Native American Tribes
Interesting Facts & Legends from the...
(All information was obtained
from Reader's Digest "Through Indian Eyes")
If you would like for me to add anything
to this page, please contact me and let me know.
Catawba | Cayuga
| Cherokee | Cheyenne
Catawba
- Spoke Sioun language
- Lived east of the Appalachian Mountains
in the Carolina piedmont.
- Long before Columbus, Catawba women
were fashioning sturdy cookware and handsome ceremonial vessels; when the
English settled Charleston, the women bartered pots for metal tools, clothing,
and other necessities. In the 1860's the Catawba were confined to a tiny
reservation in South Carolina-which by chance contained the deposits of
distinctive reddish clay they had used for years. Pottery became a key
to their very survival.
Now as then, Catawba potters eschew kiln firing, modern glazes, and potter's
wheels. Using techniques handed down from mother to daughter for generations,
they build their vessels from clay coils, polish them with quartzite pebbles,
decorate them with ancient designs, and fire them on the hot coals of an
open fire. The resulting hard finish produces a metallic ring when tapped-the
echo of a well-tended tradition, still audible among the red clay hills
of South Carolina.
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Cayuga
- Occupied the inland forests that
skirted Lakes Ontario and Erie and lived in large fortified villages. They
moved from time to time, and they used fire to clear land for crops and
to keep the forests open, a practice that encouraged the growth of brushy
browse for deer and other animals.
- Shared a tradition of warfare that
centered on taking prisoners and either adopting them into the captor's
society or, more often, sacrificing them.
- Evidence that enemies raided each
other's towns regularly appears in distinctive pottery styles found at
different sites....The major Northeastern nations might have destroyed
each other in due course, but around the 15th century AD-dates and details
differ in tribal traditions-a peacemaker came among them, and rival Iroquois
tribes formed a political confederation.
- For more information, see Iroquois
as they were part of this nation.
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Cherokee
- For the Cherokee, gogi, the
warm season between April and October, was the time to travel, to make
war, to plant, and harvest. The cold, goga, from October to April,
was the time to collect nuts, to hunt for deer, black bears, wild turkeys
and other game, and to gather inside to tend the fires and retell the stories.
- spoke a form Iroquoian and inhabited
a large area west of the Appalachian Mountains.
- Tradition dictated the protocol
to be followed in dealings between humans and plants. The Cherokee and
others believed, for instance, that ginseng, an aromatic medicinal herb
that grew wild in the mountains, was a conscious being and that it could
make itself invisible to anyone unworthy of gathering it. The women who
went out searching for ginseng were thus instructed to show their respect
by leaving the first three plants they found untouched and, before digging
up the fourth, to say a prayer and place a small bead on the ground as
compensation to the plant's spirit.
- The Cherokee used a booger mask
during a riotous ceremonial dance that may have originated as a reenactment
of De Soto's invasion. Dancers wearing the masks ("booger" refers
loosely to any ghost or monster) burst loudly into the room and launch
a manic display of lewd, aggressive behavior that leaves no doubt about
the Cherokee's opinion of the celebrated conquistador.
- The Spaniards crossed the Blue
Ridge Mountains in May of 1540, encountering little hostility but also
finding few stockpiles of corn to steal. The area was controlled by people
whose descendants would be known as the Cherokee...and were related to
other Iroquoian tribes in the Northest. (One township visited by De Soto
was called Chalaque, similar to a Muskogean word meaning "people of
a different speech.")
- Cherokee medicine men squeezed
tobacco's juice on bee stings and snakebites and boiled its leaves into
tea as a cure for fever.
- The smallpox epidemic in 1738 hit
the Cherokee nation. Cherokee elders wondered if the smallpox epidemic
might be retribution for sins committed by some of the young people, and
had their shamans lead rituals of contrition to appease the offended spirit.
But such measures often failed, and when they did, some townspeople began
to question the power of their shamans.
