INDIANS
MEMORIAL.
To the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States in Congress Assembled
The memorial of Citizens of Massachusetts, residing in all parts of the
Commonwealth, convened by public notice, and afterwards by adjournment, in the
Hall of the House of Representatives in Boston, respectfully represents:
That your Memorialists feel impelled, by the most solemn and weighty
considerations, to address the National Legislature, on a subject of general
interest, which seems likely to affect the character of our country and its
government, not only during the present generation, but through all future time.
We refer to the claims of the Cherokee Indians, and of other Indian nations
in a similar condition, and to the guaranty which these nations have received
from the government of the United States.
Your Memorialists perceive, that the interposition of citizens remote
from the Indian territory is a subject of complaint. It must be obvious,
however, that the people, in every part of the Union, may properly feel great
solicitude respecting the preservation of our national character, and the performance
of the duties of justice and humanity to the weak and defenseless tribes upon
our borders. These are topics of general concern, and should be wholly
separated from questions of local interest, and ever changing political parties.
We stand on the broad ground of principle; and would act from an unbiased regard
to the national welfare and the happiness of mankind; disclaiming all intention
of interfering with matters, which do not properly belong to us, and all
prejudice against the rights or interest of any State, or States, in the Union.
The territory of the four south-western tribes of Indians lies within
what are called the chartered limits of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee,
and North Carolina. The portion in the two last named, is small.
For the sake of distinctness, and to avoid unnecessary prolixity, your Memorialists
would ask the attention of Congress to the case of the Cherokees especially;
though the same principles, with immaterial variations, will apply to other
Indian communities.
The Cherokee Nation of Indians is a distinct community yet remaining
of the numerous original inhabitants of this continent. At the first settlement
of the Southern States, these natives were found in possession of the lands,
which they now occupy. We need not here agitate the question, whether
civilized men may appropriate to themselves a newly discovered country, unoccupied
except by the occasional visits of migratory hunters. It does not appear
that the Cherokees were ever migratory people. They doubtless made excursions
for the purpose of hunting, but they always had a home, and that home, from
time immemorial has been the same which they now possess. From their own
country they excluded all persons but themselves. In this situation were
they found by the first settlers of Georgia.
The immemorial occupancy, which has been thus briefly described gives
the Cherokees as your Memorialists conceive, a perfect right to a continued
occupancy of their country, so along as they please. In other words, it
is a perfect title, and the best of titles, to their country, involving both
the right of continued occupancy and of self government.
Though the claim, as a consequence of discovery by Europeans, were much
stronger and clearer than it is, still the assertion of such a claim must be
precluded whenever the discoverers shall have agreed upon a line of demarkation
between themselves and the original inhabitants. Such a line was in fact
agreed upon, between the first settlers of Georgia and the natives; and from
that moment the whites were bound not to trespass upon the territory beyond
the line.
During the half century that elapsed between the settlement of Georgia,
& the peace of 1783, the colony of Georgia, with the consent and approbation
of the English government, entered into successive treaties with the Creeks
and Cherokees, in all which negotiations, the whites and the Indians were regarded
as equally free and independent. The most common subjects of these treaties,
were the purchase of land, the establishment of limits, the reparation of injuries
committed in open war, and the restoration of prisoners captured by previous
hostilities. In all these transactions the Indians were called nations.
Their government, vested in chiefs, was considered as being legitimate, and
as always in existence; and their territorial rights were expressly and solemnly
recognized.
At the close of the Revolutionary War, Georgia, as an independent State,
entered into new treaties with the Creeks and Cherokees, by which territorial
limits were again fixed; and the fixing of such limits seems to your Memorialists
an admission, that each party had no claim to land, thus left in the possession
of the other.
