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Show 168 MYTHS OF THE CHEROKEE [ ETH. ANN. 19 % were subsequently added as to increase the number by more than 600. l A census taken by their agent. Colonel Thomas, in 1841, gave the number of East Cherokee ( possibly only those in North Carolina intended) as 1,220,* while a year later the whole number residing in North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, and Georgia was officially estimated at from 1,000 to 1,200.8 It is not the only time a per capita payment has resulted in a sudden increase of the census population. In 1852 ( Capt.) James \ V. Terrell was engaged by Thomas, then in the state senate, to take charge of his store at Qualla, and remained associated with him and in close contact with the Indians from then until after the close of the wrar, assisting, as special United States agent, in the disbursement of the interest payments, and afterward as a Confederate officer in the organization of the Indian companies, holding a commission as captain of Company A, Sixty- ninth North Carolina Confederate infantry. Being of an investigating bent, Captain Terrell was led to give attention to the customs and mythology of the Cherokee, and to accumulate a fund of information on the subject seldom possessed by a white man. He still resides at Webster, a few miles from the reservation, and is now seventy- one years of age. In 1855 Congress directed the per capita payment to the East Cherokee of the removal fund established for them in 1848, provided that North Carolina should first give assurance that they would be allowed to remain permanently in that state. This assurance, however, was not given until 1866, and the money was therefore not distributed, but remained in the treasury until 1875, when it was made applicable to the purchase of lands and the quieting of titles for the benefit of the Indians.* From 1855 until after the civil war we find no official notice of the East Cherokee, and our information must be obtained from other sources. It was, however, a most momentous period in their history. At the outbreak of the war Thomas was serving his seventh consecutive term in the state senate. Being an ardent Confederate sympathizer, he was elected a delegate to the convention which passed the secession ordinance, and immediately after voting in favor of that • measure resigned from the senate in order to work for the southern cause. As he was already well advanced in years it is doubtful if his effort would have gone beyond the raising of funds and other supplies but for the fact that at this juncture an effort was made by the Confederate General Kirbv Smith to enlist the East Cherokee for active service. The agent sent for this purpose was Washington Morgan, known to the Indians as A'gansta'ta, son of that Colonel Gideon Morgan who 1 Royee. Cherokee Nation, op. cit.. p. 313 and note. * Report of the Indian Commissioner, pp. 459- 460.1845. 8 Commissioner Crawford, Report of Indian Commissioner, p. 3,1842. * Royce, op. cit., p. 314. |