Volume XXXVI, Issue 9 September, 2016 Camp Officers: Commander: David Rawls 1 st Lt. Commander: David Fisher 2 nd Lt. Commander: Hank Arnold Adjutant/ Treasurer: Pat Acton Chaplain: Jeff Young Color Sergeant: Bill Haas Quartermaster: Tristan Dunn Sergeant At Arms: Sam Nelson Camp Surgeon: Dr. Rick Price Dispatch Editor: Jim Darden Commander Emeritus: Dr. Ira West Chaplain Emeritus: Dr. Charles Baker Fighting Joe Wheeler Camp 1372, Inc. C/O Adjutant P.O. Box 43362 Vestavia Hills, AL 35243 The Next Camp Meeting will be at 7:00 pm, Tuesday September 13. Dr. John Killian present a program on the Bill of Rights. SCV Calendar September10, 1838 Fighting Joe Wheeler s birthday September 13..Camp Meeting The Bill of Rights...Dr. John Killien October 11..Camp Meeting Ft Delaware..Jim Darden November 8.Election Day December 13.Camp Meeting Program TBD http://www.fightingjoewheeler.org SCV Fighting Joe Wheeler Camp 1372 Please send articles or other information for inclusion in The Dispatch to Jim Darden Editor 645 South Sanders Road Hoover, Alabama 35226 Or e-mail km4qr@bellsouth.net FJWCamp1372@yahoogroups.com Alabama: We Dare Defend Our Rights The principal for which we contended is bound to reassert itself, though it may be at another time and in another form. - Jefferson Davis, May 1865
Commander s Report Commander s Report September 2016 Compatriots: And just when I think things could not get any worse, I am proven wrong again. True sanity appears to have gone out the window and it appears to be so much easier to throw up our collective hands and surrender to the madness. Unfortunately for me, I was raised better and cannot bring myself to contribute to our ultimate destruction. Let us all be willing to do what is right before it is too late! Last Friday I had the misfortune of enduring another egregious example of this incredible heritage assault as I flipped my television, encountering a program on the History (ha!) Channel that thoroughly took me off guard. As I was passing by, I noticed a picture of Abraham Lincoln and stopped, curious as to how our Southern heritage would be attacked yet again. It turned out to be far worse than I expected: the program turned out to be Ancient Aliens (I am still trying to figure out why this program is shown by the History Channel). Anyway, I was shocked... shocked I tell you... to learn that the United States was founded by men influenced by aliens (or perhaps even the aliens themselves!) as part of an experiment in freedom. Then our hard-headed Southern ancestors tried to ruin everything by revolting against the aliens hand-picked leaders. As a result, the aliens were forced to come back to Earth and influence men such as Lincoln, Grant, Sherman, et al., so that the experiment could be saved. Really? Really? I mean outside alien influence could explain a few things but I find myself absolutely stunned at the idea that the War of Yankee Imperialist Aggression was determined by the actions of e.t. s. So, it seems our ancestors were fighting aliens as well as Yankees; no wonder the South did not have a chance. But it seems that there is some hope for sanity. This past week a federal judge in Mississippi dismissed a civil suit regarding the state flag, noting that the individual who filed the case failed to show that he had personally suffered any injury from the Mississippi state flag. As an attorney myself, I have been wondering for some time now when a court would bring up this particular issue. Now to get off my soapbox and deal with other matters. I would like to remind everyone that the November meeting has been cancelled due to the fact that New Merkle is used as a polling place during the election. I look forward to the next Camp Meeting on the 13th of September. As usual we have a wonderful speaker lined up. I ask that not only everyone come and participate but invite any and all to come and enjoy. Our ancestors fought for a just cause and they deserve far more honor and respect for what they did. Let us always honor their memory! Deo Vindice, David L. Rawls Commander Page 2