In the year 1785, the Confederated States of North America made a treaty
with the Cherokees, agreeing upon the national limits, exchanging the prisoners
of war, providing for the apprehension and punishment of criminals, and making
such other arrangements, as are usual in treaties of peace, between nations
of Europe. It is a fact worthy of notice, that in this first treaty made
between the United States, and the Cherokees, the latter are not only called
and considered as being a nation; but they actually exercise every one of the
powers which we had enumerated, in the Declaration of Independence, as the highest
attributes of national sovereignty.
By the federal Constitution, the treaty making power was vested in the
President and Senate of the United States, and the several States were inhibited
from exercising it.- Soon after the constitution went into operation,
the first President of the United States with the aid of his very able cabinet,
& with the sanction of a Senate, more than one third of whose members
were members of the Convention that formed the Constitution, laid the foundation
of our present relations with the Indians. In no part of his administration
are the proofs of his wisdom and circumspection more apparent. The Indian
communities residing within the limits of the peace of 1783, were implicitly
admitted to be distinct communities and the territory of the Indians was described
as belonging to them, and as not being under the jurisdiction of the legislative
or judicial functions of the United States. The Indians placed themselves
under the protection of the United States and became dependent allies.
They consented that the United States should regulate their trade and engaged
that they would not make treaties with foreign powers or with separate States
of the Union or with individuals of one State. They ceded a portion of
their territory and received a compensation for it. All these grants on
the part of the Indians were manifestly for their own advantage, as well as
for the advantage of the Unites States, and they were doubtless urged to make
them, and did make them from considerations of mutual benefit. The United
States, on their part solemnly guaranteed to the Indian nations, all their lands,
not ceded by the same instruments; and engaged to punish whites who should disturb
the peace of the Indians. All animosities were to cease and, in the language
of the treaties these compacts were to be executed with all good faith and sincerity."
The treaties were in fact thus executed by both parties and formed the
rule of intercourse between the United States and the Cherokees, during nearly
fifty years without a single act of hostility, or bad neighborhood having been
authorized by either party.
On the part of the United States, a law was enacted contemporaneously
so as to be in effect, part of the same transaction-a law to regulate intercourse
with the Indian tribes by which heavy penalties were inflicted upon intruders,
and rigorous measures were authorized to drive them from the Indian territory.
This act of legislation shows that the plan of our relations with the Indians
was thoroughly understood by all departments of the government; and that a disposition
was cherished, all on hands, to execute treaties with good faith.
It has been said, that barbarians are not capable of making a treaty.
But an illustrious orator, from our own State, thirty-five years ago, expressed
himself on the floor of Congress in the following manner.
" I see no exception to the respect that is paid among nations to the
law of good faith. If there are cases, in the enlightened period, when
it is violated, there are none when it is decried. It is the philosophy
of politics, the religion of government. It is observed by barbarians.
A whiff of tobacco smoke, or a string of beads, gives not merely binding force,
but a sanctity to treaties. Even the Algiers, a truce may be bought for
money; but, when ratified even Algiers are too wise, or too just, to disown
or annul its obligations. Thus we see neither the ignorance of savages,
nor the principles of an association for piracy and rapine, permit a nation
to despise its engagements."
Your Memorialists, in pursuing this investigation, find a renewal of
the guaranty to the Cherokees, made seven years after it was first given; and
in this renewal, the guaranty is declared to be "forever", which was obviously
the meaning in the first instance. In the progress of numerous subsequent
negotiations, the Cherokees yielded to the United States the free navigation
of the rivers in the Cherokee Nation; and made several specific grants of roads
through their country, as the progress of white population led the Presidents
of the United States to solicit these privileges.
In the late treaty between the United States and the Cherokees--a compact
which was negotiated at Washington, eleven years ago, it is stipulated that
the provisions of the intercourse law, which was made for the protection of
the Indians generally, shall be continued for the security of the Cherokees;
and thus the provisions of the intercourse law became, in fact, a part of the
treaty.
