Source: http://www.wcu.edu/library/DigitalCollections/CherokeePhoenix/Vol1/no21/cherokee-treaty-page-1-column-1b.html
Timestamp: 2017-11-19 13:58:22
Document Index: 694107336

Matched Legal Cases: ['Art. 4', 'Art. 5', 'Art. 6', 'Art. 7', 'Art. 8', 'Art. 9', 'Art. 10', 'Art. 11']

Cherokee Phoenix | CHEROKEE TREATY | Volume 1, Number 21; Published July, 21, 1828
Articles of A Convention, concluded at the City of Washington, this sixth day of May, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and twenty-eight, between James Barbour, Secretary of War being especially authorized therefore by the President of the United States, and the undersigned, Chiefs and Head men of the Cherokee Nation of Indians West of Mississippi, they being duly authorized and empowered by their Nation.
Art. 4. The United States moreover agree to appoint suitable persons, whose duty it shall be in conjunction with the Agent, to value all such improvements as the Cherokees may abandon in their removal from their present homes to the District or Country as ceded in the second Article of this agreement, and to pay for the same immediately after the assessment is made, and the amount ascertained. It is further agreed, that the property and improvements connected with the Agency, shall be sold under the direction of the agent, and the proceeds of the same applied to aid in the erection in the country to which the Cherokees are going, of a grist and saw mill, for their use. The aforesaid property and improvements are thus defined: commencing at the Arkansas River opposite William Stinnetts, ' running due north one mile, thence due east to a point from which a due south line to the Arkansas River would include the Chalybeate, or mineral spring, attached to, or near the present residence of the agent, and thence up said river (Arkansas) to the place of beginning.
Art. 5. It is further agreed, that the United States, in consideration of the inconvenience and trouble attending the removal, and on account of the reduced value of a great portion of the lands herein ceded to the Cherokees, as compared with that of those in Arkansas which were made theirs by the Treaty of 1817, and convention of 1819, will pay to the Cherokees, immediately after their removal which shall be within fourteen months of the date of this agreement, the sum of fifty thousand dollars; also an annuity, for three years, of two thousand dollars, towards defraying the cost and trouble which may attend upon going after and recovering their stock which may stray into the territory in quest of the pastures from which they may be driven-also, eight thousand seven hundred and sixty dollars, (for spoilations committed on them- the Cherokees) which sum will be in full of all demands of the kind up to this date, as well those against the Osages, as those against the citizens of the United States-this being the amount of the claims for said spoilations, as rendered by the Cherokees, and which are believed to be correctly and fairly stated. Also, one thousand two hundred dollars for the use of Thomas Graves, a Cherokee Chief, for losses sustained in his property, and for personal suffering endured by him, when confined as prisoner, on a criminal, but false accusation; also five hundred dollars for the use of George Guess, another Cherokee, for the great benefit he has conferred upon the Cherokee people, in the beneficial results which they are now experiencing from the use of the alphabet discovered by him, to whom also, in consideration of his relinquishing a valuable saline, the privilege is hereby given to locate and occupy another saline on Lee's Creek. It is further agreed by the United States to pay two thousand dollars, annually, to the Cherokees, for ten years, to be expended under the direction of the President of the United States in the education of their children, in their own country in letters and mechanic arts; also, one thousand dollars towards the purchase of a printing press and types, to aid the Cherokees in the progress of education to benefit, and enlighten them as a people, in their own and our language. It is agreed further, that the expense incurred other than that paid by the United States in the erection of the buildings and improvements, so far as that may have been paid by the benevolent society who have been, and yet are engaged in instructing the Cherokee children, shall be paid to the society, it being the understanding that the amount shall be expended in the erection of other buildings and improvements, for like purposes in the country herein ceded to the Cherokees. The United States relinquish their claim due by the Cherokees to the late United States' Factory, provided the same does not exceed three thousand five hundred dollars.
Art. 6. It is moreover agreed, by the United States, whenever the Cherokees may desire it, to give them a set of plain laws, suitable to their condition-also, when they may wish to lay off their lands, and own them individually, a surveyor shall be sent to make the surveys at the cost of the United States.
Art. 7. The Chiefs and Head men of the Cherokee Nation, aforesaid for and in consideration of the foregoing stipulations and provisions, do hereby agree, in the name and behalf of their Nation, to give up and they do hereby surrender to the United States, and agree to leave the same within fourteen months, as herein before stipulated, all the lands to which they are entitled in Arkansas, and which were secured to them by the Treaty of 8th January 1827, and the convention of the 27th February, 1829. [sic]
Art. 8. The Cherokee Nation West of the Mississippi having by this agreement, freed themselves from the harassing and ruinous effects consequent upon a location amidst a white population, and secured to themselves and their posterity, under the solemn sanction of the guarantee of the United States, as contained in this agreement, a large extent of unembarrassed country; and that their Brothers yet remaining in the States may be induced to join them and enjoy the repose and blessings of such a state in future, it is further agreed, on the part of the United States, that to each Head of a Cherokee family now residing within the chartered limits of Georgia, or if either of the states, east of the Mississippi, who may desire to remove west, shall be given on enrolling himself for emigration, a good rifle, a blanket, and kettle, and five pounds of tobacco; (and to each member of his family one blanket) also, a just compensation for the property he may abandon, to be assessed by persons to be appointed by the President of the United States. The cost of the emigration of all such shall be borne by the United States, and good and suitable ways opened, and provisions procured for their comfort, accommodation, and support, by the way, and provisions for twelve months after their arrival at the Agency; and to each person, or head of a family, if he take along with him four persons, shall be paid immediately on his arriving at the agency and reporting himself and his family, or followers, as emigrants ' permanent settlers, in addition to the above, provided he and they shall have emigrated from within the Chartered limits of the State of Georgia the sum of fifty dollars, and this sum in proportion to any greater of less number that may accompany him from within the aforesaid chartered limits of the State of Georgia.
Art. 9, It is understood and agreed by the parties to this Convention, that a tract of land, two miles wide and six miles long, shall be, and the same is hereby, reserved for the use and benefit of the United States, for the accommodation of the military force which is now, or which may hereafter be stationed at Fort Gibson, on the Neasho, or Grand River, to commence on said river half a mile below the aforesaid fort, and to run thence a due east two miles, thence northwardly six miles, to a point which shall be two miles distant from the river aforesaid, thence due west to the said river, and down it to the place of beginning. And the Cherokees agree that the United States shall have and possess the right of establishing a road through their country for the purpose of having a free and unmolested way to and from said fort.
Art. 10. It is agreed that Captain Rogers, in consideration of his having lost a horse in the service of the United States, and for services rendered by him to the United States, shall be paid in full for the above, and all other claims for losses and services, the sum of five hundred dollars.
Art. 11. This treaty to be binding on the contracting parties, so soon as it is ratified by the President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.
BLACK FOX (L.S.)
THOMAS GRAVES, (L.S.)
TOMAS MAW (L.S.)
GEORGE MARVIS, (L.S.)
JOHN LOONY (L.S.)
JOHN ROGERS,(L.S.)
J. W. FLOWEV., (L.S.)
Thos. L. M'Kenney,
D. Brown, Secy. Ch. Del.
F. W. Duval, U. S. Agent.