.MTA2Mg.NzE5ODc

From Newberry Transcribe
Jump to navigation Jump to search

88 1730

  “The French aided by the Cherokees regain possession of the Natchez, who elude the fury of their enemies by a retreat upon the Mississippi, managed with extraordinary secrecy & dispatch.  They were shortly afterwards pursued by M. Perier at the head of a considerable force, overtaken at a fort they had erected for their defence on Red River about 180 miles from its mouth, & finally put to the sword or taken prisoners and reduced to slavery.  Thus the Natchez, the most polished, civilized & humane of all the savage nations of North America, became extinct as a nation through the injustice & wanton rapacity of the French, who were bound in gratitude to show them every mark of friendship & forbearance.  The extirpation of these inoffensive natives, equals in character, though not in extent, the most wanton barbarities committed by the Spaniards upon the innocent aborigines of the western continent.  A deputation of Choctaws is sent to England, presented to the King, and acknowledge themselves & their nation as subjects of his dominion.  With the exception of the Choctaws & Chickasaws, the Indians generally on the Mississippi were friends of the French. "Settlements