Workshop on Culture, History, and Society

Date: 

Friday, March 2, 2018, 12:00pm to 2:00pm

Location: 

William James Hall, 33 Kirkland Street, Room 1550

"'No Right of Citizenship': The 1863 Emancipation Acts of the Loyal Cherokee Council"

Speaker:

Melinda Miller, Assistant Professor of Economics, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

Contact:

Yueran Zhang
yueranzhang@g.harvard.edu

Chairs:

Orlando Patterson, Faculty Associate. John Cowles Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology, Harvard University.

Daniel Lord Smail, Frank B. Baird, Jr. Professor of History, Department of History, Harvard University.

Ya-Wen Lei, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology, Harvard University.

Abstract:

In 1863, the Cherokee Nation abolished slavery within its borders.  The standard account of this action typically neglects to mention that Nation’s National Council actually passed two separate emancipation acts.  The first called for ending slavery only if the Federal government agreed to compensate Union-loyal slave owners for doing so.  Just three days later, this act was replaced by a law that prescribed universal, uncompensated emancipation.  These acts have had a lasting impact on issues of inclusion, belonging, and citizenship in the Cherokee.  To understand fully the importance of this Council, Cherokee abolition, and the Cherokee Nation’s role in the Civil War, the details and subtleties of both Cherokee emancipation acts must be brought into sharper focus to reveal the many actors and ideals shaping this particular historical moment. To do so requires illuminating the arrest, and subsequent parole, of Principal Chief John Ross in of July 1862, the subsequent schism that emerged in the Cherokee Nation, and the 1866 treaty between the Cherokee Nation and United States.  By reconstructing the process of emancipation within the Cherokee Nation, this article seeks to contribute a rich and nuanced story to the historiography of the Civil War that highlights the complexity and fluidity of emancipation as peoples and governments throughout the United States contemplated what freedom meant.