- More than 300 years had passed
since the first Europeans stepped into the Southeast...Yet even those who
held fast to tribal identities were much changed from the ancestors who
had greeted the early white explorers....The Cherokee had their own written
language, thanks to the genius of Sequoyah, and their own newspaper, The
Cherokee Phoenix, with a readership reaching well beyond the tribal
homelands.
- No group succeeded more dramatically
in modernizing itself than the Cherokee. Taking new European ideas of republican
government and blending them with their own tradition of tribal councils,
progressive Cherokee leaders attempted to construct a model society. They
built a capital, New Echota, in Georgia (their original capital in Tennessee
having been lost by treaty), established a 32-member legislature, wrote
a constitution, and framed a judicial system.
But to the growing white majority on the western frontier, the presence
of any Indians at all, "civilized" or not, was unacceptable.
Every perceived failing was dredged up to discredit the Cherokee-including
the fact that they had sided with the British during the American Revolution.
(No matter that more recently, in the War of 1812, Cherokee warriors had
allied with Jackson to defeat the Red Sticks.) Meanwhile, white planters
and land speculators continued to pour in. Hungry for new acreage...they
relentlessly pressed the federal government to remove the Cherokee, along
with the other Southeastern tribes.
- In 1828 gold was discovered on
the edge of Cherokee territory, and the cries for removal reached a crescendo...later
that year...Andrew Jackson was elected president. He objected to the existence
of sovereign Indian nations within the boundaries of the United States.
He feared they might make their own alliances with Spain or England, which
still posed a real threat to America's national ambitions.
After a furious debate, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act of 1830
by one vote. The bill allowed the president to give the Five Civilized
Tribes land in Indian Territory, later named Oklahoma, in exchange for
the Southeastern lands they now occupied. That was the carrot. The stick
was a provision that the new law could be enforced, if necessary, with
military action.
- In their battles against removal,
the Cherokee were led by their principal chief, John Ross, the de facto
head of government at New Echota. He had fought on Jackson's side at Horseshoe
Bend. But Ross was adamant in opposing Jackson's removal plans: the Cherokee
were a sovereign nation, he argued, whose territory the federal and state
governments must respect. Ross gained the support of several prominent
white politicians, including Sen Henry Clay of Kentucky and the great Massachusetts
orator Daniel Webster. Yet he never succeeded in winning over all of his
own people.
- One of those who disagreed with
Ross was a Cherokee Council speaker called The Ridge...who believed it
was in the tribe's interest to negotiate with Washington, make the best
deal possible, and move west. Ridge had another motive as well-he wanted
to replace Ross as principal chief. In this he had the support of his son,
John; his brilliant cousin, Elias Boudinot, editor of The Cherokee Phoenix;
and Boudinot's brother, Stand Watie. The "Ridge Faction", as
it was known, inspired little enthusiasm from the rest of the tribe; only
a few hundred favored accommodation.
- When the Supreme Court handed down
its verdict, the result at first seemed ambiguous. In Cherokee Nation
v. Georgia (1831), Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that Indian tribes
were "domestic dependent nations"-wards of the federal government,
in effect, with no right to file suit. Then in a second case (Worcester
v. Georgia), the court held for the Cherokee, declaring them to be
"a distinct community, occupying its territory," which the people
of Georgia had no right to enter without Cherokee consent. But President
Jackson simply sneered at it, "John Marshall has made his decision.
Now let him enforce it."
- Government negotiators soon began
talks with the Ridge Faction and its supporters. In 1835, at the New Echota,
Ridge and a group of several hundred supporters agreed to trade the remaining
Cherokee lands for territory west of the Mississippi. Remembering a Cherokee
law of 1829 that decreed death to anyone selling land without the consent
of all Cherokee people, Ridge grimly remarked, "With this treaty,
I sign my death warrant." Four years later Ridge, his son, and Elias
Boudinot were put to death for their actions. On June 22, 1839, they were
stabbed to death by unknown assailants. Amnesty was subsequently granted
to others who signed-and to the unidentified executioners.
But the treaty of New Echota-which was never approved by the Cherokee Nation
nor by John Ross nor by anyone seriously considered a leader-was ratified
by the US Senate and became the legal basis for exiling the Cherokee
people.
