A recent edition of the TV quiz Jeopardy offered the
question of who an Indian named Osceola might have been. One
contestant suggested “Cree[k]” and two declared “Seminole.” Those
two were declared correct by the ceremony master, Alex Trebek.
I felt sorry for the person who suggested “Cree,” because
Osceola was indeed a Creek Indian, born in Alabama and a migrant to
Florida, where the Seminole Tribe was struggling to maintain itself
against an ever-encroaching population of white U.S. citizens,
protected and encouraged by U.S. troops and volunteers.
Heading the Indian removal was President Andrew Jackson and his
Indian Removal Policy. His treaties stripped the southern tribes of
three-fourths of Alabama (native to the Creek) along with parts of
Georgia, Tennessee, Mississippi. Kentucky, North Carolina. and
Florida. The U.S. Supreme Court weighed in with a ruling that it
was illegal for Indians to hold title to land and Congress complied
by passing the Indian Removal Act. Jackson’s aim was to drive the
“Five Civilized Tribes — Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek and
Seminole” west of the Mississippi.
President Jackson declared of those who might resist
displacement: “They have neither the intelligence, the
industry, the moral habits or the desire of improvement which are
essential to any favorable change in their condition.”
The U.S. Army and the Seminoles fought three wars between 1816
and 1858. Osceola had moved to Florida after the War of 1812 and
became a leader of the Seminole resistance, accounting through his
leadership for several minor victories, and a major one called the
Battle of Okeechobee, presided over by general Zachary Taylor. The
government hyped what seemed a defeat into a major victory and
Taylor eventually entered politics and became president in
1849.
Before this, however, Osceola had led his Seminole adoptees into
several skirmishes.
But in October of 1837 he made the mistake so many Indian
leaders made: he assented to a truce, and was taken captive by
General Thomas Jesup, who threw him in jail where Osceola fell ill
and died of malaria. Many Americans had come to admire Osceola as a
fighter for his homeland and they were incensed at the treachery.
Jesup recommended ending hostilities by granting the Seminoles a
reservation in southern Florida, but the new President, Van Buren,
rejected the idea and gradually nearly all the Seminoles bowed to
the white supremacists and moved to Arkansas.
It was over for that part of the country in which a man named
Osceola had captured the nation’s attention. The attention of all
except those who invent the questions for Jeopardy.