CHAPTER THIRTY ONE.
The Cherokee Indians, a portion of whom we had just met on such friendlyterms, are probably destined to act no inconsiderable part in the futurehistory of Texas. Within the last few years, they have given a severelesson to the governments of both Texas and the United States. Thereader is already aware that, through a mistaken policy, the governmentof Washington have removed from several southern states those tribes ofhalf-civilised Indians which indubitably were the most honourable andindustrious portion of the population of these very states. TheCherokees, the Creeks, and the Choctaws, among others, were establishedon the northern banks of the Red River, in the territory west of theArkansas.
The Cherokees, with a population of twenty-four thousand individuals;the Creeks, with twenty thousand, and the Choctaws, with fifteen, assoon as they reached their new country, applied themselves toagriculture, and as they possessed wealth, slaves, and cattle, theircotton plantations soon became the finest west from the Mississippi, andlatterly all the cotton grown by the Americans and the Texians, withinone hundred miles from the Indian settlements, has been brought up totheir mills and presses, to be cleaned and put into bales, before it wasshipped to New Orleans. Some years before the Independence of Texas, asmall number of these Cherokees had settled as planters upon the Texianterritory, where, by their good conduct and superior management of theirfarms, they had acquired great wealth, and had conciliated the good willof the warlike tribes of Indians around them, such as the Cushates, theCaddoes, and even the Comanches.
As soon as the Texians declared their independence, their rulers,thinking that no better population could exist in the northern districtsthan that of the Cherokees, invited a few hundred more to come from theRed River, and settle among them; and to engage them so to do, the firstsession of congress offered them a grant of two or three hundredthousand acres of land, to be selected by them in the district theywould most prefer. Thus enticed, hundreds of wealthy Cherokee plantersmigrated to Texas, with their wealth and cattle. Such was the state ofaffairs until the presidency of Lamar, a man utterly unequal to the taskof ruling over a new country.
I have already related the massacre of the Comanches in San Antonio, andthe miserable pilfering expedition to Santa Fe, but these two acts hadbeen preceded by one still more disgraceful.
The Cherokees, who had migrated to Texas, were flourishing in their newsettlement, when the bankruptcy of the merchants in the United Stateswas followed by that of the planters. The consequence was, that fromTennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, and Arkansas, hundreds of planterssmuggled their negroes and other property into Texas, and as they darednot locate themselves too far west, from their dread of the Mexicans andIndians, they remained in the east country, upon the rivers of whichonly, at that time, navigation had been attempted.
These new comers, however, had to struggle with many difficulties; theyhad to clear the ground, to build bridges, to dry up mud-holes andswamps; and, moreover, they found that they could not enter intocompetition with the Cherokees, who having been established there for alonger time, and raising abundant crops of maize, cotton, and tobacco,were enabled to sell their provisions at one-half the price which thewhite planter wished to realise. The Europeans, of course, preferred tosettle near the Cherokees, from whom they could obtain their Indian cornat fifty cents a bushel, while the American planters demanded twodollars and sometimes three. In a short time, the Cherokee districtbecame thickly settled, possessing good roads, and bridges and ferriesupon every muddy creek; in short, it was, in civilisation, full acentury ahead of all the other eastern establishments of Texas.
To this order, the Cherokees did not deign to give an answer, and, awareof the character of the Texians, they never attempted to appeal forjustice; but, on the contrary, prepared themselves to defend theirproperty from any invasion. Seeing them so determined, the Texians'ardour cooled a little, and they offered the Indians twelve cents anacre for their land, which proposition was not attended to; and probablythe Cherokees, from the fear which they inspired, would never have beenmolested had it not been for an act of the greatest cowardice on thepart of the Texian government, and a most guilty indifference on that ofthe United States.
In Alabama, Tennessee, and Arkansas, labour had fallen so low, thatthousands of individuals had abandoned their farms to becomehorse-thieves and negro smugglers. Many among them had gone to sell theproduce of their depredations to the Cherokees, who not only did notcondescend to deal with them, but punished them with rigour, subjectingthem to their own code of laws. These ruffians nurtured plans ofvengeance which they dared not themselves execute, but, knowing thegreedy spirit of their countrymen, they spread the most incrediblestories of Cherokee wealth and comforts. The plan succeeded well, foras soon as the altercation between the Texians and Cherokee Indians wasmade known to the Western States, several bands were immediately formed,who, in the expectation of a rich booty, entered Texas, and offered theCongress to drive away the Cherokees. As soon as this was known,representations were made by honourable men to the government of theUnited States, but no notice was taken, and the Western States, probablyto get rid at once of the scum of their population, gave everyencouragement to the expedition.
For a few months the Cherokees invariably discomfited their invaders,destroying their bands as soon as they were newly formed, and treatingthem as common robbers; but, being farmers, they could not fight andcultivate their ground at the same time, and they now thought ofabandoning so unhospitable a land; the more so as, discovering that theCherokees were more than a match for them in the field, a system ofincendiarism and plunder was resorted to, which proved more disastrousto the Cherokees than the previous open warfare.
Since that period the Cherokees, Choctaws, and Creeks have had severalwar councils, and I doubt not that they are only waiting for anopportunity to retaliate, and will eventually sweep off the entireeastern population of Texas.
The fact is, that a democratic form of government is powerless when thenation is so utterly depraved. Austin, the father of Texiancolonisation, quitted the country in disgust. Houston, whose militarytalents and well-known courage obtained for him the presidency, hasdeclared his intention to do the same, and to retire to the UnitedStates, to follow up his original profession of a lawyer. Such is thedemoralised state of Texas at the present moment; what it may hereafterbe is in the womb of Time.