Creek War
The Creek War, occurring from 1813 to 1814, was a significant conflict involving the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, which faced pressures from encroaching white settlers and internal cultural divisions. By the early 19th century, the Muscogee had begun to adopt aspects of European-American culture while retaining their traditional practices. Tensions escalated when a faction of traditionalists, known as the Red Sticks, resisted further assimilation and called for a return to Muscogee customs, leading to violent confrontations with settlers and rival factions within the tribe.
General Andrew Jackson emerged as a leading military figure, commanding forces against the Red Sticks after a series of attacks, including the massacre at Fort Mims. The conflict culminated in the decisive Battle of Horseshoe Bend, resulting in a significant defeat for the Red Sticks and subsequent land cessions under the Treaty of Horseshoe Bend. This treaty not only expanded white settlement into the region but also marked a pivotal moment in the trajectory of the Muscogee, leading to their eventual removal to Indian Territory in present-day Oklahoma. The Creek War thus represented a complex intersection of cultural resistance, warfare, and the relentless pressures of American expansionism.
Creek War
Date July 27, 1813-August 9, 1814
During the Creek War, the federal government broke the power of the Creek nation, seized Creek lands, and opened Alabama to white settlement. The war also launched Andrew Jackson’s military career, which put him on the road to the U.S. presidency.
Also known as Creek Indian War; Muscogee War
Locale Alabama
Key Figures
Big Warrior (d. 1825), chief of the Upper Creeks and leader of the progressive peace partyAndrew Jackson (1767-1845), major general of Tennessee militia whose forces destroyed the Red Stick movementPeter McQueen (d. 1818), mixed-race planter, chief, and leader of the Red Stick factionWilliam Weatherford (c. 1780-1824), mixed-race son of a Scots trader and leader of the Red Stick factionJosiah Francis (d. c. 1818), mixed-race Creek warriorWilliam McIntosh (c. 1775-1825), Creek ally of the U.S. government
Summary of Event
Among all the American Indian peoples at the turn of the nineteenth century, the people who seemed most likely to assimilate into the advancing white culture were the Muscogee, whom whites called Creeks. Colonial deerskin traders from Charleston, South Carolina, married into this matrilineal native culture, establishing kinship ties with their wives’ families throughout the Muscogee nation and siring mixed-race children who became the nation’s cultural and political elite. Alexander McGillivray —of Scottish, French, and Muscogee background—was educated in Charleston and became one of the most powerful and influential chiefs (micos) in the culture’s history. William Weatherford, William McIntosh, and others born to both cultures remained influential in the tribe through and beyond the coming Creek War.
President George Washington appointed Revolutionary War veteran Benjamin Hawkins as Indian agent to the Muscogee, whom Hawkins attempted to teach European-derived farming techniques. With well-established agricultural traditions of their own, the Muscogee took easily to the teachings of both Hawkins and their own mixed-race people. The Muscogees established within their nation a subculture that featured frame houses, fenced fields, domesticated animals, adoption of European clothing and technology, and most other vestments of the traditional frontier South, including cotton production with African American slave labor for the wealthy.
The Muscogee cultural transition was not entirely smooth, however. One problem was the continued encroachment of advancing white civilization. So relentless were the demands of state governments for cessions of Muscogee lands that the Muscogee named one Tennessee governor the Dirt King and gave a Georgia governor the name Always Asking for Land.

Meanwhile, as buckskin breeches went out of fashion in Europe, the market for American deerskins evaporated. The Muscogee had traded heavily in deerskins, and they now found themselves with nothing to trade for European clothing, weapons, household utensils, and other goods to which they had become accustomed. By continuing to buy these goods on credit, they fell deeply into debt to U.S. and British trading houses. The Jefferson administration, through Hawkins, encouraged the paying off of these debts through cessions of land. The Muscogee strenuously objected to this plan, even when the U.S. government offered perpetual annuities to the tribe and bonuses to local chiefs who signed land treaties. The pressure on Muscogee hunting grounds intensified, and the chiefs who ceded land became enemies in the eyes of many of their kinsmen.
More sinister than the insatiable land hunger of the United States was its innate distrust of American Indians and its general desire to eliminate rather than assimilate them. Some segment of the native population—Iroquois, Shawnee, Cherokee, Muscogee—seemed to be constantly at war with the frontiersmen. For whites, these violent clashes supported their belief that American Indians were dangerous savages in need of extermination. Another problem was the strength and depth of the Muscogees’ own native culture. Their relationship to their environment and their tribal traditions had been deeply satisfying. Although white culture made life more comfortable, it did not resolve any life-threatening problems for the Muscogee. Thus, it was a luxury, not a necessity.
The pressure of encroaching white settlement continued to increase all along the U.S. frontier during the early nineteenth century, prompting the Shawnee chief Tecumseh to attempt an alliance of all Native American tribes so that they might together resist further white advances and save American Indian lands and culture. When Tecumseh and his brother, Tenskwatawa, known as the Shawnee Prophet, visited the Muscogee tribal council to urge an alliance with the Shawnee, head chief Big Warrior rejected the idea and called for continued peace with white Americans. A movement—part spiritual, part political—was already growing among the Muscogee, however, calling for a return to the roots of Muscogee tradition and a rejection of the values and material goods of white society.
