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AUGUST 1: August 1, 1866: Today John Ross, Principal Cherokee Chief, dies in Washington, DC. August 1, 1836: 2700 Creeks, including the ones who fought for the whites, were forced to leave Alabama for the Indian Territory. Their leader, Opothleyaholo, was with them. 1615 Huronia Ontario Samuel de Champlain c1570-1635 arrives in Huronia with ten Indians and Etienne Brulé, to back Hurons against Iroquois; winters in Huronia; estimates population at 30,000. 1629 Tadoussac Quebec Samuel de Champlain c1570-1635 reprimands Etienne Brulé and Nicolas Marsolet de Saint-Aignan c1587-1677, who had gone over to the Iroquois. 1701 Montreal Quebec Death of Grand Chief Kondiaronk at Montreal. 1805 Ontario Mississauga Indians cede over 101,170 hectares in York County to the Crown. 1885 Regina Saskatchewan Louis Riel 1844-1885 found guilty of treason and sentenced to death; defense's plea of insanity not believed by Anglo-Saxon, Protestant jury. 1990 Chateauguay Quebec Group of 12,000 angry Chateauguay residents march on city hall to demand removal of the native blockade of the Mercier Bridge outside Montreal; Kanawake Iroquois protesting Oka standoff, now entering its second month. BACKGROUND:
Opothleyaholo, Creek chief, born probably in Tuckabatchee, year of birth not known, died in Kansas about 1866, was the son of Davy Cornells, who was the son of Joseph Cornells by a Tuckabatchee woman. On good Creek authority the etymology of the name is "hupuena," child, "hehle," good, and "Yaholo," holloer, whooper. Davy Cornells, the father, was killed by a party of lawless whites in June, 1793, while going under a white flag to see James Seagrove, the Creek agent, at Coleraine. No facts have been presented of the early life of Opothleyaholo, except that he was considered a promising youth, nor is it known when he rose to the position of speaker of the councils of the Upper Creek towns. His residence was in Tuckabatchee, near the great council house. His first public service was in February, 1825, at the treaty of Indian Springs, whither he went as the representative of the Upper Creeks to remonstrate with General McIntosh against the cession of any part of the Creek country. In his speech before the commissioners, he told them that the chiefs present had no authority to cede lands, which could only be done in full council and with the consent of the whole nation, and this was not a full council. While perfectly respectful to the commissioners, in his speech he warned General McIntosh of the doom that awaited him if he signed the treaty. Opohleyaholo left the treaty ground for home the next day. McIntosh signed the treaty and paid for this action.with his life. Opothleyaholo was at the head oú the Creek chiefs that soon after went to Washington to protest against the validity of this treaty, and to execute one that would be more acceptable to his people. In all the negotiations that followed, "he conducted himself with great dignity and firmness, and displayed talents of a superior order. He was cool, cautious, and sagacious; and with a tact which would have done credit to a more refined diplomatist, refused to enter into any negotiation until the offensive treaty of the Indian Springs should be annulled. The consent of the nation, nor in accordance with its laws, but in opposition to the one, and in defiance of the other, disapproved of it, and another was made at Washington in January, 1826, the first article of which declared the treaty of the Indian Springs to be null and void. Under the new treaty the Creeks ceded all their lands in Georgia except a small strip on the Chattahoochee, which after much negotiation was ceded to Georgia in 1827. On the death of Little Prince in---- Opothleyaholo became practically the principal chief of the Creeks, though he still continued to exercise the functions of speaker of the councils. In the Creek troubles of 1836, Sangahatchee, an Upper town, was the first to rise in revolt, and its painted warriors began to waylay and murder travelers on the highways. Without delay Opothleyaholo arrayed the warriors of Tuckabatchee, marched against the insurgent town, captured it, and delivered the prisoners captured into the hands of the military authorities. He next, at the request of Governor Clay. called a council of his warriors at Kialgee. and there, taking fifteen hundred of them, he marched to Talladega and offered their services to General Jessup, there in command of the regular troops. The offer was accepted, and Opothlayaholo, promoted to the rank of colonel, was appointed commander of all the Indian troops. The united regular and Indian forces, all under the command of General Jessup, now marched without delay to the town of Hatcheechubbee, where were embodied the hostiles, who, overawed by such an imposing force, surrendered, and the trouble was over. Shortly after this came the enforced migration of the Creeks from their native land. Opothleyaholo had ever been extremely adverse to emigration west. One of his objections was that the Upper and Lower Creeks could not live harmoniously in close contiguity with each other in the new country, cherishing, as they did, the bitter feelings engendered by the death of General McIntosh. His forebodings were not realized, for after settling in the new country, the old feud was in a measure forgotten, and Opothleyaholo still continued in his office as chief speaker in the Creek councils. At the outbreak of
the great war of 1861, the Creeks divided, the more ignorant position,
influenced by Opothleyaholo, adhered to the Federal cause, while the educated
and progressive element, under the McIntoshes, were strong adherents of
the Confederacy. A civil war ensued, with the result that Opothleyaholo
with his partisans, in great destitution, retreated in December to Coffey
County, Kansas, where the old chief died shortly after the war. But little
is known of the domestic life of Opothleyaholo, whether he had one or more
wives. He had a son, born about 1816, who was educated at the Choctaw Academy
in Kentucky, and named Colonel Johnson, in honor of Colonel Richard M.
Johnson. He had several daughters, said to have been handsome women.
From Rootsweb at http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cmamcrk4/crkchf5.html#anchor1287326
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