76 comments

  1. Just a note: When the Indians won a battle it was called a massacre..when the others instigated a massacre it is called a great victory. I fully understand the fury from either adversary. Just a note.

    1. Very true statement.

    2. I am not trying to take sides. History is that history. If a settler most of us would have fought as savagely as needed to get our revenge and to gain the upper hand on land expansionist treaties. If Indian we would have fought to the bitter end to retain our culture and way of life. Against a culture that had so many technological advantages the tribes were doomed. All that could be done was to try and retain some of their ancestral land holdings. Also: although both sides were prone to outright barbarity and savagery due to evolutionary cultural differences the Indians practiced it more. That is burning at the stake and killing of non combatants. I am just glad that this is a part of history…look at it this way: what would the settling of the frontiers have been like had there been no Indians? It would have just been a conquest of Nature’s wilderness. So much has been brought to us via this historical experience. As for major defeats of the U.S. and colonial/militia see the defeat of General St.Clair in 1791 at the hands of the Shawnee headed by Blue Jacket and Little Turtle. The U.S. forces suffered 600 soldiers killed, 30 female camp followers (wives, mistresses and whores) and 300 wounded. This was the greatest victory of the Indians and what Tecumseh with his confederacy also hoped to accomplish. “To drive the Whites back into the sea from wench they came.” I can not blame a people for fighting for what they view as theirs the same as my ancestors fought the jun hordes of blue bellies.

  2. Robert you are right

  3. Was this Peter McQueen the son of James McQueen of Scotland who tried his best to repopulate the Red Creeks? James McQueen lived to be something like 125 years old.

  4. This was the greatest native American victory against US expansionism; even more so than Custer’s defeat on the Little Big Horn.

  5. Got to visit the site when shooting video for Ala Power in the mid 80’s. I felt a cold spot and asked the ranger if that was where the fort gate doors were and he said yes.

  6. At the massacre at Horseshoe Bend, they killed 800 or more. To get an accurate casualty count, they cut off the noses of those men, women and children they killed. They being the US forces under Gen Coffee, Andrew Jackson and Sam Houston. Davy Crockett participated in the massacre of a Creek village just before this battle, along with Coffee, but Crockett sat out the battle of Horseshoe Bend.

  7. I am glad Indians won a battle…but the Indians lost the war…and were treated badly..

  8. Fort Mims was after Horseshoe bend……

  9. Sad how they were treated, outsiders coming in and taking over, kind of like whats going on now in our country.

  10. Bad is bad, no matter what side it is on and most people don’t know the true reason why we were at war with the Indians. Propaganda is propaganda! My gggg grandfather and his 16 year old son were both killed and scalped while they were clearing land he had been granted for service in the Revolutionary War! They were not harming anyone. They were just clearing the land and building a cabin. My gggg grandmother was left a widow with five young children. There are two sides to every dispute! The “Red Sticks” were vicious terrorist who caused the Indian Wars. The “White Sticks” were the peaceful ones who wanted to get along with the white settlers. They still own land here in Alabama. They are the Poarch Band of the Creek nation. They still have property here in Alabama and they are good neighbors and love their State! And their State loves them! Oh, and by the way, my gggg grandfather and his 16 year old son were killed and scalped on their on land in Georgia long before the Indian Wars happened! Never believe everything you hear or read in a History book that wants to demonize people from a certain part of the country!

    1. not trying to start another WAR, but the “land” granted to you ancestor really wasn’t the governments’ to begin with. the LAND belonged to the INDIANS, and the white man TOOK it. those SAVAGES, as oyu described, were the REAL owners of the land. they were jsut trying to defend their rights as land owners. if it were your ancestors as it was the indians, the same would have occured. as for the RED STICKS versus the WHITE STICKS…..they were still the CREEK NATION. RED EAGLE was half white (scottish man was his father, he had red hair and beard) was defending his bands land. i know, i have talked to ancestors of his. i USED to live in baldwin and mobile county and worked for baldwin county. i know where red eagle is buried, beside his mother.

      1. You spoke the truth. I am so tired of people calling Native Americans “savages.” This was their home! I am of both Native American and European descent. My sympathies are completely with the Native Americans.

  11. My fourth great grandfather was a Creek Indian Chief…. his name was Chief William McIntosh

  12. John, the land belonged to the British crown, not the Indians! The Indians were “squatters” on British Land! Who do you think we fought for the land? Why do you think that the pilgrims took a chance to come to a new country where there wasn’t so much as a house to sleep in and where they had to make most of their supplies because there wasn’t a corner store to go for anything! It’s clear that you don’t know much about our Nation’s history. They tried to live peaceably with the “Indians” and did. The White Sticks are still here! My gggg grandmother was one of them!

