The Creek War was
a localized war between the settlers in Kentucky,
Alabama, and Tennessee and the Creek Indians. It
is sometimes considered part of the War of 1812,
a larger conflict between the United States and
Great Britain, though in reality the two events
were totally separate. U.S. military intervention
in 1814 quickly brought an end to the hostilities.
As White settlers invaded the ancestral lands of the Creeks, leadership within
the tribe differed on how to approach the problem. The upper Creeks favored violence,
while the lower Creeks favored diplomacy. In August of 1813, the upper Creeks
took matters into their own hands my massacring settlers at Ft. Mims on the Alabama
River. Over 350 settlers were killed in the ambush. The ambush quickly provoked
various militia groups into action, along with the U.S. military. Tennessee militiamen,
Lower Creek warriors, and other forces commanded by Andrew Jackson staged retaliatory
attacks on the Upper Creeks at Talladega and Auttosee, killing hundreds and scorching
many villages.
On March 27, 1814, Jackson and his forces annihilated Creek resistance at Horseshoe
Bend, Alabama, killing over 900 Creek warriors and capturing 500 women and children
as prisoners. This battle ended the Creek War and caused many in the resistance
to flee and join the Seminoles in Florida. The Lower Creeks, who remained loyal
to Jackson, were forced to sign the 1814 Treaty of Fort Jackson, which ceded
20 million acres of Creek territory in Georgia and Alabama to the U.S. Government.
By 1836, virtually all Creeks were removed from the area and forced into reservations
in Oklahoma |