- To force compliance with the illegal
Treaty of New Echota, the US government sent more than 7,000 troops
into Cherokee country; state militias swelled the army of occupation to
more than 9,000 men. The soldiers built stockades in key locations and
in late May of 1838 began to fill them with ordinary people pulled from
their homes.
Years later an eyewitness remembered the scene: "Families at dinner
were startled by the sudden gleam of bayonets in the doorway and rose up
to be driven with blows and oaths along the trail that led to the stockade."
Individuals were seized "in their fields or going along the road,
women were taken from their spinning wheels and children from their play."
As soon as soldiers removed the Indians, local whites rushed in, ransacking
their abandoned homes and stealing anything of value. Searching for Cherokee
gold that was rumored to have been hidden, white mobs feverishly ripped
apart burial grounds and opened old coffins, tossing aside the sacred remains
of Cherokee ancestors. Within a single month more than 8,000 Cherokees
had been rounded up and herded into the stockades. Only one small group
managed to escape the soldiers; they took refuge deep in the North Carolina
mountains, where their desendants remain today.
- Drought struck the Southeast, drying
up wells and streams and destroying crops. Cholera and dysentery broke
out in the stockades. Watching their people die, Cherokee leaders negotiated
an agreement that allowed them to control their own removal. As the long
caravans began to move toward Oklahoma, the emigrants were already running
short of food and supplies.
Tuberculosis, pellagra, pneumonia, and other diseases stalked the wagon
trains. Of the 16,000 men, women, and children forced to relocate, more
than 4,000 died either in the stockades or on the way west. The tragedy
of the removal still lingers in the memory of the Cherokee. They call it
oosti ganuhnuh dunaclohiluh, "the trail where they cried."
- The Cherokee laid out a new capital,
Tahlequah, and revived their constitution. Ross won reelection as principal
chief. A public school system was in operation by 1841. The Cherokee
Advocate, the first newspaper in Indian Territory appeared in 1844
and was soon joined by publications from other tribes.
- The 1893 opening of Cherokee land
in Indian Territory to white settlement triggered a stampede that left
several would-be-settlers dead. Seven such events added 14 million acres
of "surplus" tribal lands to what became the state of Oklahoma.
- An unforeseen consequence of the
Dawes Commission's work is that in Oklahoma today there are no Indian reservations
such as exist in states to the north and west of it. Yet Oklahoma boasts
the largest Native American population in the US-more than 250,000. About
120,000 of those are Cherokee, which ranks not only as the largest tribe
in Oklahoma but-with almost 310,000 people nationwide identifying themselves
as Cherokee in the 1990 census-the largest in the United States and Canada.
- In early 1994, the University of
Tennessee repatriated 190 sets of Cherokee remains disinterred during a
Tennessee Valley Authority dam construction.
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Cheyenne
- Bear Butte, just northeast of the
Black Hills racetrack, is a sacred place, mato paha. The Cheyenne
say their prophet Sweet Medicine was given the tribe's sacred icon of four
arrows. And it was here that the Cheyenne, starving at the time were given
the gift of the Sun Dance so that they might yearly renew the world, its
game, and its bountiful nature.
- For the Cheyenne, the role of peace
chief-charged with handling problems within the tribe-offered the highest
degrees of prestige and responsiblity. Men were chosen to join the "council
of 44" peace chiefs for a 10-year term of office. During that time
a chief was expected to be generous to the poor, to behave as a wise father
to every tribal member, and to resolve disputes with a tenderhearted yet
decisive manner.
- Among the Cheyenne and other Plains
tribes, artison "guilds" controlled the production of all quillwork
and beadwork. Members controlled the highly specialized knowledge needed
for certain techniques, and instruction required payment. Those women who
were fortunate enough to possess such knowledge were paid well for their
creations. A quilled robe made by a member of a quilling society, for example,
could easily be traded for a pony from the Arapaho or the Mandan-Hidatsa.
