursions like those which forced us from our homes in the States — endeared to us by thirty years of toil, and by the blood of our people shed in defence of it and the Union — and beyond which, westward, there is no abiding place for our people. While our views as to the dangers of such grants preclude us from making a treaty by which they are given, we have expressly consented to provide in the treaty that our National Council may at any time have power to make such grants : so that, if on full consideration our people consent to make them, no new treaty will be necessary to effect the object. We are not insensible to the fact that the great highways of commerce which may touch our country must be allowed free passage through it. But we wholly fail to see how it comports with the duties of the Guardian of our interests to demand that we make a gift of more than a million acres of our land to private companies, without consultation with our people, and at the hazard of national security. If the Secre- tary of the Interior now demands this, as you report, he has entirely changed his views since our interview with him a few weeks ago, when he advised us to make no grants to railroads, except right of way ; and stated the evil eifects of such grants with quite as much emphasis as we have here set them forth. 6 2d. "A Territorial (.iuvermuent nut inconsistent with Senate Bill No. 459, 38tli Congress.'" We hiiVL- expressly ^iven uur assent t«i the estahlishiaent uf a Territorial Council, eoiupused of representatives of the several tribes in the Indian Territory, with powers of legis- lation on inter-tribal atiairs, and with snch other powers as the several tribes may grant, subject to the approval vi' the President; and also to the establishment of United States courts in our cniuitry. This is as far as the Secretary of the Interior ever re«inested us to go; and, in our judgment, it is far enough. Our peoj)le f<*ar that tin; establishment of a territorial government as proposed in .Mr. Harlan's bill — placing us, as it will, to a gre-at extent, under the rule of white men in the enactment and administration of local laws, will soon learesent as tlic altirnative of refusal. !{d. " Purchase of the territory west of ninety-five and a half degrees, iuchnli'ff in pntnit nf kciuh millions nf (tcrts, at a lair jiricf." The treaty ot' \s'A7) M.ld (.. the Cherokee Nation nnt onlv the eight hundred thousand acres of neutral land, ami the »cven millionH of acres referred to in ytiur j)roj)osition, but alHo "a perpetual outlet west, and thf frrc tntd miniohsfcd iitic (ij III! tilt / ams^ us fur west as the sovereignty of the United States and their right of soil extends," — reserving only to the United States the right to allow other Indians to take salt from the salt plain in the country west. And in pursuance of an express provision of that treaty, letters patent were issued to the Nation for tlie neutral lands, tlie seven millions of acres extending a little beyond the ninety-seventh degree of longitude, and about eight millions of acres west of the seven millions, witli no reservation other than tliat as to the use of the salt plain. Your proposition ignores tlie title of the Nation in the eight millions of acres west of the seven millions; and, taken in connection with your oral declaration that the Nation have no title to it, clearly shows that you mean to take it without compensation. Knowing that tlie tract of eight millions is ours, by a title in perpetuity, as exclusive (except as to the use of the salt plain) as any of our land ; and that it was sold us, as was all our land, (except the neutral tract) at a price far beyond its present value, we will never consent to its being thus wrested from us. As to the sale of that part of the seven millions west of ninety-five and a half, we have to say that it was not the expectation of our people when we came here, that we would be asked to cede as much as we have already offered, to wit : "the neutral land," and all west of the ninety-seventh degree of longitude. In proposing to cede more than half our land, we go as far as duty and foirness to the peoi)le we represent will permit. We have been told that the United States may need all the country west of ninety-five and a half degrees for the settlement thereon of other Indian tribes. We have therefore already proposed to receive into that country, between ninety-five and a half and ninety-seven, other civilized and tViemlly trihcs. and let thciu have it parct'lkMl out into n-sorva- tions for tlieexclusivcaiul in-rpetual (iccuiiatiuiKit'sufh tribes — lettinjr them retain their tribal hiws and usa.ires not inconsist- ••nt with National laws — »jivinur lands — on their ctiMtrihutin^ to our National and fducational fumls sueli lair