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Who killed the Seminole Indians?

Who killed the Seminole Indians?

By 1707, Carolinan raiders and their Yamasee Indian allies had killed, carried off, or driven away most of the remaining native inhabitants during a series of raids across the Florida panhandle and down the full length of the peninsula. In the first decade of the 18th century.

What caused the Second Seminole War in the 1830s?

What caused the Second Seminole War in the 1830s? White settlers opened fire on Seminole Indians, against terms of the Indian Removal Act. The Seminole and the Cherokee fought over lucrative land along the Mississippi River. The U.S. military forcibly removed Seminoles from their land.

How did the Seminoles react to the Indian Removal Act?

The “Trail of Tears” claimed thousands of lives including one-fourth of the Cherokee Tribe due to hunger, cold, disease and sorrow. Only one group of Indians — the Seminoles — successfully resisted removal and they did so fiercely.

How did US forces finally defeat the Seminole Indians in Florida in 1842?

How did U.S. forces finally defeat the Seminole Indians in Florida in 1842? They lured the Seminole chief into a trap with the promise of a peace settlement.

What finally happened to the Seminoles?

With peace, most Seminoles agreed to emigrate. The Third Seminole War (1855–58) resulted from renewed efforts to track down the Seminole remnant remaining in Florida. It caused little bloodshed and ended with the United States paying the most resistant band of refugees to go West.

Which Seminole Warrior became famous during the 2nd Seminole War?

The campaigns of the Second Seminole War were an outstanding demonstration of guerrilla warfare by the Seminole. TheMicos Jumper, Alligator, Micanopy and Osceola, leading less than 3,000 warriors, were pitted against four U.S. generals and more than 30,000 troops.

Who won the 2nd Seminole War?

Second Seminole War

Date December 23, 1835 – August 14, 1842 (6 years, 7 months, 3 weeks and 1 day)
Result Nominal end to conflict; no peace treaty; approximately 4,000 Seminoles forcibly transported to Indian Territory; approximately 350 Seminoles remained in Florida; unresolved conflict led to Third Seminole War in 1855.

What are the Seminoles known for?

The main people were the southern Creek who left Georgia to find safer lands. People from other tribes joined them and they became known as the Seminole tribe. The Seminole people fought to keep their land from the United States in a series of wars called the Seminole Wars.

How did the Seminole avoid removal?

When the U.S., enforcing the Removal Act, coerces many Seminoles to march to Indian Territory (which is now known as Oklahoma), some Seminoles and Creeks in Alabama and Florida hide in swamps to avoid forced removal. The descendants of those who escaped have governments and reservations in Florida today.

How did the Seminole assimilate?

The U.S. government gave in to settlers’ demands. To speed up the process of assimilation, they passed the General Allotment Act (also known as the Dawes Act) in 1887. Allotment divided reservations into small, individual parcels of land. In 1906 the government divided 350,000 acres of Seminole land into small parcels.

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Ruth Doyle