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Authors: Michael Gannon
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Florida’s Seminole and Miccosukee Peoples · 207
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Osceola, Chief of the Seminole
. Painting by George Catlin, 1838. Catlin painting A-499,
American Museum of Natural History. Courtesy of the Department of Library Services,
American Museum of Natural History (Neg. No. 327045).
General Clinch. Gaines departed from Florida to the border of Texas. Scott
charged him with spoiling his campaign, necessitating a court of inquiry,
late in November 1836. The two generals vilified each other, but the court
found both blameless.
When President Jackson relieved Scott on 21 June 1836, he made a politi-
cal rather than a military appointment. His selection to command in Florida
208 · Brent R. Weisman
was a civilian, Richard Keith Cal , governor of Florida Territory. Cal as-
sembled 2,500 men, a mixture of Tennessee volunteers, Florida militiamen,
regulars, and Creek Indians, once again to penetrate the Cove. On 13 No-
vember he found it abandoned. Desperate to make a creditable showing, he
received evidence that a substantial body of warriors was in Wahoo Swamp
at the southern tip of the Cove. He attacked on the 21 November, but after
several hours of fighting drew back without overcoming the foe. Jackson
did not forgive him for this. He dispatched Brevet Major General Thomas
S. Jesup, quartermaster general of the army, to take command in Florida.
A year of conflict had borne hard on the Indians. Several chiefs, includ-
ing Micanopy, entered into an agreement on 6 March 1837 to migrate. They
stal ed, enjoying the provisions and liquor provided by the government.
At length, though, 700 encamped near Fort Brooke, waiting to be shipped
west. Jesup thought the war was over. Then, during the night of 2 June, the
700 slipped away. Although Osceola’s power had diminished, he, with the
medicine man of the Mikasukis, Arpeika (Sam Jones to the white men),
by some means convinced or coerced the camped Indians to decamp. This
exodus so disil usioned Jesup that he determined to subdue the Seminoles
by any means. The latter, hungry and impoverished, were willing to come
to the military camps to talk, eat wel , and drink whiskey. At such a meeting
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on 9 September 1837, the general seized Coacoochee (Wildcat), who had
arrived under a flag of truce. Wildcat’s father was Philip, his mother a sister
of Micanopy. He had a chief’s lineage but was not yet a chief. Like Osceola,
he lacked formal authority and had to lead by force of personality.
More notorious was Jesup’s seizing of Osceola on 27 October under a
white flag. These two vital leaders were imprisoned in the old Spanish co-
quina fortress Castillo de San Marcos at St. Augustine, known to the Ameri-
cans as Fort Marion. Wildcat, with nineteen followers, made a miraculous
escape on 29 November, then slipped southward to join the intransigents
under Arpeika and Otulke Thlocco, the Prophet. Arpeika, after hearing
Wildcat’s story, would never again risk attending a white council. Osceola,
now too unwell to influence the war, died at Fort Moultrie, South Carolina,
on 31 January 1838.
General Jesup held to this strategy. On 14 December 1837 he seized Mi-
canopy, three other chiefs, and 78 followers who had come in to his camp to
talk. He had by that time seriously cut into Seminole leadership. Still there
were frequent skirmishes and the major pitched battle of the war. Colo-
nel Zachary Taylor attacked a prepared position near Lake Okeechobee
on Christmas Day 1837. Halpatter Tustenuggee (known to the whites as
Florida’s Seminole and Miccosukee Peoples · 209
Alligator), a close associate of Micanopy, commanded the center of the In-
dian line; Wildcat held the left with about eighty men, while Sam Jones and
the Prophet directed half the force on the right. Soldiers numbering 1,032,
most of them regulars, assailed 480 Seminoles from diverse bands with no
overall commander. Taylor’s army drove the warriors out of their prepared
position at a cost of 26 killed and 112 wounded. Because it was closer to a
pitched battle than any other action during the conflict, it focused public
attention on Zachary Taylor. He was commissioned a brigadier general for
it, and in the end became the only white commander to emerge from the
war with an enhanced reputation.
In May 1838 General Jesup requested relief from the Florida command.
He had crippled Indian fighting power, shipping 1,978 persons west and
killing perhaps 400. He created opportunities for captured blacks to serve
as guides and interpreters and helped set them against each other. Although
he vacil ated on what to do with the Seminole blacks, final y he sent most of
them west with their masters.
Thomas S. Jesup continued as quartermaster general until his death in
1860, but he never lived down the stigma attached to his seizing Indian lead-
ers, particularly Osceola, under white flags.
Brigadier General Zachary Taylor assumed command on 15 May 1838.
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One thousand Indians remained in the territory; a cluster of bands in Mid-
dle Florida (the Panhandle region), another in central Florida, and a third
in the southwest region of the Big Cypress. They had little contact with each
other, but the leaders in the southwest, Holata Micco (known as Bil y Bow-
legs), Arpeika, and Otulke Thlocco sometimes met together. The Prophet
was a refugee Creek who escaped out of Georgia after the Creek War of 1816.
He became the messiah figure of the Second Seminole War. Because the
other leaders feared his occult powers, he controlled much of the action in
southwest Florida. In the end, though, he could not keep an army detach-
ment from destroying his own camp.
Zachary Taylor initiated a new strategy. He divided the territory north of
the Withlacoochee River into squares twenty miles on each side, with a fort
in the middle garrisoned by soldiers who built roads and regularly patrolled
their squares. He intended to enlarge the area covered by squares when the
commanding general of the army, Major General Alexander Macomb, ar-
rived in Florida. Macomb met with such chiefs as he could assemble and
in mid-May 1839 arranged with them to end the conflict. His peace docu-
ment permitted the Seminoles to remain in 6,700 square miles of south-
western Florida, about half of the Big Cypress Swamp. Floridians detested
210 · Brent R. Weisman
this settlement, but they were not the instruments terminating the peace.
