23 LC 112 1255 S. R. 84 - 1 - Senate Resolution 84 By: Senators Gooch of the 51st, Kennedy of the 18th, Strickland of the 17th, Beach of the 21st, James of the 35th and others A RESOLUTION Commending the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, Cherokee Nation, United Keetoowah Band of 1 Cherokee Indians, Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and the historical tribes that once2 called Georgia their home, including the Yuchi Tribe, Chickasaw Nation, Seminole Nation,3 Seminole Tribe of Florida, Shawnee Tribe, and all tribes; and for other purposes.4 WHEREAS, the ancestors of today's Southeastern tribes and other Native peoples have for5 millennia inhabited the lands of the present day State of Georgia. The Lower Muscogee6 Creek, a major tribe, occupied towns on the Fall Line, the Piedmont, and coastal plain areas.7 They were not one tribe but several tribes that formed a powerful confederacy. The8 Cherokee, another major tribe, occupied the mountains of northern Georgia; and9 WHEREAS, the arrival and settlement of General James Oglethorpe, founder of the Colony10 of Georgia, opened a new chapter in the histories of the Native peoples of said territory; and11 WHEREAS, the State of Georgia acknowledges the significant role that the Native American12 tribes have played in permitting the birth of this colony to take root, such as Tomochichi; and13 WHEREAS, in 1801, the first mission school to the Cherokee and the Lower Muscogee14 Creek was established at Spring Place, Georgia. The Moravian mission became a model for15 23 LC 112 1255 S. R. 84 - 2 - ministry, education, and farming techniques, and in subsequent years, a friend and ally to the 16 chiefs and tribal heads at New Echota, capital of the Cherokee Nation; and17 WHEREAS, on November 12, 1825, New Echota was officially designated as the capital of18 the Cherokee Nation, and the tribal council also began a building program that included19 construction of a two-story council house, a supreme court, and later, the office of the first20 Indian-language newspaper, the Cherokee Phoenix, which used the new syllabary created by21 the Cherokee scholar Sequoyah; and22 WHEREAS, the Native American sovereign rights to their lands and nations were confirmed23 by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Worcester vs. Georgia, in which Chief24 Justice John Marshall opined that all Muscogee Creek land east of the Mississippi is that of25 nations and that the federal government had the sole right to deal with the Indian nations in26 North America. Justice Marshall also clearly stated that neither the states nor the federal27 government had the right of possession to Native lands nor political dominion over the laws28 enacted by Native peoples; and29 WHEREAS, in subsequent years prior to 1830, relationships with all Native tribes began to30 deteriorate. In 1826, the Treaty of Washington was signed, which ceded to the United States31 all Muscogee Creek land east of the Mississippi River. The passage of the Indian Removal32 Act of 1830 initiated the removal of the Native peoples from Georgia beginning with the33 Lower Muscogee Creek, thus perpetrating the removal of approximately 17,000 Creeks to34 the Oklahoma Territory. Georgia then included Cherokee territory in its Sixth Land Lottery,35 allocating Cherokee land to white settlers, although the Cherokee Nation had never ceded the36 land to the state; over the next six years, the Georgia Guard operated against the Cherokees,37 evicting them from their properties; by 1834, New Echota was becoming a ghost town, and38 council meetings were moved to Red Clay, Cherokee Nation, now in Tennessee; and39 23 LC 112 1255 S. R. 84 - 3 - WHEREAS, as the General Assembly recalled in a 1997 resolution dedicating the Trail of 40 Tears Highway: "New Echota was converted from the capital of a nation to a holding pen for41 the human inhabitants of that nation as they were rounded up and corralled like cattle to42 embark on one of the most sordid chapters in our state’s history, the forced migration of the43 Cherokee people from their native Southeastern foothills and mountains to Oklahoma, an44 event that lives in infamy as the Trail of Tears"; and45 WHEREAS, the Constitution of the United States is the supreme law of the land, which we46 are sworn to protect and uphold; and47 WHEREAS, it is abundantly fitting and proper for members of this body to recognize the48 importance of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, Cherokee Nation, the United Keetoowah Band49 of Cherokee Indians, and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, including the historical50 tribes such as the Yuchi Tribe, Chickasaw Nation, and the Seminole Nation, Seminole Tribe51 of Florida Indians, and the Shawnee Tribe to the rich history of this state and our nation; and52 NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE that the members of this body,53 in honor of Native American Honoring Day, commend the Muscogee (Creek) Nation,54 Cherokee Nation, United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians, Eastern Band of Cherokee55 Indians, and the historical tribes, including the Yuchi Tribe, Chickasaw Nation, Seminole56 Nation, Seminole Tribe of Florida Indians, the Shawnee Tribe, and all tribes.57 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the members of this body proclaim, "LET US GO58 DOWN TO THE RIVER, LET US BURY THE HATCHET AND PLANT THE TREE OF59 PEACE!"60 23 LC 112 1255 S. R. 84 - 4 - BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Secretary of the Senate is authorized and directed 61 to make appropriate copies of this resolution available for distribution to the public and the62 press.63