The Cheyenne's quilling society offered graded memberships, based on the
particular item that the woman had learned how to make. Ascending in order,
there were membership divisions for the moccasins, baby cradles; stars
for ornamenting lodges; buffalo robes; and lodge linings, back rests and
parfleches.
- Some of the best-known women warriors
were members of the Cheyenne tribe. Perhaps the most illustrious woman
warrior was Buffalo Calf Woman, sister of the distinguished Cheyenne warrior
Chief Comes in Sight. In the early summer of 1876, Buffalo Calf Woman rescued
her wounded brother from a battlefield where he had fallen. Had it not
been for her courage, Chief Comes in Sight almost certainly would have
died that day. The high esteem in which the Cheyenne held her is evidenced
by the fact that the fight became known as "Where the Girl Saved her
Brother."
- Another Cheyenne woman who fought
in battle was Island Woman, wife of White Frog. While taking part in an
attack on the Pawnee, Island Woman was charged by a hatchet-wielding Pawnee
warior. She reputedly wrenched the hatchet from her assailant's hand, knocking
the Pawnee from his horse.
- Of all the Plains' manly-hearted
women, the most ruthless may have been Ehyophsta, better known as Yellow-Haired
Woman. The daughter of Cheyenne Chief Stands in Timber and the niece of
the old Bad Faced Bull, Ehyophsta fought not only in the battle of Beecher's
Island in 1867 but also during the battle between the Cheyenne and the
Shoshone the following year, when she counted coup on one enemy and killed
another. One of the last Cheyenne fighting women, Yellow-Haired Woman died
in 1915.
- Some historians suggest that the
Sun Dance appeared around 1700, possibly originating with the Cheyenne.
To the Plains Indians, however, the ceremony was ageless-a divine gift
from the supernatural world. To the Cheyenne, it was known as the New Life
Lodge. It was a world-renewal ritual, and the altar featured elements that
reminded them of their agricultural heritage.
- In 1825, Brig. Gen. Henry Atkinson
and Indian agent Benjamin O'Fallon sought out chiefs for negotiating treaties
concerning trade and friendship. In early July, Atkinson's party intercepted
the Cheyenne at their base camp near the Black Hills. An Atkinson aide
described the 15 Cheyenne leaders who convened with the general as "decidely
the finest-looking Indians we have seen." These 15 individuals willingly
put their thumbprints to a document acknowledging US political and commercial
authority over their region. But they represented only one of the tribe's
10 bands; they were only 15 out of an estimated 3,000 Cheyenne. As would
happen time and again in Indian-white frontier diplomacy, what US officials
considered a legally binding agreement, the great majority of Indians neither
understood nor accepted.
- The Cheyenne and the Arapaho made
peace in 1840; the same year the Kiowa and the Comanche, who had stopped
fighting each other in 1790, forged a potent alliance. For the next quarter
century the swift horsemen and stealthy warriors of these southern tribes
descended like hawks on the slow-moving pack trains along the Santa Fe
Trail and also launched regular rustling forays against the cattle ranches
that were proliferating in western Texas and eastern New Mexico. At first
these depredations brought new wealth into their tepee circles-silver to
be beaten into ornaments, mirrors for dance regalia and silent signaling
between war parties, and an occasional Mexican or fair-haired Anglo child
as an adopted member of the family.
However...in the summer of 1849, a party of Cheyenne horse raiders returning
home stopped at a wagon-train camp in the Platte River valley. By the time
their leader saw the white gold-rushers dying of cholera, it was too late:
water supplies for the Cheyenne campsites had already been contaminated,
and the agonizing disease soon killed most of their inhabitants.
- In the early to mid 1800's, the
times were changing, and many Plains Indians read the signs with foreboding.
One was a Southern Cheyenne war leader name Yellow Wolf. In August 1846
his buffalo-hide tepee was pitched beside William Bent's trading post,
an important stopover on the Santa Fe Trail. Recuperating from an illness
at the post was Lt JJ Abert of the US Army, who was about to travel to
Pueblo country for the government. Struck by the 60-year-old warrior's
engaging intelligence, Abert recorded Yellow Wolf's thoughts in his private
journal. The Indian observed that buffalo were harder to find and confided
a deeper fear that unless his people adopted the white man's ways and found
some alternative to their hunting way of life, they would disappear forever.