By the same compact, a permanent school fund is created, the annual income
of which is to be expended in diffusing the benefits of education among the
Cherokee Nation east of the Mississippi, that is, among the Cherokees, maintaining
their national character, in their present residence. Numerous stipulations,
found in all the treaties, imply the sovereignty of the Cherokee Nation, except
so far as that sovereignty was quantified by a voluntary acceptance of the offer
of protection, and the regulation of trade on the part of the United States.-
These stipulations are all perfectly consistent with each other; and your Memorialists
find nothing which has the appearance of bringing the Cherokees under the laws
of the United States, or of abandoning them to the laws of the several States.
On the contrary, a national government always in existence, an inviolable territory,
and a perpetual guaranty, meet the eye every where, without anything of an opposite
description, either expressed or implied.
Your Memorialists do therefore humbly conceive, that the United States
are bound to the Cherokees, by as plain and positive engagements as language
is capable of expressing, to defend them in the possession of their country
as a nation, and in the free exercise of their own laws and customs, till they
shall voluntarily consent to change the existing relations of the parties.
Your Memorialists would further state to your honorable body, that
the Cherokees, thus standing on their original and perfect title, and thus fortified
by treaties, were urged by successive Presidents of the United States to betake
themselves to a civilized life, and to industrious habits, with the solemn assurance,
that they should remain permanently on the land of their fathers, and should
find in the whites good neighbors, who would rejoice in their prosperity.- They
allege, that they received letters of this import from President Washington
and President Jefferson; and that the agents of the United States, residing
among them, invariably made similar declarations. The assertions of the
President of the United States, whom they were taught to call their father,
were always received by them as the decisions of the government; and doubtless
the solemn assurance of the chief magistrate of this country, made in his official
character to an ignorant people not versed in diplomacy, should not be invalidated,
except for the most urgent and satisfactory reasons.
Your Memorialists are aware, that the Indians are urged to remove beyond
the Mississippi from a regard to their own benefit and with a view to their
future prosperity. But the question of right should be first settled.
If this can be clearly ascertained, it should be firmly established. The
suggestions of friendship should come afterwards. If the Cherokees have
a perfect right to remain where they now are, as long as they please, and to
claim the protection of the United States, against encroachments from every
quarter, they should be told so, in a firm and decisive tone; and the United
States should honorably redeem their numerous and solemn pledges.
If the Government, in a spirit of sincere kindness and friendship, should
advise the Cherokees to remove, let the Cherokees weigh the advice, and decide
upon it, as they think best.-The question should be freely decided by them,
and not by strangers.
But if this question of supposed benevolence does in fact sway
the minds of some, so that they cannot fairly look at the question of right,
your Memorialists feel bound to say, that they have seen no reason, which satisfy
them, that the removal of the Cherokees would be for their benefit.
If the country west of the territory of Arkansas is correctly described
by Major Long, an authorized agent of the government, it is uninhabitable.
Other travellers declare, that it is nearly all a boundless prairie, and destitute
of running water during a part of every year. The portion which is wooded
is extremely small and would furnish a comfortable residence for only a part
of the southwestern tribes. There is reason to apprehend, therefore, that
the removal of these tribes, in a body, would plunge them into a condition of
great distress and do them an irreparable injury.
If it should be admitted that the whole country is good and capable of
high cultivation, as some of the advocates of removal assert, the land will
soon become an object of much greater cupidity to the whites, than the present
territory of the Cherokees ever can be. They are already retired within
the mountains, at the headwaters of rivers, in the most secluded spot in all
the southern part of our country. If they should be confirmed in their
right of continued occupancy by the highest authority of our nation, that right
will be respected by all their neighbors; and their title will be more
secure than any title which can be given them to a new country.
There is every reason to believe, that within a quarter of a century
from the present day, the pressure of population upon the frontiers of any reservation
of good land near the western limits of Missouri, Arkansas, and Louisiana, will
be much greater than it will be, at the same period, on the frontiers of the
present Cherokee country. The cost of transportation is now less, as your
Memorialists are informed, from New Orleans to the western limits of the Arkansas
territory;--that is, to the borders of the new country intended for the Indians,-than
it is from Augusta, Knoxville, or Nashville, to the Cherokee territory, which
is the subject of the present controversy. Whenever the western prairies
shall be habitable at all, they will be thronged with a more dense population,
than the mountainous region near the north west corner of Georgia will ever
be capable of sustaining.
