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Page [1] view page image
At the interview with which we were honoured [honored] on our arrival here some Months ago, as a regularly appointed Delegation from the Cherokee Nation , we were referred by your Excellency to the Secretary of War. We were then encouraged to expect that a negotiation would be forthwith opened to settle all matters between the Cherokee Nation and the United States . Informal Communications followed, at the express suggestion of the Secretary of War, between Mr. John Mason jr. , and two individuals of our Delegation, John Ross and Edward Gunter , who were told that if there should be no result from those Communications, the Delegation, as a body, would Still be at perfect liberty to proceed with our official intercourse, as though nothing had intervened. But while the individuals in question were yet waiting a reply Page [2] view page image from Mr. Mason , to the last unofficial suggestion they had offered, and before any We would now distinctly assure your Excellency, Page [3] view page image that since our ardent desire to have settled the differences between the United States and our Nation, by retaining a portion of our territory and becoming Citizens, with all the previleges [privileges] of We cannot but believe that, blended with the vast power of the United States , there must be all that magnanimity, which may entitle us to hope that this earnest wish on our part to settle an extremely embarrassing question in a manner which can afford no pretext whatever for difficulty on either side, will be met in the same spirit with which it is offered. Our people expect that we [added: shall] should finally arrange the matter here in Washington . We are fully prepared to do so; and we cannot doubt, if such be the disposition of your Excellency, that the whole subject will be most satisfactorily terminated without delay, "peaceably and on reasonable terms." We need not explain to the considerate mind of your Excellency, why we ask the earliest decision Page [4] view page image upon this request, from,
Copy of a letter from the Delegation of the Cherokee Nation to The President of the United States From papers of John Ross in possession of his grandson Robert B. Ross Park Hill , Okla [Oklahoma] |
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