In fact, another 40 years of Indian rebellion still lay ahead-years of
whole tribes removed and resettled, of pitched battles and pitiless massacres
and violent deaths of many good-hearted Indians like Yellow Wolf, who fell
at the age of 85.
- Just as the exile at Bosque Redondo
was beginning for the Navajo, an incident took place in Colorado that sent
shock waves across the country. No sooner had gold turned up along Cherry
Creek in 1858 than the city of Denver was born. The eastern flanks of the
Colorado Rockies were soon dotted with mining camps....By 1864 the attraction
of Montana's goldfields had expanded the territory's population by 30,000
new settlers. In the face of this rampant growth, it was only a matter
of time before conflict erupted.
The pretext was supplied in Denver, where the slain bodies of a miner's
family were laid out for public viewing as evidence of Indian savagery.
It was unclear who had actually killed them-but no matter. A force of some
700 "Colorado militia," hastily recruited from local gambling
halls and ranches, set out to teach the Indians a lesson. Just after sunrise
on December 28, 1864, the ragtag troops, led by a former clergyman, Col.
John M. Chivington, found a quiet encampment of Cheyenne and Arapaho families
along Sand Creek. Here they had set up their tepees as ordered by a post
commander at Ft Lyon, to whom they had surrendered two months earlier.
The leader at Sand Creek was the Cheyenne peace chief Black Kettle. In
a matter of minutes Chivington delivered his infamous battle cry-"Kill
them all, big and small, nits make lice"-and his men attacked.
"I saw the bodies of those lying there cut all to pieces," an
eyewitness later testified, "worse mutilated than any I ever saw before,
the women all cut to pieces...children two or three months old; all ages
lying there, from sucking infants up to warriors." Of 123 dead, nearly
100 were women and children. "Colorado Soldiers Have Again Covered
Themselves With Glory," headlined the Denver News, Indian scalps
were proudly displayed at a local theater. The outcry came from settlers
throughout the West to get tough on Indians, with most of the nation's
military establishment in hearty agreement.
At the same time, calls for peace and compassion were heard from abolitionist
groups... Liberal-minded citizens in the East-who, angry Westerners pointed
out, were comfortably distant from the realities of frontier life-demanded
an inquiry into the events at Sand Creek. At length the government acted:
In 1865 a congressional team headed by Sen. James Doolittle of WI was dispatched
to interview Indians, traders, and missionaries across the West. Its goals
were to establish who was to blame for Sand Creek and to determine why
the populations on reservations such as Bosque Redondo were declining so
rapidly.
The commission's final report recommended no action against Chivington
or his men. It did cite such factors as disease, lawlessness by whites,
corruption by Indian agents, and the loss of hunting grounds as causes
in Indian depopulation-but offered no relief for the general "Indian
problem," which it concluded, "can never be remedied until the
Indian race is civilized or shall entirely disappear."
- In October 1867, the US government
and the Plains Indians held the last major peace treaty negotiations. The
first meeting took place in the valley of Medicine Lodge Creek in Kansas.
The final Medicine Lodge Creek treaty created two large reservations in
Indian Territory-one for the Kiowa and Comanche in the Leased District,
and one for the Cheyenne and Arapaho in the Cherokee Outlet-for the containment
and pacification of these southern tribes.
- In the late summer of 1868, Cheyenne
war parties wreaked havoc on some 40 white communities over a two month
period, killing at least 79 settlers and kidnapping a number of children.
In response, Gen Philip Sheridan ordered an ambitious lieutenant colonel
of the 7th Calvary, George Armstrong Custer, to lead a surprise attack
against a Cheyenne encampment on Oklahoma's Washita River.
On the morning of November 27, 1868, for the second time in his life, the
peace chief Black Kettle noticed furious soldiers descending on his camp.
