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Introduction
One of Tennessees nicknames is The
Volunteer State. It refers to the record number of volunteers
the state provided during both the War of 1812 and the Mexican-American War.
During the period between those two national wars, there were regional
U.S. situations like the two Seminole (Flordia) wars, the Cherokee disturbance
and the soon to follow Cherokee removal. All of these situations called
upon Tennessee volunteers.
There was also the Texas Revolution (1835-1836). Tennesseans were
called upon to defend the border between Mexican Texas and the United States.
Our purpose here is to focus on that period of the 1830s which covers
the Tennessee volunteers during the Sabine Expedition, Cherokee
disturbance, Second Seminole (Florida) War, and the Cherokee Removal.
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Tennessee Timeline
~ 1812-1835 ~
War of 1812 :
1812-1815
1813-1814 ... Creek War
27 March 1814 ... Creeks defeated at
Battle of Horseshoe Bend by General Andrew Jacksons Forces. (Horsehoe Bend or
Battle of Tohopeka, now Tallapoosa County, Alabama)
8 January 1815 ... British defeated
at Battle of New Orleans by General Andrew Jacksons Forces.
First Seminole (Florida) War :
1818-1819
 In 1817, U.S.A. Major General Andrew Jackson
was recalled to service to recapture runaway black slaves living among Seminole
and to pursue Seminole forces which had been conducting raids into Georgia.
Jackson and his 3,000 soldiers destroyed several native villages and had two
captured British citizens executed on charges of inciting the Indians and runaways.
General Jackson captured the Spanish fort of Pensacola in May 1818 and there
deposed the current government.
Jackson resigned his command and served as Commissioner of the United States
to Florida, 10 March 1821 to 12 November 1821. He was in effect,
the pre-territorial governor of Florida.
East & West Florida Ceded by Spain :
1819-1821

The Adams-Onís Treaty (Florida Treaty) signed in Washington on February 22, 1819,
ratified by Spain October 24, 1820, and entered into force February 22, 1821.
Here the United States purchases Spanish Florida for $5,000,000 and establishes
the western boundary between Spanish Texas and the Louisiana Purchase:
The Boundary
Line between the two Countries, West of the Mississippi,
shall begin on the Gulf of Mexico, at the mouth of the River Sabine in the Sea,
continuing North, along the Western Bank of that River, to the 32d degree of
Latitude; thence by a Line due North to the degree of Latitude, where it
strikes the Rio Roxo ... (Rio Rojo or Red River).
On 27 September 1821, representatives of the Spanish crown recognized Mexican
independence. They signed the Treaty of Córdoba.
Florida Territory :
30 March 1822
Andrew Jackson, President :
1829-1837
28 May 1830, Congress passes
Indian Removal Act.
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Table of Contents & Tennessee Timeline
~ 1835 into the 1840s ~
Research Aids :
1836
Query Board
Some Captains
Companies, 1836 (from TSLA)
A List of Some
Tennessee Companies, 1836
Second Seminole (Florida) War :
1835-1843
The Second Seminole War ... resulted from the efforts of the United States to remove
the Seminole Indians from Florida. The 1832 treaty of Paynes Landing had provided for a
delegation of Indians to journey to the West and decide on the acceptability of the land set
apart for them. The Seminoles agreed to leave Florida for the West within 3 years of giving
their approval.
Disputes arose, however, when the government insisted that the agreement to emigrate was
fulfilled when the delegation approved the new lands, and the Seminoles asserted that the
treaty would not take effect until they expressed satisfaction with their delegates report.
The federal government ordered the Seminole Indians to gather on January 8, 1836, for
removal---resistance would be met with force. The ensuing clash plunged both sides into
seven years of hardship. Both free blacks and slaves fought with the Seminoles. The U.S.
Army enlisted volunteers and mercenaries from other tribes. By 1843 the Army had forced all
but a few hundred of the Indians to emigrate, in small groups, west of the Mississippi.
Source: National Archives
and Records Administration
Texas Revolution & the Republic of
Texas :
1835-1836
2 October 1835 ... Battle of
Gonzales, also called the first battle of the
Texas Revolution.
28 October 1835 ... Battle of
Concepción, 450 Mexicans defeated.
2 March 1836 ... Texas declares
independence from Mexico.
6 March 1836 ... Alamo falls.
About 189 Texans killed.
27 March 1836 ... Goliad Massacre.
Nearly 400 Texans were executed by the Mexicans.
21 April 1836 ... Mexican forces
defeated at San Jacinto Texas.
