Some Cherokee, such as Sequoyah, have voluntarily…
June 1817 CE
They clash here with the Osage, who control this area.
The Osage regard the Cherokee as invaders.
They begin raiding Cherokee towns, stealing horses, carrying off captives (usually women and children), and killing others, trying to drive out the Cherokee with a campaign of violence and fear.
The Cherokee are not effective in stopping the Osage raids, and work to gain support from related tribes as well as whites.
The peoples confront each other in the "Battle of Claremore Mound," in which thirty-eight Osage warriors are killed and one hundred and four are taken captive by the Cherokee and their allies.
As a result of the battle, the United States constructs Fort Smith in present-day Arkansas.
It is intended to prevent armed confrontations between the Osage and other tribes.
The U.S. compels the Osage to cede additional land to the federal government in the treaty referred to as Lovely's Purchase.