    1. I realize these are are old comments, but this Jane person has posted so many untruths that I feel compelled to comment. Jane, you are clueless. Nothing you posted is true. Nothing! You have no understanding of the ‘red sticks’ or ‘white sticks’. It was nothing like you described. The Poarch were NOT white sticks’ as you claim. Again, you obviously have no understanding at all what it means. Most offensive of all is your sickening comment that the Indians were “Squatters” on British land. My people were living in the Southeastern part of this country for centuries before any European ever visited. You sprout nothing but untruths and insult others for not knowing their history? What a horrid person you must be. I had family at Fort Mims and also among the attackers. In fact, I had a 4x Great Grandfather on both sides of the attack. It was a terrible event.

  13. I am a descendant of the Upper Creek Nation. I have ancestors, who were removed from Alabama. Fortunately, there were some, who remained in hiding…some hiding behind those European features that made them “white”. It is sad that many people have never heard of the “Upper Creek Nation”,even here in Alabama….but they have no one to speak for them, because they are gone. It is what it is. I am grateful to be an American…for all our scars, I still believe we are the greatest people. (My husband has proof that he descended from Menewa. He is of the Campbell clan in Chilton County.)

  14. […] episode of the Creek Indian War, November 12, 1813. Following Fort Mims massacre, numerous depredations were made by Indians throughout the entire settled sections of the country, […]

  15. My great great grandfather, Dr. John Watkins, of Burnt Corn, Alabama, narrowly escaped the Fort Mims massacre. He arrived in the area shortly after the incident and administered aid to the wounded. One young girl, who had been scalped, Elizabeth Stroud, recovered at the home of my great great grandfather and lived with them for several years afterward.

    1. Dr. Watkins treated a survivor of the Ogle Massacre as it was called. The event took place in what is today Lowndes County. The survivors headed for Dr. Watkins, then at Weatherford’s Ferry (Claiborne). The man responsible was Jack Hague, more commonly known as Savannah Jack. Dr. Watkins treatment of the young woman, Elizabeth Ogle, had nothing to do with the Ft. Mims attack.

  16. […] of Alabama. In this autobiography we hear her actual words of her experiences and the massacre at Fort Mims. The autobiography was published in The Alabama Historical Quarterly in […]

  17. Part of my family fought and died here.

  18. Part of mine also. On both sides.

  19. And then the changed their name to the “peaceful” Seminoles.

  20. Lynn Hyde Cartee… You commented that the massacre at Fort Mims was after the battle of Horseshoe Bend. This is incorrect.

    The Fort Mims massacre occurred August 30, 1813, while the Battle of Horseshoe Bend was March 27, 1814.

  21. visited thhre last year..really interesting and cool part of our history

  22. Ann Christian Elizabeth West Britt

  23. The man defending Fort Mims to the death was half Creek and half European. The man leading the attack, William Weatherford aka ” Red Eagle” was 1/8 Creek and 7/8th European. It was basically a political war over who should live, farm and homestead in Alabama and those who wanted all homsteaders and/or “whites” to leave. . Folks seemed to have gotten along fine until the French and Indian War (between the French and English over control of the continent of America: any native groups were basically disregarded by Europeans as they were “Pagan” and did not count. The British was supplying gunpowder, paying $50 a scalp (a fortune in those days) for every “patriot” scalp whether from a man, woman or child. This created problems and hatreds that never ended. It became a fight for survival on both sides: really among those who wanted assimilation and homesteads and those who did not. Both sides were mixed blood in Alabama!

    Here is a published article:

    William “Red Eagle” Weatherford

    Birth: 1765
    Little River
    Baldwin County
    Alabama, USA
    Death: Mar. 24, 1824
    Little River
    Baldwin County
    Alabama, USA

    Native American Historical Figure. It is believed that he was born in what is now the state of Alabama into a wealthy family that consisted of his father, a Scottish trader, and his mother, a Creek Indian also of mixed heritage.
    As a result of this mixed lineage, he was only one-eighth Creek Indian. In the Creek nation descent was determined by the mother and his white father was of no concern to the other Creeks. He was therefore able to rise to become a chief of the Creeks.