Certain Indian leaders who had not signed Macomb’s pact struck at the new
trading post on the Caloosahatchee River on 23 July 1839, total y destroy-
ing it and kil ing several soldiers. This ended the peace. Taylor’s strategy
of squares was not continued. During his command, 800 Indians and 400
blacks had been shipped west.
At his request, Taylor was relieved by Brigadier General Walker K. Ar-
mistead in May 1840. The new commander established detachments of 100
men and sent them to explore little-known parts of Florida and ferret out
Indian hideaways. But when it seemed that all the Indians had been pushed
into south Florida, destructive raids occurred in northeast and central Flor-
ida, where none had taken place for months. Armistead did what he could
to suppress these, and to corral more Seminoles to ship west. At the end of
the year in which he commanded, 700 Seminoles and blacks were deported
to Indian Territory.
Under a policy to rely ful y on regular troops, militia generals left the
federal service. Once they were no longer present to outrank United States
officers, it was possible for the first time to place a colonel, Wil iam Jen-
kins Worth, in command. At a council in April 1841, Bowlegs, Arpeika, and
the Prophet reaffirmed their determination not to leave Florida, and pro-
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nounced death for any Indian who carried messages from the whites. Far
north in the Long Swamp east of Fort King, two months later, one Mikasuki
chief, two Seminole chiefs, and Octiarche, a Creek fugitive from Georgia,
took the same intransigent stand. No peace terms involving removal were
acceptable.
When Colonel Worth took command in June 1841, he began to change
his strategy. First, in Worth’s plan, rid north Florida of hostiles, because of
their proximity to new white settlements. The Indians had returned to the
Cove of the Withlacoochee, and he divided his force into detachments of
twenty men to clean them out. Second, using partisan tactics, he kept his
troops campaigning right on through the sickly season in the swamps of
south Florida. White Floridians approved of his strategy, but howled when
he sharply reduced the number of civilians and militiamen employed by the
United States.
In June 1841 Major Childs seized Coacoochee when he came into Fort
Pierce. An officer shipped him west, but Worth ordered him returned to be
used to induce other bands to surrender. Not even Wildcat could persuade
Arpeika to place himself in white hands. All in al , though, Worth’s system
Florida’s Seminole and Miccosukee Peoples · 211
was so successful that by April 1842 only 300 Indians remained in Flor-
ida, 112 of them warriors. They were hungry and miserable, especial y the
women and children. Worth, from his base of operations near Cedar Key,
proposed to the War Department that this remnant be allowed to remain
in Florida in the same 6,700-square-mile reservation proposed by General
Macomb in 1839. White Floridians cried that it was shameful to tolerate any
Indians in the peninsula, but in August 1842 the administration accepted
the plan and the war ended.
Shipment of some of the 300 continued until, by the end of 1843, 3,824
were gone. It is not known how many died during the war, but the Semi-
noles had shown a rare ability to adapt to new circumstances and to survive
as a culture. Their resilience would serve them well in the years ahead. Their
fight to stay in their homeland is as gal ant as any in history. That they held
out for seven years is al the more remarkable because of the diversity of
bands among them and their lack of continuous central leadership. It had
been total war for them.
Not so for the United States where the war required a limited commit-
ment from the people. It did require a ful commitment from the army.
Every regular army regiment served in Florida, straining the logistical and
personnel staffs more than at any time since the War of 1812. There were
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1,466 deaths in the regular army, 328 of them combat-related. Seventy-four
of the dead were officers while the corps was reduced sharply due to resigna-
tions of officers who saw no glory or honor for their service in Florida. Fifty-
five citizen soldiers were killed, while unknown hundreds died of disease.
On the plus side, the war amounted to field training for officers who served
later in the Mexican War and Civil War.
The army had to change its strategy and tactics more than once during
the seven years of conflict. The Seminoles proved tactical y adept at engag-
ing the soldiers on terrain of their choosing, and used natural features of the
landscape to their advantage. In response, the heavy columns, supported
by logistical trains used by General Scott, gave way bit by bit to small units
carrying their supplies on their backs. These detachments had to penetrate
nearly inaccessible hideaways, live in part off the land, recruit Indians and
blacks as guides and interpreters, destroy the Seminoles’ food sources, en-
dure extreme hardship, and throughout also protect white settlements. The
partisan style was not carried into the Mexican or Civil Wars, but the Union
did final y employ a strategy against a people, not just against the military
portion of it.
212 · Brent R. Weisman
Third Seminole War
Following the end of the Second Seminole War in August 1842, Bil y Bow-
legs became principal chief over the 300 to 400 Indians remaining in Flor-
ida. Twenty warriors refused to acknowledge his authority. He and Sam
Jones, a trusted leader and head of one of the bands, strove to abide by the
terms of the peace settlement. Thus, when in July 1849, after seven quiet
years, five defiant young warriors kil ed and pil aged outside the reservation,
Bowlegs and Jones undertook to deliver the miscreants to the whites for
justice. They did deliver three, and the hand of one killed, but the fifth had
escaped. The next year they handed over three other rovers who had killed
young Daniel Hubbard of Marion County. Floridians were little affected by
the conscientious effort that the chiefs had made. They simply wanted to be
rid of the Seminoles altogether. An editorial in a St. Augustine newspaper
on 10 August 1850 asked that the natives be outlawed and a bounty of $1,000
placed on every male delivered dead or alive and $500 for every woman or
child delivered alive. Senator Stephen Mallory said that they must get out
or be exterminated.
For a time the United States government sought to achieve removal with-
out war. Powerful chiefs were brought from among the Seminoles in Indian