2 nd LT Commander s Report July, 2016 Camp, I send this out with a heavy heart. As most of you know my Mom passed and was buried 2 weeks ago. I thank all that called or came to the service. It was a celebration of Mom s life as it should have been. Mom was a true Southern woman. She taught me a lot and imparted thoughts and ways of me I shall always carry, you might call it my "good side". Growing up we celebrated family values. Being together, singing in the car, picnic lunches, and family reunions. At the reunions I was the one that walked the cemetery looking for Confederate solders. I was asking the "old folks", now I am one, about the war and the old days. I found out that Mom had 2 great uncles buried at Franklin. Her great-grandfather was buried in a forgotten grave in Pike county. He was in the 57th Ala. and fought in the Atlanta campaign, Hood's Tennessee campaign, and was wounded at Bentonville. He came back from the war and farmed and traded for a living. It was this hard existence that helped mold the Southern people into what we are today. Proud of our heritage, protective of what rights we have left, family people that fight to keep what is ours. I am proud to be a Southerner, my mothers son, and the Son of a Confederate veteran. Please remember to conduct yourselves in a way that will make our ancestors proud. They are watching from above. Hank Arnold 2nd Lt Cdr. FJW 1372
Stand Watie (1806-1871) Also known as Standhope Oowatie, Degataga, and Isaac S. Watie, he was a leader of the Cherokee Nation and a brigadier general of the Confederate States Army during the Civil War. He was born in Oothcaloga, Cherokee Nation (Calhoun, Georgia) on December 12, 1806, to David Uwatie, a Cherokee, and Susanna Reese, who was of Cherokee and European heritage, and first called Isaac Uwatie. Later, when he grew up, he preferred the English translation of his Cherokee name, Degataga, meaning "Stand Firm," and the "U" was dropped from "Uwatie." Watie was educated at the Moravian Mission School in Spring Place, Cherokee Nation (now Georgia) and by the time he grew up, his father had become a wealthy slave-owning planter. He would later write for the Cherokee Phoenix newspaper, which led him into the dispute over the Georgia Anti-Indian laws. When gold was discovered on Cherokee lands in northern Georgia in 1828, thousands of white settlers encroached on Indian lands. In spite of federal treaties that protected them from actions of individual states, Georgia confiscated most of the Cherokee land and the Georgia militia destroyed the Cherokee Phoenix in 1832. The Federal Government soon stepped in, encouraging the Cherokee to move to Indian Territory and the Treaty of New Echota was signed in January, 1836, which established terms under which the entire Cherokee Nation was expected to move west to the Indian Territory. Although it was signed by a minority Cherokee political faction and not approved by the Cherokee National Council, it was ratified by the U.S. Senate and became the legal basis for the forcible removal known as the Trail of Tears. The Watie brothers stood in favor of the removal of the Cherokee to Oklahoma and were members of the group that signed the Treaty of New Echota. The Anti-Removal National Party following John Ross refused to ratify the treaty, putting him at odds with the Waties. The family, along with many other Cherokee soon emigrated to the West, where Stand Watie, a slave holder, started a successful plantation on Spavinaw Creek in Indian Territory. Those Cherokee following John Ross remained on their tribal lands for two years until they were forcibly removed by the U.S. government in 1838 in a journey known as the "Trail of Tears," during which thousands died. The following year, many of the members who had signed the treaty were targeted for execution and in June, 1839 Stand s brother Elias Boudinot was murdered outside his home. His cousin and uncle, John and Major Ridge, fell to Cherokee assassins on the same day. In 1842 Watie encountered James Foreman, one of his uncle's assassins and shot him dead. He was tried for murder in Arkansas and acquitted as acting in self defense, even though Foreman was unarmed. Stand Watie's brother Thomas Watie was also murdered by Ross partisans in 1845. At least 34 politically related murders were committed among the Cherokee in 1845 and 1846. From 1845, Stand Watie served on the Cherokee Council, part of that time as speaker. When the Civil War broke out, a majority of the Cherokee Nation voted to support the Confederacy and Watie organized a regiment of cavalry. In October 1861, he was commissioned as colonel in the First Cherokee Mounted Rifles. In December, 1861, he was engaged in a battle with some hostile Indians in the Battle of Chusto-Talasah in present day Tulsa County, Oklahoma.