22 April 1836 ... Mexican General
Antonio López de Santa Anna captured.
14 May 1836 ... Santa Anna
signs treaty with the Texans.
General Gaines & the Sabine
Expedition :

The Texas Revolution and potential Indian problems caused some
concern that the unmarked boundary between Mexican Texas and American
Louisiana might be breached. With the approval of Congress, USA Major General
Edmund Pendleton Gaines called upon the governors of Alabama, Louisiana,
Mississippi, and Tennessee to provide volunteers for the
defense United States and to guard the border at the Sabine River.
Tennessees Governor Newton
Cannon ordered into service many militia companies which were to
rendezvous at Fayetteville in Lincoln County or Athens in McMinn County.
Because of the Texans capture of
Mexican General Antonio López de
Santa Anna, the need for so many volunteers on the western front
greatly deminished. Many militia companies were dismissed after
the initial muster.
An Act of Congress :
Request to Congress,
6 May 1836
Authorization of
Volunteers, 23 May 1836
Letters :
General Gaines
to the Governors, 8 April 1836
General Gaines to
Mexican Commander in Texas, 25 April 1836
General Gaines to
Newton Cannon, 28 June 1836
General Gaines to
Newton Cannon, 28 August 1836
General Gaines to
Joel R. Pointsett, 19 August 1838
Messages of the Tennessee Governor,
Newton Cannon :
Legislative Message
5 October 1836
Legislative Message 8
October 1836
Claims of Tennessee Volunteers :
Claims of
Tennessee Volunteers,
8 February 1837
Claims of
Tennessee Volunteers, 19 December 1837
A List of Some
Tennessee Companies, 1836
John H. Hamiltons
Company
(Jackson County)
James Soaps
Company
(Cannon County)
H. C. Armstrongs
Company
(Overton County)
John B. Croziers
Company
(Anderson County)
Willie B. Watkinss
Company
(Bedford County)
Adrian Northcuts
Company
(Warren County)
Benet G. Whites
Company
(Rutherford County)
Henry S. Maxwells
Company
Overton County)
William Lauderdales
Company
(Sumner County)
Patrick Callaways
Company
(Franklin County)
Officers of the Executive Staff
(15 October 1836)
An Act of Congress :
Pay for
Militia, 1 March 1837
Tennessee Legislative Messages :
Request for Congressional Action, 2 November 1837
General Assembly Resolution, 4 January 1838
Cherokee Removal :
1836-1839
Treaty
of New Echota, Treaty of Removal, or the Trail of Tears Treaty ...
29 December 1835
The New Echota Treaty of May 1836 fixed the time after which Cherokee Indians who refused to
voluntarily leave their land in Alabama and Georgia would be removed by force. In 1838 the
War Department issued orders for General Winfield Scott to remove immediately the remaining
2,000 Cherokees to Indian Territory (now Oklahoma). The Army forced the Indians into stockade
camps before starting out on the 1,800 mile march west. They arrived in Indian Territory in
the spring of 1839. Scott was ordered to take command of troops already in Cherokee country,
including infantry, cavalry, and artillery. He also had the authority to call on the
governors of the adjoining States for as many as 4,000 militia and volunteers.
... the Cherokee disturbances
and removal, 1836-1839 ... these operations are generally called the Cherokee War.
Source: National Archives
and Records Administration
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Tennessee Timeline
~ in the 1840s ~
James Knox Polk, President :
1845-1849
James K. Polk was the last of the Jacksonian
Democrats to sit in the White House.
As a young lawyer he entered politics, served in the Tennessee legislature,
and became a friend of Andrew Jackson. He served in the U.S. House of
Representatives (1825-1839) and served as speaker between 1835 and
1839. He then served as governor of Tennessee (1839-41).
Polk entered the 1844 presidential campaign with little name recognition
but he publicly asserted that Texas should be re-annexed and
all of Oregon re-occupied. To the Democrats, Polk was the
candidate who stood for expansion.
During his term of office,
Polk pressured Mexico into war. The result of that war put the American
southwest into the hands of the United States.
Mexican~American War :
1846-1848. Timeline.
25 April 1846 ... Mexican troops attack on American troops along the
southern border of Texas.
14 September ... U.S. General Winfield Scott occupies Mexico City.
2 Feburary 1848 ... The peace treaty was signed at Guadalupe Hidalgo. Mexico
cedes Texas, California, and New Mexico (all the present-day states of
the American Southwest) to the United States.
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