Chief Neamathla of Fowltown, a Miccosukee (Creek)…
November 1817 CE
The land in southern Georgia had been ceded by the Creeks in the Treaty of Fort Jackson, but the Miccosukee do not consider themselves Creek, do not feel bound by the treaty which they had not signed, and do not accept that the Creeks have any right to cede Miccosukee land.
In November 1817, General Edmund P. Gaines sends a force of two hundred and fifty men to seize Fowltown.
The first attempt is beaten off by the Miccosukee.
The next day, November 22, 1817, the Miccosukee are driven from their village.
David Brydie Mitchell, former governor of Georgia and Creek Indian agent at this time, will state in a report to Congress that the attack on Fowltown had been the start of the First Seminole War.