Later, he would participate in the Battle of Pea Ridge, Arkansas in March, 1862, after which General Albert Pike, in his report of this battle, said: "My whole command consisted of about 1,000 men, all Indians except one squadron. The enemy opened fire into the woods where we were, the fence in front of us was thrown down, and the Indians charged full in front through the woods and into the open grounds with loud yells, took the battery, fired upon and pursued the enemy retreating through the fenced field on our right, and held the battery, which I afterward had drawn by the Cherokee into the woods." Though the Battle of Pea Ridge was a Union victory, Watie's command of his troops was well noted and there was considerable fear by the Union that Indian Territory would be entirely lost to the Confederacy. The same year, though he was serving in the Confederate Army, Watie was elected principal chief of the Cherokee Nation. Though former Chief John Ross had fled to Washington D.C., his supporters, who by this time were in the minority, refused to recognize Watie s election and open warfare broke out between the "Union Cherokee" and the "Southern Cherokee. Confederate General William Steele, in his report of the operations in the Indian Territory, in 1863, said of Colonel Watie that he found him to be a gallant and daring officer. On April 1, 1863, Watie was authorized to raise a large brigade. In May, 1864 Colonel Watie was commissioned a brigadier-general, the only Native American to achieve that rank in the Civil War. In June, he captured the federal steamboat J.R. Williams with 150 barrels of flour and 16,000 pounds of bacon, which Watie would later say was actually a disadvantage to the command, because a great portion of the Creek and Seminole soldiers immediately broke off to carry their booty home. In September, 1864 he attacked and captured a Federal train of 250 wagons on Cabin Creek and repulsed an attempt to retake it. At the end of the year 1864 General Watie's brigade of cavalry consisted of the First Cherokee regiment, a Cherokee battalion, First and Second Creek regiments, a squadron of Creeks, First Osage battalion, and First Seminole battalion. To the end of the War, General Watie stood by his colors, becoming the last Confederate general in the field to stand down. When the leaders of the Confederate Indians learned that the government in Richmond, Virginia had fallen and the Eastern armies had been surrendered, most began making plans for surrender. The chiefs convened the Grand Council June 15, 1865 and passed resolutions calling for Indian commanders to lay down their arms. However, Stand Watie refused until June 23, 1865, a full 75 days after Lee's surrender in the East. Finally accepting the futility of continued resistance, he surrendered his battalion of Creek, Seminole, Cherokee, and Osage Indians to Lieutenant Colonel Asa C. Matthews at Doaksville. After the Civil War ended the "Union Cherokee" and the "Southern Cherokee" sent delegations to Washington D.C., where Watie pushed for recognition of a separate "Southern Cherokee Nation." Watie was refused; however, and the government negotiated a treaty with the Union Cherokee in 1866, declaring John Ross as the rightful Principal Chief. It seemed that open hostilities would break out again in the Cherokee Nation, but, when John Ross died in August, 1866, hostilities calmed down. In the election in 1867, full-blood Cherokee, Lewis Downing, was elected Principal Chief and was able bring about peaceful reunification, though tensions lingered under the surface into the 20th century. In the meantime, Watie had returned from the Civil War to find his home burned to the ground by Federal soldiers. In financial ruin, he spent his final years farming and trying to restore his once-beautiful Grand River bottomland. All three of Watie s sons preceded him in death and in his last years he watched as colossal tracts of land legally deeded to the Cherokee were taken from them as punishment for their support of the Confederacy and given to other tribes. Many believe that Stand Watie died of a broken heart. In one of his last letters to his daughter, he would say You can t imagine how lonely I am up here at our old place without any of my dear children being with me. He died on September 9, 1871 and was buried in the Polson Cemetery in Delaware County, Oklahoma. From http://www.legendsofamerica.com/na-standwatie.html