152:"That the main business of the said Cherokees seems to consist in the following points: 1st, To obtain a higher annual compensation for the lands they relinquished by the treaty with Governor Blount, on the 2d day of July 1791. 2dly, That the white people who are settled to the southward of the ridge which divides the waters of the Tenassee from those of Little River, should be removed, and that the said ridge should be the barrier. 3dly, That a person of Reputation should be commissioned on behalf of the general Government to reside in the Cherokee Nation, who should at once be their Counsellor and protector. 4thly, That the projected settlement of the Tenassee Company at the muscle shoals, should be prevented.1 5thly, That the annual allowance of Goods should be now furnished together with some ploughs and other implements of husbandry, as mentioned in the Treaty. 6thly, That John Thompson, who is a half Creek and James Carey, should be appointed interpreters agreeably to the recommendation of Governor Blount—it is proposed to add George Miller, the full-blooded Cherokee to the Interpreter⟨s⟩—He has claims on the Government for services in the North Carolina troops—having as he alleges, served with them for several years. He is young, good-humoured, well disposed to the United States, and his appointment would be highly grateful to the Indians, as well as to himself, and would be considered as a reward for his past services which must now be supported by evidence."
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paid by the United States to the
Cherokee leaders. Below is an excerpt from a letter of the War Department Dated January 17, 1792, by Secretary of War Henry Knox:
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of the United States, with the United States managing all future foreign affairs for all the loosely affiliated
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affairs for the southern district of the United States, and various representatives of the
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United States to make presents to the
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Guarantees by the United States that the lands of the
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A monument to the treaty, erected in 1997, is located on the banks of the
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No U.S. citizens may settle within the
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signed on July 2, 1791, and proclaimed on
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Cherokees to give notice of pending attacks by other tribes against the United States.
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Statue representing the signing of the Treaty of the
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Boundaries were established between the
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Establishment of perpetual peace and friendship between the two peoples.
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Both peoples to cease any animosities held against each other.
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Cherokees acknowledge the protection of the United States.
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The Cherokee must deliver criminals to the United States.
187:"Founders Online: Enclosure: Report, 17 January 1792"
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No U.S. citizens may hunt within the Cherokee lands.
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28:Cherokee–American wars § Treaties of 1777
16:1791 treaty between the U.S. and the Cherokees
125:within the Cherokee areas are to be punished.
103:Stipulation of a road by the United States.
241:United States and Native American treaties
141:An addendum to the treaty was signed by
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128:Retaliation restrained by both nations.
26:For the 1777 Treaty of Fort Henry, see
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251:Native American history of Tennessee
84:This treaty mentions the following:
246:Cherokee and United States treaties
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