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Nancy Ward
1738-1824 Cherokee tribal leader
Nancy Ward was spared the sight
of her people's exile to Indian Territory in 1838, but because
her spirit was present at Chota, they knew she had preserved
that connection to their eastern home.
The role of Ghighua, or Beloved Woman, among
the Cherokee was an influential one indeed. The most noted of the
Cherokee Beloved Women was Nancy Ward, or Nan'yehi. Closely related
to such leaders as Old Hop, the emperor of the Cherokee nation in
the 1750s, Attakullakulla, the Wise Councillor of the Cherokee, and
Osconostato, the Great Warrior of the Cherokee nation, Ward won the
honored title of Ghighua and her own leadership position after
displaying great bravery in battle. But Ward was not merely a
warrior. She spoke on behalf of her people with U.S. representatives
and wisely counseled the tribe against land cession. She did not
live to see her warnings become reality as the Cherokee were
dispossessed of their eastern lands.
~ Earns title Beloved Woman ~
Born about 1738 at Chota, a "Peace
Town" or "Mother Town" in the Overhill region of the
Cherokee Nation, Ward came into the world at the beginning of a
crucial era in Cherokee history. Raised by her mother, Tame Deer,
and her father, Fivekiller (who was also part Delaware or Lenni
Lenap‚), Nan'yehi realized at a young age that her people were
in turmoil. Missionaries, Moravians (Christians who seek to persuade
others to accept their religion and follow the Bible as their rule
of faith and morals) in particular, were trying to gain access to
the Cherokee people in order to convert them. Still very
conservative (resistant to change), preserving their traditional
customs and religion, the Cherokees had a mixed reaction to the
missionaries. Many regarded them as a threat, others saw them as a
blessing.
One of those who straddled this fence was
Nan'yehi's very influential maternal uncle, Attakullakulla
("Little Carpenter"). He eventually struck a deal allowing
Moravians into Cherokee territory, but only if they would build
schools to instruct Cherokee youth in English and the ways of the
white man. Later critics would see this as evidence of
Attakullakulla's desire for the Cherokee to accept European ways;
others saw this as a tactic to teach the tribe more about their
enemy. Like her uncle, Nan'yehi too would try to find the middle
ground between tradition and innovation.
Ward married a Cherokee man named Kingfisher
while in her early teens. Kingfisher was a great warrior, and
Nan'yehi was at his side in battle, helping prepare his firearms and
rallying Cherokee warriors when their spirits flagged. In 1755, the
Cherokees fought the Creeks at the Battle of Taliwa. During the
fighting, Kingfisher was killed. Nan'yehi, about 18 years old at
this time, took up her slain husband's gun and, singing a war song,
led the Cherokees in a rout of the enemy. Out of her loss was born a
decisive victory for her people and a title of honor for her:
"Beloved Woman."
The Cherokee were a matrilineal (tracing
family relations through the mother) society, and thus their fields
had always been controlled by women. Women of great influence became
known as Beloved Women, often working behind the scenes in shaping
decisions. The role of Ghigau or Beloved Woman was the highest one
to which a Cherokee woman could aspire. It was unusual for one as
young as Nan'yehi to be so named, but since the name also translates
as "War Woman" and was usually awarded to women warriors
(or warriors' mothers or widows), Nan'yehi had duly earned it. Much
responsibility went with the many privileges of the rank, and,
although young, Nan'yehi showed herself capable.
Among the privileges accorded Nan'yehi as a
Beloved Woman were voice and vote in General Council, leadership of
the Women's Council, the honor of preparing the Black Drink ;
a tea used in ceremonies to purify; and giving it to warriors
before battle, and the right to save a prisoner already condemned to
execution. Nan'yehi would exercise all these rights and would serve
as her people's sage (wise person) and guide.
Another of the Beloved Woman's duties was as
ambassador, or peace negotiator. It is through this role that Ward
became a figure in non-Cherokee history. Ward, who had been
"apprenticed" as a diplomat at her uncle's side, was a
shrewd negotiator who took a realistic view of how to help the
Cherokee people survive. She had grown up during a time when
continued white settlement on Cherokee lands, in violation of the
Royal Proclamation of 1763, in which the British Empire had
recognized the rights of Native people, created constant tension in
Indian-white relations.
