(c) 1995-2003 William James Chance
Although Osceola was fierce and cruel, he always told his warriors
to treat women and children kindly.
The Indians fled before the white army, which the government sent
to conquer the red man, Osceola led his warriors into the everglades of Florida,
where they joined the Seminoles. Osceola was not very tall and not very straight
but he was brave and had an undying hatred for the whites. His wife was taken
away from him and made a black slave in the plantations of Florida. His purpose
to fight them made him a strong man.
Imagine a medium sized man, dressed in a buckskin shirt that reached to his knees, a turban of grey, silver coin earrings, leggings and moccasins that were fringed and beaded and you will have a mind picture of the young chieftain.
Osceola was very skillful with the bow and arrow although he did
like the white mans gun better and he handled a gun perfectly. In one battle he
killed forty men by himself.
He became the leader of the Creeks and the Seminoles with two
chiefs, Jumper and Alligator. Under him they were as brave as Osceola himself.
The Seminoles was not their original name, they got their name from the Spanish.
The Seminoles real name was, Lower Creek Indians.
For fifteen years this leader of the Seminoles went from one chief
to another, preaching death to the whites and begging the chiefs to hold the
lands of mother earth, which their forefathers owned. It was on Osceola's
account that the United States government spent ten million dollars and lost two
thousand men in an effort to conquer the Seminoles and move them to the lands in
the west. Osceola said, "I will not sign the treaty to give away Indian lands
and I will kill any chief who does sign it".
When the government agent was trying to get the Indians to leave
Florida, the treaty of Payne's Landing, was signed by the Indian chief and they
said goodbye to their old hunting grounds.
It was impossible for the white soldiers to capture the cunning
chief, for he knew the everglades and they did not. At last he was persuaded to
go to Saint Augustine to talk the matter over. While there, he was put in
prison. He died in at Fort Moultrie in Charleston, South Carolina. All Indians,
good or bad, believe that When Oseola's spirit passed away, it joined those of
other brave Indians whom had gone before to the happy hunting grounds.
He died in chains in South Carolina.
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