    His war name was Hopnicafutsahia, or “Truth Teller,” and was commonly referred to as Lamochattee, or “Red Eagle.” Chief Red Eagle was reluctant to go to war, but once in battle he was a fierce warrior. During the war of 1812 he led the Creek nation against the Americans. He led his people in an attack on Fort Mims, a temporary stockade near the confluence of the Tombigbee and Alabama Rivers. The battle raged for about four hours and became known as the Fort Mims Massacre. The loss for the Creeks may have reached into the hundreds, but the loss for the Americans was complete. Weatherford may have made an attempt to halt the massacre but his warriors were like “famished wolves” he reported later. American losses were estimated as high as five hundred. News of the massacre spread quickly and galvanized the southwest. Andrew Jackson who was hampered by a wound he received in a recent dual, with the bullet still in his body, his arm in a sling, and so weak that at times he had to be helped on his horse headed south. Jackson dispatched a force of 500 troops under his trusted lieutenant John Coffee to the Creek village of Tallushatchee. The troops lured the Creek warriors into a trap and fought as long as a single warrior existed. In the end all 180 warriors were slain and only 5 troops were killed. No sooner had Coffee returned than Jackson received word that Weatherford and a thousand of his braves were attacking Talladega, thirty miles to the south. Jackson headed south with 1200 infantry and 800 cavalry. Jackson surrounded Talladega, but his efforts to emulate the Tallushatchee success failed and Weatherford and 700 of his warriors escaped. That left 300 of his people dead and Talladega saved. The American losses were 15 dead and 85 wounded. On December 23, 1813 General William Claiborne surprised Weatherford in the village of Oconochaca. Weatherford escaped only by urging his horse to make a legendary, and often recounted, jump off a bluff into the river. Weatherford and about 3000 warriors were hold up in an encampment known as Tohopeka, or Horseshoe Bend on the Tallapoosa River. This time Weatherford brought the battle to Jackson as he approached Horseshoe Bend. The Indians attempted to attack in three places simultaneously. Unfortunately for them, one of the forces failed to engage and Jackson was just barely able to hold them off., but was forced to retreat. Weatherford’s forces struck again and once more the attack was furious; Jackson rallied his troops and prevented them from being routed. Jackson could not claim victory, but the Creek losses far outweighed his. Jackson managed to piece together a larger force and with about four thousand men, including some Creek, Cherokee, and Choctaw allies marched again toward Horseshoe Bend. Weatherford and about 1000 braves and 300 women and children were fortified there. They were almost completely surrounded by the river and had enclosed the rest of the camp with a breastwork of logs five to eight feet high with many portholes. At about 10:00 in the morning of March 27, 1814 Jackson began his attack. The Battle was fierce and raged on through the afternoon. Jackson later told his wife, “The carnage was terrible.” Jackson sent out a flag of truce and it was fired upon. By night fall only a few warriors had escaped across the river. Jackson counted 500 dead on the ground and an estimated 300 more in the river. But their leader William Weatherford, Chief Red Eagle, had been absent from Horseshoe Bend. Word went out to the Creek to surrender and sever ties with the British or be annihilated. Many turned themselves in, but Weatherford’s whereabouts remained a mystery. Jackson demanded they turn their leader in to show good faith. But before they were forced to do so he walked boldly into camp. This was exactly the sort of brave act that would impress Jackson. Weatherford said, “My warriors no longer hear my voice. Their bones are at Talladega, Tallushatchee, and Tohopeka. … I now ask for peace for my nation, and for myself.” He set about convincing the remaining holdouts to surrender and the Creek War came to an end. He was pardoned by Jackson and became a prominent citizen and wealthy planter in Monroe County, Alabama.

    Family links:
    Parents:
    Sehoy Weatherford (1759 – 1811)

    Children:
    Mary Levitia Weatherford Howell (1823 – 1859)*

    Siblings:
    William Weatherford (1765 – 1824)
    David Tate (1778 – 1829)*
    John David Weatherford (1783 – 1831)*

    *Calculated relationship

    Burial:
    William Weatherford Memorial Park
    Little River
    Baldwin County
    Alabama, USA

    Edit Virtual Cemetery info [?]

