“A Demand of Blood: The
Cherokee War of 1776” by Nadia Dean is an excellent history of the Cherokee
decline during the beginning of the American Revolutionary War; it shows how
unrest with the white political divisions also created divisions among the native
people. This was definitely a crippling
blow to the Cherokee people who had lived in harmony with the land from their
aboriginal beginnings; traders had changed a lifestyle for these Indian people which
could never return. With rifles, the
deerskin trade flourished a few years until deer got scarce; less animals meant
Cherokee people had to depend upon their entire territory to take deerskins for
trade. Encroaching white settlers
limited their hunting grounds which resulted in conflicts; with the
white-Indian unrest, colonial armies moved in and devastated entire regions
destroying Cherokee homes, crops, and taking untold numbers of human lives.
Andrew Williamson and
Griffith Rutherford were colonial militia leaders that tried to annihilate the
Middle, Valley, and Lower Towns of the Cherokee; in addition to killing as many
Cherokee people as possible, they burned entire villages, destroyed crops, and
killed all livestock that was not confiscated for their own purposes. Later when William Christian’s colonial army
moved through the Overhill Towns, several of the Cherokees homes and villages
were allowed to remain intact; Christian’s humanitarian move through the heart
of Cherokee country allowed for a somewhat peaceful resolution. Many of the elder Cherokee leaders agreed to
a new peace treaty with the colonial government; however, this 1776 war created
a vast divide in the Cherokee people.
Dragging Canoe and his Chickamauga followers carried on the war until
Doublehead signed the Treaty of Philadelphia with President George Washington
in June 1794.
Nadia
Dean gives us an intimate view and highly referenced narrative of the
remarkable events in our Cherokee and colonial history in “A Demand of
Blood!” It is without hesitation that I
highly recommend this book so everyone can have a better understanding of the
bloodshed that built our Nation!
Rickey Butch Walker,
Author/Historian
December 17, 2013
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Hello, my name is Susan Deily-Swearingen. I am from the Winston County families Swearingen, Steele, Cole, Kidd, and Blankenship. I am writing because I am currently writing a Doctoral Dissertation on Winston and aspects of its Cherokee Heritage. I have worked with Jerry Smith at Northeastern Alabama Community College and also been given documents by Marty King. I have been working my way through your material and I wondered if you would be willing to talk or write to me about some questions I have. I thank you in advance for your time. Best,
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sorry. I should have given my email address: snb24@wildcats.unh.edu
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