He had survived Sand Creek; he did not survive Washita. Custer's take-no-prisoners
policy resulted in 103 Cheyennes being shot to death-including Black Kettle
and his wife, killed riding along the ice-encrusted river in a desperate
attempt to flee. All the Cheyennes' horses were shot to inhibit the survivors'
movements and to destroy their emergency food supply. Some would later
call the engagement Custer's First Stand. The Cheyenne never forgot it.
- In the summer of 1876, Gen Philip Sheridan proposed to
confront the Indian hostiles-composed of Sioux, Cheyenne, And Araphao-from
three directions. His three army columns, amounting to about 2,500 men,
would include Gen Alfred Terry and Col George Custer coming in from the
east, Gen George Crook entering from the south, and Gen John Gibbon striking
from the west.
Coming upon the Indian camp at Rosebud Creek on June 17, Crook abruptly
discovered that their numbers had been disastrously underestimated. For
6 hours his troops faced waves of attacks by well-armed warriors before
he ordered a retreat. Meanwhile, other tribal groups were filtering into
the area they knew as the Greasy Grass (and whites called the Little Bighorn
River). More than 7,000 people in all camped in six great tepee circles,
including 1,800 warriors....
Out of touch with Crook, Custer led a detachment of the 7th Calvary toward
the Little Bighorn. Unaware that he was approaching the largest fighting
force ever assembled on the Plains, Custer made an impulsive and fatal
decision. Dividing his troops-about 210 men-into three attacking groups,
he positioned them on a ridge above the camp.
A warrior named Wooden Leg remembered being awakened by the crack of gunfire.
Stripping for the fight and leaping onto his favorite war pony, he and
his friend Little Bird took off after a fleeing soldier. 'We were lashing
him with our pony whips. It seemed not brave to shoot him. He pointed back
his revolver, though, and sent a bullet into Little Bird's thigh. As I
was getting possession of his weapon, he fell to the ground. I do not know
what became of him.'
In the course of an hour, Custer and every one of his men perished; only
a horse name Comanche, belonging to one of Custer's captains was left alive.
The victors promptly withdrew, most heading up the Little Bighorn Valley-where
they held a great celebration below the mouth of Lodge Grass Creek.
- Only four months after the victory over Custer, a group
of Northern Cheyennes led by Little Wolf and Dull Knife had their village
destroyed and hundreds of their horses shot by US troops. Accused
of involvement at the Little Bighorn, they were deported by train to the
Southern Cheyenne Agency in Indian Territory. But these lifelong inhabitants
of the northern Plains hated this strange, oppressively humid place and
waited for a chance to escape. In September 1878 about 300 of them began
a 1,500 mile run for freedom.
For four months they managed to elude more than 10,000 pursuing troops,
until at the Platte River a dispute over strategy led to a split up. Little
Wolf's group surrendered soon afterward at the Little Missouri River and,
ironically, was shortly hired as army scouts on the Tongue River Reservation.
Dull Knife's followers did not fare so well. Captured near Nebraska's Red
Cloud Agency, they were locked in an unheated brig at Ft Robinson in the
dead of winter. When the desperate prisoners attempted a breakout, 64 were
killed and 78 recaptured. But the 30 or so survivors who remained free
were eventually allowed to return to the Rosebud Valley, where their descendants
still live today.
*Please see "The Cheyenne Woman Iron Teeth
Remembers the Great Escape" on my home page for a recount from the
Northern Cheyenne woman who lived through the suffering endured after the
escape.
- By the 1860's Plains Indians were beginning to preserve
their stories on the pages of ledger books acquired from whites. Ink, pencils,
and watercolors on paper were easier media than the stick and bone brushes
on hide previously employed.
- In early 1994, at Busby, MN, tribespeople turned out
in force to reclaim and provide a proper burial for the skulls of 24 Cheyennes
killed in 1878 while trying to escape from Ft Robinson, NE. The skulls
had rested for more than a century at three Eastern museums. Now finally,
they reached the destination the fugitives had been seeking.
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