
RED
CONFEDERATES
The Cherokee Braves
General Stand Watie was born in the Oothcaloga Valley south of present-day
Calhoun, Ga. in 1806. His birth name was Tak-er-taw-ker meaning
"Stands Firm" and later Degadoga for "He Stands On
Two Feet". Baptized as Isaac he later combined a
portion of his
Cherokee name
with his father's name Oo-wat-ie to form Stand Watie in English.
Little is known of his early years in Georgia, he may have been
educated in Georgia mission schools that were set up to
Englishise the Cherokees. He was the brother of Buck Oowatie who
later took the name of Elias Boudinot and became a newspaper
editor, and the nephew of the prominent Cherokee Chief Major
Ridge.
The
Oowatie and Ridge families were two of the more prominent slave
owning aristocrat families of the Cherokees owning most of the
estimated 1600 owned by Cherokees. Those in the lower classes,
poorer than the Ridge and Oowatie factions tended to be less pro
slavery and were more traditionalist and less likely to favor a
move west from Georgia and the western Carolinas.
By 1820 one third of the
tribe moved west of the Mississippi River. Those who remained
began to split into factions. Those who favored fighting removal
to the west rallied behind John Ross, a Scottish Cherokee from
Tennessee. Ross had only one eighth Cherokee but considered them
to be his people over his white counterparts and was extremely
popular having support of the majority.
On the opposing side was
the Oowatie Ridge faction who believed that the lower classes of
the tribe would never make it in the white mans world, believing
that in years to come they would be decimated even lower to
drunkenness and poverty and that moving west was in the tribes
best interest.
In 1827 John Ross was
elected to lead and represented them in their first centralized
government to help them deal with the white world around them. By
1832 the rivalry between those of the Ross faction and the
Oowatie Ridge factions began to grow, and in the next few years
worsened. In 1835 it came to a head when the the Ridge faction
supported a treaty with Washington that would give the Cherokees
5 million dollars in return for their removal west of the
Mississippi. The Ross side refused to sign hoping to hold out for
at least 20 million. It was clear that no treaty would be made at
that time since the majority of Cherokees sided with the Ross
faction.
Then in December 1835 the
Ridge Oowatie faction managed to sign the Treaty at New Echota
Georgia receiving $15 million dollars and 800,000 acres of land
in Oklahoma for the Cherokees. They believed they had secured the
best terms possible in the best interest of the tribe while the
Ross followers considered it an act of treason against them.
The Trail of Tears
followed in 1838 with Federal and State militias enforcing the
removal. In 1839 the bitter animosity between the two tribes
remained in Oklahoma. A hundred or so Cherokees from anti treaty
faction met in secret and decided on death for the the Ridge and
Watie men. On June 22, 1839 John Ridge was dragged from his home
in Indian Territory and was stabbed to death. His father Major
Ridge was ambushed and killed in Washington County Arkansas.
Elias Boudinot the brother of Stand Watie was attacked at his
home and axed to death. Stand Watie also marked for death was
forewarned and escaped.
John Ross denounced the murders but did nothing in aiding the capture of the killers. He was accused of hiding them in his home by the now Watie faction while Ross denied involvement in the murders. President Andrew Jackson wrote to Stand Watie now the leader of the former Ridge Oowatie faction and denounced Ross. On March 7, 1862 Stand Watie was part of Earl Van Dorn's 16,000 man army in the area of Fayetteville Arkansas attempting to encircle the right flanks of Major General Curtis's 12,000 troops. Curtis was on the defensive entrenched at Pea Ridge about thirty miles northeast of Fayetteville. After two days of fighting Van Dorn was unable to penetrate and ended up withdrawing. Stand Watie had distiquished himself by leading his command in capturing a Union artillery battery and by committing a skillful rear guard action stopping a disaster.
It was here during this action that Stand Watie was noticed by his superiors for his bravery and exceptional military abilities, which got him considered for a higher command in the Confederate Army. The First Cherokee Mounted Rifles was formed on August 31, 1862 with Colonel Stand Watie commanding, with Lieutenant Colonel Calvin Parks second in command. This unit along with others adopted the Cherokee Braves flag as their regimental colours. After Pea Ridge many of the Cherokees left the war, but Stand Watie and his Cherokee Braves remained for the duration of the war scouring the region using guerilla warfare, cutting Union supply lines and disrupting Federal operations throughout the Indian Territory.
He was feared by his loyal Cherokee counterparts for the next three years. On May 10, 1864 he was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General, the only Native American to reach the rank of General. Along with this first, he was also the last Confederate General officer to formally cease hostilities two months after Appomattox and Bentonville. His formal agreement to end hostilities was issued on June 25, 1865 and like Col. Mosby of Virginia he never officially surrendered. Watie had displayed unfailing devotion and bravery during his service to the Confederacy. He died on September 9, 1871 and was laid to rest at Polson Cemetery in Delaware County, Oklahoma.
In 1995 the US postal Service issued a set of 20 commemorative stamps showing 16 individuals and 4 battles of the Civil War. General Stand Watie was one of those honored along with others such as Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee and Joseph Johnston.
10/19/04