    Maintained by: Find A Grave
    Originally Created by: Tammy McCollough Lemons
    Record added: Jul 28, 2004
    Find A Grave Memorial# 9193282

    Added by: Anonymous

    Added by: Claire

    Added by: Claire

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    husband of 1st cousin 6x removed
    – Chickasaw Elder
    Added: Sep. 1, 2014
    Never Forgotten
    – Chad Craft & Christy
    Added: Jul. 22, 2014
    My 8th great grandfather.
    – Tammy McCollough Lemons
    Added: Jan. 12, 2014

  24. […] episode of the Creek Indian War, November 12, 1813. Following Fort Mims massacre, numerous depredations were made by Indians throughout the entire settled sections of the country, […]

  25. HopeLily, this is really interesting and important history.

  26. Very good narrative.

  27. William Weatherford is an ancestor of mine through Aunt Myrtle Weatherord.

    1. Me too. Through my mother’s side. He was Creek/Scottish – his Father was Scottish. Scots liked to marry indians unlike a lot of men. But Red Eagle did give himself up to the white leaders later.

  28. I had about 7 relatives there, one left before the fight, one – my grandmother’s grandmother – died there, others servived

  29. Kera Smith, more history for the kids!

    1. Do you know where this is? How far away? We start war talk this next week I THINK

    2. Kera Smith south Alabama I think fort mims!

  30. Lost some of my family there

  31. Descendant of survivors.

  32. I really like history like this

    1. Thanks,
      Glad you enjoyed it.

  33. strange how this was called a massacre but Horseshoe Bend was a battle..guess it depends on who writes the history,,..

  34. I’ve been there. It’s an interesting place.

  35. Who wrote this history marker a 3rd grader.

    1. Hayes Glenn Turpen Ellis lol Have you ever tried to cast molten metal? You only have so much room and flexibility.

  36. But we caught those bloody British at battle of New Orleans Jan 1815 and whooped them good.

  37. Lost ancestors in this massacre. I did a college paper on it.

    1. Ashley Whaley it was the impetus that started the Indian wars

    2. I am related to the Mims in the area.

  38. Chas Weatherford, you recon this could of been some of your ancestors?

  39. Michael Snowden true. I guess it all depends on who’s writing the history books!
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Horseshoe_Bend_(1814)

  40. My family survived!

  41. Tony Edwards It has been my experience that history is always written by the winners; not always the true history but written just the same.

  42. If not for the attack on Fort Mims, I suspect Alabama would be a much more “blended” State today, and the Trail of Tears would have never happened. Assemilation between whites and Indians was well underway in 1813, with Indians becoming landowners and farmers, and many white men taking Indian wives. Many of the victims at Fort Mims were of mixed-blood. Red Eagle himself was mixed. The root cause of the attack was a Civil War among the Creeks. Assemilation/cooperation with whites was the issue. The Red Sticks were opposed to assemilation, and by winning the battle, they lost the war.

    1. Alex R. Moore possibly from what I read they had towns and farms and big stores of corn and other foods fruits and even nuts I’ve read mostly of Cherokee though

    2. Alex R. Moore Indians were continuously being “treatyed” off their traditional lands in the south, especially after our revolution. Assimilation was indeed well underway. But the Indians had consistently partnered with the Spanish, then the Brits leaving themselves in a terribly poor political position after the American revolution.

  43. Barbara Gibbs It is very true. History is written by the victors never by the defeated.

  44. Been here many times so much history

  45. I have been to Red Eagles grave

  46. The American State Papers told Jackson’s side of the story but it’s not what is recorded as what happened by Alabama Historians.

    Imagine what would happen if more people learned to look things up and go deeper than what is readily available.

    Federal Statute or Fairy Tales of The Tensas?

    Hmm..

  47. Michael Snowden the Battle of Horseshoe Bend was in response to the Ft. Mims Massacre or Battle

  48. Put yourself in the moccasins of native Americans. You get invaded by Europeans, with firearms. Your land is stolen, you are lied to by the white government at every turn. What would you have done? Yeah, you would defend your Homeland.

  49. How much of the fort is still here today?

    1. Sharon Jones no much the last time there, but some work has been initiated with signage and “story boards”. Worth the effort for a little roadtrip. Also, it’s just down the road from William Weatherford’s grave, that area of which has really been cleaned up and made into a little park.

    2. Sharon Jones not originally from here. Who is William Weatherford?

    3. Kate Swigonski He was a mixed breed Creek who was one of the leaders of the Redsticks that were at war with the whites. Also known as Red Eagle. Was at Horseshoe Bend and probably Ft. Mims.

  50. Good Lord willing & The Creeks don’t rise.

  51. And now we let them control the casinos and whether we get a lottery or not they don’t want us to have a lottery cause they want all our money spent in their casinos well f them they want to give us a billion dollars but then would tighten their machines up to recoup their losses

  52. My 5th great grandfather was killed in that battle his name was For Off Warrior.