When militant Cherokees prepared to attack
illegal white communities on the Watauga River, Ward disapproved of
intentionally taking civilian lives. She was able to warn several of
the Watauga settlements in time for them to defend themselves or
flee. One of the settlers unfortunate enough to be taken alive by
the Cherokee warriors was a woman named Mrs. Bean. The captive was
sentenced to execution and was actually being tied to a stake when
Ward exercised her right to spare condemned captives. Taking the
injured Mrs. Bean into her own home to nurse her back to health,
Ward learned two skills from her which would have far-reaching
consequences for her people.
~ A time of change ~
Mrs. Bean, like most "settler
women," wove her own cloth. At this time, the Cherokee were
wearing a combination of traditional hide (animal skin) clothing and
loomed cloth purchased from traders. Cherokee people had rough-woven
hemp clothing, but it was not as comfortable as clothing made from
linen, cotton, or wool. Mrs. Bean taught Ward how to set up a loom,
spin thread or yarn, and weave cloth. This skill would make the
Cherokee people less dependent on traders, but it also Europeanized
the Cherokee in terms of gender roles. Women came to be expected to
do the weaving and house chores; as men became farmers in the
changing society, women became "housewives."
Another aspect of Cherokee life that changed
when Ward saved the life of Mrs. Bean was that of raising animals.
The white woman owned dairy cattle, which she took to Ward's house.
Ward learned to prepare and use dairy foods, which provided some
nourishment even when hunting was bad. However, because of Ward's
introduction of dairy farming to the Cherokee, they would begin to
amass large herds and farms, which required even more manual labor.
This would soon lead the Cherokee into using slave labor. In fact,
Ward herself had been "awarded" the black slave of a
felled Creek warrior after her victory at the Battle of Taliwa and
thus became the first Cherokee slaveowner.
From these accommodations to European-based
ways of life, one might get the idea that Ward was selling out the
Cherokee people. But her political efforts proved the contrary. She
did not seek war, but neither did she counsel peace when she felt
compromise would hurt her tribe. In 1781 Ward entered into peace
talks with Tennessee politician and soldier John Sevier at the
Little Pigeon River in present-day Tennessee, she had called for
peace but warned Sevier to take the treaty back to "his
women" for them to ratify. It did not occur to the Cherokee
that women did not decide matters of war and peace in the white
man's world, as they did in many southeastern tribes. Ward was also
a negotiator for the Cherokee at the 1785 signing of the Treaty of
Hopewell, the first treaty the Cherokee made with the
"new" United States.
By the turn of the nineteenth century, it
was already becoming apparent to the Cherokee that the Americans
intended to get as much Cherokee land as possible and that the day
might come when the Natives would be forced off their homelands.
Ward, by now called "Nancy" by the many non-Indians she
had befriended, feared that each time the Cherokee voluntarily
handed over land, they were encouraging the settlers' appetite for
it. She feared that someday their hunger for land would destroy her
people. In 1808, the Women's Council, with Ward at its head, made a
statement to the Cherokee people urging them to sell no more land.
Again, in 1817, when Ward took her seat in council, her desperation
was ill concealed. She told the younger people to refuse any more
requests for land or to take up arms against the
"Americans" if necessary.
~ The road back to Chota ~
When she became too aged to make the effort
to attend further General Council meetings, Ward sent her walking
stick in her place thereafter. Some contemporary sources say she
"resigned" her position as Beloved Woman with this action,
but the mere absence from council did not indicate the end of her
term. Ward was well aware that Cherokee "removal" west of
the Mississippi River was almost a foregone conclusion. Rather than
face the sorrow of leaving her homeland, she decided to find a way
to blend in to the white world.
Nan'yehi had become Nancy Ward when she
married the Irish (or Scots-Irish) trader Bryant Ward. By now, her
three children were grown, so she was accorded the indulgence of
"modern conveniences" because of her advanced age and the
great integrity with which she had long discharged her duty to her
people. Therefore, when she and Ward took to the innkeeping trade,
there was no disrespect voiced toward the Beloved Woman. Their inn
was situated near the Mother Town of Chota, on Womankiller Ford of
the Ocowee River, in eastern Tennessee.
Ward returned to Chota, her birthplace, in
1824. She was cared for by her son, Fivekiller, who reported seeing
a white light leave her body as she died. The light was said to have
entered the most sacred mound in the Mother Town. Ward was spared
the sight of her people's exile to Indian Territory in 1838, but
because her spirit was present at Chota, they knew she had preserved
that connection to their eastern home. The last woman to be given
the title of Beloved Woman until the late 1980s, Ward remains a
powerful symbol for Cherokee women. She is often referred to by
feminist scholars as an inspiration and is revered by the Cherokee
people of Oklahoma as well as the Eastern Band Cherokees of North
Carolina.
 


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