- John Horse
John Horse (b. 1812 - d. 1882), also known as "Juan Caballo" and "Gopher John", was a
military advisor toOsceola and a leader of the Afro-Seminole contingents against American troops during theSeminole Wars . He later became a scout for theUnited States Army and led a number of Black Seminoles across theSoutheastern United States to firstIndian Territory (nowOklahoma ) and later toMexico , where he died.Early Life and war
Horse was born and raised as a slave in Micanopy,
Florida . The year that he was born, theWar of 1812 broke out between American and British troops. Horse, while a biracial slave to a Seminole family, wasn't treated in the type of manner that was common in the institution of chattel slavery in the northerly states such as Georgia. The First Seminole War (1817-1818) occurred during his childhood.As a young man, he gained notoriety within the
Seminole Nation as an interpreter for Osceola and Chief Alligator, and fought against the army ofZachary Taylor during theSecond Seminole War . He led an escape of over 700Seminole and [Black Seminoles from a relocation camp nearFort Brooke , alongside Osceola andSam Jones , a Mikasuki chief. He voluntarily surrendered to US troops in 1838 because of a lack of morale and reinforcements, a year after Osceola and other leaders were captured under the pretense of awhite flag , and was shipped fromTampa Bay toNew Orleans , and eventually settled in Indian Territory with his family, some 500 Black Seminoles who had accepted removal.Life in Oklahoma
Once in Indian Territory, he accepted a job as an interpreter for the Army, which needed interpreters to convince the remaining insurrectionists in Florida to surrender and relocate to Indian Territory, and returned to Florida in 1839. He returned to Indian Territory in 1842 along with some 120 other Seminole who were captured and forcibly expelled. However, the pro-slavery
Creek people were already settled in the lands that were promised by the Army to the Seminoles. This led to tensions with the Creek, who tried to kidnap several Black Seminoles, and succeeded in capturingDembo Factor , a war veteran.Coacoochee , a traditionalist who opposed the idea of living with the Creek, protested the possible selling of Factor to the Territory as a slave. He was joined by Horse, and while the Army recovered Factor to the Seminole, no criminal charges were filed against the suspected slavers by the Creek Nation. Coacoochee and Horse then traveled toWashington, D.C. in 1844 to seek a separate land grant for the Seminole. They failed to secure a treaty and went home empty-handed, and an unsuccessful attempt was made on Horse's life by a Seminole man. Horse traveled again to Washington, and lobbied his old enemy Gen. Jesup, for a separate land for Seminole settlement; Jesup then grantedFort Gibson as a place of residence to the Seminoles. However, during his time in Washington, then-Attorney-General John Y. Mason ruled that the Black Seminoles were functionallyfair game for slave raiders. This meant that over 280 Black Seminoles, including members of Horse's own family, could be sold into chattel slavery under the whites and Creeks by their informal Seminole masters.Migration
To that end, John Horse and Coacoochee led a group of Seminoles from
Fort Gibson to modern Wewoka. During this time, Coacoochee and Horse thought of constructing an alliance of plains Indians, eastern Indians and fugitive slaves in an uprising against the federal government. The two waited until the notorious Indian agent,Marcellus Duval , finished his tenure and returned to Washington. Then they immediately led a migration across Texas and theRio Grande intoCoahuila ,Mexico . They presented themselves to the Mexican commander atPiedras Negras onJuly 12 ,1850 .Later life
Horse eventually secured land for the migrants, but returned with a number of Black Seminoles after the
American Civil War to work as Indian scouts for the US Army. However, he returned to Mexico after a number of years, and then died en route toMexico City while trying to gain more land rights for his people in northern Mexico. A community of Black Seminoles still resides in Coahuila to this day.External links
* [http://www.johnhorse.com John Horse website]
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