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June 11 1839 Documenting The Cherokee Nation’s Genocidal Coup de Taut against The Chickamauga Nation Condoned by The United States.

The Chickamauga Nation - TCN

June 11, 2026
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Genocide

June 11 1839 Documenting The Cherokee Nation’s Genocidal Coup de Taut against The Chickamauga Nation Condoned by The United States.

The Illegal Assassinations, Genocide, Coup de Taut, and Theft of the Chickamauga Treaty Rights from the 1835 – 7 Stat. 478, 1835 – 7 Stat. 474, 1833 7 Stat 414, 1828 – 7 Stat. 311, and the December 31, 1838, Land Patent, and the complicit refusal to uphold the Treaties by the United States Government.

From the Cherokee Registry
https://cherokeeregistry.com/the-emigration-from-georgia-trail-of-tears/

© TCNPress.Org
By Line – YO-WA-NE-GV - The White Place
Thursday, June 11, 2026, 8:00 pm

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[EDITORIAL]: Throughout this document the Chickamauga and Chickamauga Nation are referred to as the Arkansas Cherokee, the Western Cherokee or Old Settlers.  These terms were used not only by the East Cherokee but the United States government as well.  The United States was too lazy to correct their actions and behavior, all the while the East Cherokee used these names to claim the power, authority, honor, and dignity of The Chickamauga Nation and their traditional customs and beliefs associated with the Mound Building Culture and the Southeast Ceremonial Religious Complex.  The Cherokee had NO Claims to the Mound Building Culture or the Southeast Ceremonial Religious Complex because they are Canadian, Great Lakes, Erie people who were expelled from the Iroquoian Confederacy after the end of the Beaver Wars and eventually immigrated into the Southeast sometime after the mid-1670s and whose Chief, Charles Hicks says they assassinated Lower Town Chiefs and Priest when they arrived in 1805 – 1815.


“Takattokah, June 11, 1839

Adair Bell, and in this manner those two escaped mobs that hunted them. Three days later a party that was hunting Stan Watie, searched the house of Rev. Samuel A. Worcester in their quest.


“Takattokah, June 11, 1839.

The national council is unable to act understandingly upon the propositions of our brother emigrants from the eastern Cherokee Nation. The subject seems to have been too ambiguously presented by them to be understood what their views and real wishes are. ‘The national council respectfully request that the chiefs would ask Messrs Ross and Lowry to state, in writing, what they really wish and desire, and to give them in as plain and simple manner as possible, in order that no misconstruction can he had upon the subject. After which, the council will act upon it according to your request, and, if possible. to the satisfaction of our brothers.

[EDITORIAL]: This is shrewd by the leadership of The Chickamauga Nation in that requiring the East Cherokee to put in writing exactly what they want and expect.


A. M. VANN, President National Council.
WM. THORNTON, Clerk.
Messrs. John Brown, John Looney and John Rogers,
Chiefs Cherokee Nation
We hand this to Messrs. Ross and Lowry, and hope the request of the council will be complied with as soon as convenient.
John Brown,
John Looney,
John Rogers.

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