The idea of removing Indians so far that they will not be followed by
whites, or that good land possessed by them will not be an object of desire
to whites, seems to your Memorialist too visionary to require serious attention.
We believe there is no place within the territorial limits of our nation, where
Indians can be protected in their possessions, unless the strong barrier of
law can be interposed between them and their neighbors. It would seem
impossible to assign them any place where they will not stand in the way of
the whites; and where the supposed interest of the whites would not be promoted
by their removal, or their extinction. The barrier of law, already existing
for the protection of the Cherokees, on the land of their fathers, can be strengthened
now, more easily than a new barrier can be raised on a new field, and under
far less favorable circumstances.
Should the four southwestern tribes be removed and placed near each other,
on land assigned them by the United States, it appears to your Memorialists,
that they would be thrown into a state of anarchy, and would lose the benefit
of improvements already made by some of them, in the practice of government.
For several years past, the advocates of removal have urged into public notice,
and repeatedly laid before Congress, a plan, which contemplated one government
for all the congregated tribes; which government was to be administered by agents,
appointed for that purpose by the President of the United States.- But this
scheme, so long insisted on, has been suddenly abandoned, and it is now declared,
that each tribe is to be left to its own laws and customs.- Considering that
the removal must be gradual, and that the emigrants would go with heavy hearts,
distrusting the professions of the government, it would seem almost certain
that they would give themselves up to despondency, and that everything like
subordination and public spirit, would disappear. In such a state of things,
improvidence, contention, idleness, intemperance, and general profligacy, must
be expected.
The progress of education also, we fear must be interrupted. The
means of moral improvement could not be advantageously applied for a series
of years; and the general condition of the people would be rapidly deteriorating.
Some would probably remain a while, and attempt to live under the laws of the
States; many would struggle away into the white settlements and become vagabonds;
and it would be natural for these, who were collected beyond the Mississippi
to become utterly dispirited and to consider themselves deserted, betrayed,
oppressed, and undone.
The sufferings occasioned by a constrained removal of so many people,
men, women, and children, the aged, the sick, and the poor, must be great.
Your Memorialists would by no means exaggerate the evils of the course,
which has been urged upon Congress. The fears which they entertain appear
to them well grounded: and they respectfully refer to it the judgment of your
honorable body to decide whether they are mistaken.
In conclusion, our Memorialists do humbly entreat the National Legislature
to interpose and deliver the country from all apprehension of violated faith,-to
redeem the sacred pledges of our national government.-to protect the defenseless
aboriginal tribes in their rights,- and to give them assurance that all public
engagements with them are to be fulfilled in the most honorable manner, according
to the true intent and meaning of those engagements, and the understanding of
the parties.
And to this end, your Memorialists would respectfully suggest to your
honorable body, to consider the expediency of passing a declaratory act, making
it the duty of the President of the United States to issue his proclamation,
reciting the principle provisions of the intercourse law, and announcing the
determination of the government rigidly to enforce these provisions, as having
been made in accordance with treaties and for the protection of our dependent
allies.
And your Memorialists would further suggest that, if a removal of any
tribe or tribes of Indians, to a different territory from that, which they now
inhabit, should seem to the government desirable, and likely to promote the
welfare of the Indians, suitable measures be devised and adopted to ascertain
all the facts in relation to the subject, which are necessary to arriving at
a safe conclusion.-- When the facts are ascertained, let the matter be
proposed to the Indians; and when their consent to a removal is fairly given,
and a plan approved by Congress, your Memorialists, and their fellow citizens
who think with them on this subject, will cordially acquiesce in any decision
this matured.
And your Memorialists, as in duty bound, will ever pray.
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