Seminole
Wars
Three wars
(1817-1818, 1835-1842, 1855-1858) between the Seminole
peoples and the United States.
The
Seminole occupied lands
in northern Florida that
were coveted by American settlers in the neighboring
state of Georgia, although Florida at the beginning
of the 19th century belonged to Spain.
Another
cause for dissension was the Seminole practice of
giving refuge to fugitive slaves. While the U.S. was
fighting the War of 1812 with Britain, a series of
incidents led to an increase in hostility between
the U.S. and the Seminole.
In
1817 the First Seminole War began with skirmishes
between American troops and native peoples along the
Florida border. In 1818 the American general (later
president) Andrew Jackson was sent with an army to
Florida to quell the Seminole rebellion. After destroying
several Native American settlements and executing
two British traders accused of encouraging Seminole
resistance in the region, General Jackson captured
the city of Pensacola in May 1818 and deposed the
Spanish government.
When Florida became U.S. territory in 1819 and colonists
began entering from the north, the Native Americans
were forced to move south into regions unsuitable
for their agricultural economy.
In 1823 the Seminole officially ceded most of their
former tribal lands to the United States; in 1832,
by the treaty of Paynes Landing, the tribe was bound
to move to territory west of the Mississippi River
within three years.
Widespread opposition to this treaty, led by the Seminole
chief Osceola, resulted
in the outbreak of the Second Seminole War. In 1837
Osceola was captured while under a flag of truce,
but the war, which for the U.S. was extremely costly
in both troops and revenue, continued until most of
the Seminole finally surrendered in 1842.
The
majority of the tribe was then moved to the present-day
state of Oklahoma. A few hundred, however, took refuge
in the Everglades of southern Florida.
After
the Third Seminole War, about half of those were moved
west. The rest remained in Florida; their descendants
did not sign a peace treaty with the U.S. until 1935.
"Seminole
Wars," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000
http://encarta.msn.com
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