t'i|uivalent as we mi^'ht mutually a^^ree on, or as the President mi;^ht pre- scrilie. The (Jherokees live under a written Constitution — have annual sessions of a Natitmal Tie;j:islature, whose laws are jirintcd and puldisht'd and known to the ])eople — have District and Supreme Courts to exjtound ani have said to us that it" the tribes in Kansas, none ot" whom liavr a written coiie «»t" laws, or an efficient tbrm of ;^ovt'rnment . would confederate with us on the terms proposi'd, it wotiM be ^'rratly to their advantage. We have reason to believe that several tribes would thus join US, and have asked time to consult and arrange with them to that end. Hut you will be satislied with nothing but an abso- lute cession. "U' seizure, of three-t'ourthv ofoui- land - -not being willini; even to take tlie linlt' wehavr olfcred on your own terms, and leave the 'piestion ot I'urther i^essiuns to our National LegiKlature. Having endeavored earnestly to satisfy you by every concession which our duty will per- mit. We lire i-oiM|ie||ed therelorc to leave the result to the MCHHe <»f jUMtice ot t he |'ri'sidei\t and ('oiiirress. 9 4th. '• A j)romise that the Cherokees (Northern) have a '' country north of the Arkansas and on tlie east part of the " Cherokee country (east of the Grand, heh)w Ross' Ford, and " so far west above that line extending to north line of Indian "country) equal to three hundred and twenty acres to each "man, woman and child, (Cherokee,) and eighty acres for " each person of color, (formerly a slave to any Cherokee,) who " may remain in said country. " Such Cherokees as may, on account of former feuds and " difficulties as now exist in said Nation, and who now reside " in the Canadian District, and west of Grand River, and east " of ninety-five and a half W. L., and such as go into said "District to reside, within one year, shall have for his or " their use one hundred and sixty acres for each Cherokee so "residing in said District, and eighty acres for each freed- " man so therein who was the former slave of any such "Cherokee, and such Cherokees, so removing into said "District shall have their pro rata share of the school "funds, equal right to participate in the benefits of the "academies and seminaries in the Cherokee Nation, and "their equitable proportion of all the funds of said Na- " tion — and while they so remain in said separate terri- " tory, the Cherokee National authorities shall not have local "jurisdiction over them, but so far as their dealing with the " United States, they shall be considered and treated as part "of the Cherokee Nation, and in case the two bands of "Cherokees shall hereafter so determine, they shall be re- "' united. "A census of the Cherokees in the Nation, and those "outside, in the districts above, shall be taken within one "year, under the direction of the United States Agent. "The improvements of those now in tlie districts above 10 " belonging to such Cherokees as may witliin one year desire "to return to the Cherokee country east of the Grand and west '*of the Arkansas, shall Le paid for hy tliose going into said " district.'" You are aware that the Cherokees have for many years maintained a regular government as a civilized nation — a " domestic dependent Nation," it is true — hut still, a Nation. Its polity has commended itself to all good men hy its emi- nent success in preserving public order, protecting life and property, and elevating its people in intelligence and morality. And it has the solemn guaranty of the United States Govern- ment to j)reserve it when threatened by invasion or laction. A few factious men, who were among the instigators of the rebellion, and the crudest t>f its frontier leaders, fear or jtretend to fear, to return among our people, and demand that the Nation shall be 8])lit in two — the loyal forming one nation, the disloyal another — and its lands and moneys parcel- led between them. It would be sufticient for us to say in re- sponse that the government which sent us here conferred on us n<» powers for its own destruction; and that the loyal Cherokees, who comprise three-fourths of the j)eople, and who sent three thousand soldiers to fight for the integrity of the Federal Union and of the Cherokee Nation, will never consent, now that the Union has been ])reserved, that their Nation — older than the [•'rdfral Union — shall bo by Union men dismembered. Vou inf(»rm us tliat General Stand Waitie, Colonel Fields, Colonel Ahitiim of tlir Xatiinutl f.ir/inlatiirr tn trritt I'il/i tltr I'liitiil Sfdtrs (if to t/if nff'ui'rs <>f' t/ir ('htmlciu' Xntiov. f- (] 1^^ /" r^ '■ .0 ,-&■ . 0' 'b V^ .0 O^ * o . vO C *^m: /.'j^'!^*-. .0*. ^°-n^. :>i't %.^ ti, -""'' aO V "^ .V °^ ' •0 t- J^,^, ° A C, sP ."J^- , « o '\_,^°',:>^->....^ ** .■°-- ^0■ ''^^^^ y 0* '^-^