The traditionalists were primarily young. Among their leaders were men who had successfully assimilated white culture—half-white cotton planters such as Peter McQueen, and such white traders’ sons as William Weatherford and Josiah Francis. The leaders of the progressive, assimilationist wing were often older. Some, such as William McIntosh, lived like white men. Others, such as Big Warrior, maintained a traditional Muscogee lifestyle yet accepted the inevitability of progress.
On July 27, 1813, this cultural and political dispute broke into open warfare, a civil war within the nation over the direction the culture should take: toward the European style of life or back to the purity and spirituality of Muscogee life. The reactionary wing, led by a reluctant Weatherford, a vengeful Francis, and McQueen, became known, from the red color symbolic of war, as Red Sticks.
The war spilled over into white society with the killing of isolated settlers in southern Tennessee and the massacre of two large numbers of white, black, and Creek people at Forts Sinquefield and Mims in lower Alabama. These killings brought U.S. major general Andrew Jackson into the conflict with an army of Mississippi, Georgia, and Tennessee militia, joined by progressive Muscogee, Choctaw, and Cherokee allies.
Jackson’s early campaign was tedious and unsuccessful. With winter approaching, pay in arrears, little to eat, and enlistments expiring, many militiamen prepared to go home. Jackson branded them all mutineers and arrested and executed six leaders, cowing the frontiersmen into remaining to continue the fight. Through hard marching and sporadic fighting, the allied force of frontiersmen and progressive Native Americans chased and battled the Red Sticks across Alabama, finally cornering a large contingent at Tohopeka (Horseshoe Bend) on the Tallapoosa River. In this battle, more than five hundred Red Sticks were killed, destroying Red Stick resistance.
Significance
In the ensuing Treaty of Horseshoe Bend, signed on August 9, 1814, Jackson took approximately twenty-five million acres of land from both Red Stick insurgents and his Muscogee, Choctaw, and Cherokee allies. The cession opened the land to immediate white and African American settlement and created the heart of the cotton South. The Creek War left Andrew Jackson with a veteran and victorious army well positioned to block the British invasion of New Orleans, giving the United States its most impressive land victory in the War of 1812 and opening the path to the White House for Andrew Jackson.
For the Muscogee, the defeat spelled the beginning of the end of their existence in their homeland. Within two decades, they and most other surviving members of the South’s Five Civilized Tribes were banished to the Indian Territory, Oklahoma.
Bibliography
Barrett, Carole, and Harvey Markowitz, eds. American Indian Biographies. Rev. ed. Pasadena, Calif.: Salem Press, 2005. Collection of nearly four hundred biographies of Native Americans, including more than a dozen Creeks.
Braund, Kathryn E. Holland. Deerskins and Duffels: The Creek Indian Trade with Anglo-America, 1685-1815. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1993. Describes the competitors, pricing, credit policies, markets, and distribution of the Muscogee deerskin trade; provides a detailed look at Muscogee life.
George, Noah Jackson. A Memorandum of the Creek Indian War. Meredith, N.H.: R. Lothrop, 1815. 2d ed. Edited by W. Stanley Hoole. University, Ala: Confederate Publishing Company, 1986. Based on General Jackson’s reports and correspondence, this pamphlet gives a battle-by-battle account of the campaign from the U.S. perspective. Written amid the passions of the War of 1812, it asserts that the Red Sticks were tools of the British.
Griffith, Benjamin W., Jr. McIntosh and Weatherford, Creek Indian Leaders. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1988. A highly readable account of the war. Argues that Weatherford was a most reluctant Red Stick, knowing from the outset that the movement was doomed.
Halbert, Henry Sale, and T. H. Ball. The Creek War of 1813 and 1814. Chicago: Donohue and Henneberry, 1895. Reprint with introduction and annotation by Frank L. Owsley, Jr. University: University of Alabama Press, 1969. Provides a lengthy discussion of the causes of the war, presenting it as an intertribal difference that would have been resolved had whites not interfered.
Hudson, Charles M. The Southeastern Indians. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1976. Places the Muscogee within the larger framework of the native population of the area. One of several excellent volumes on southeastern American Indians by ethnologist Hudson.
Martin, Joel. Sacred Revolt: The Muscogees’ Struggle for a New World. Boston: Beacon Press, 1991. Emphasizes the importance of spirituality in Muscogee life, in the evolution of the Red Sticks’ back-to-our-culture campaign, and in their warmaking.
O’Brien, Sean Michael. In Bitterness and in Tears: Andrew Jackson’s Destruction of the Creeks and Seminoles. Guilford, Conn.: Lyons Press, 2005. Engagingly written history of Andrew Jackson’s role as a military commander in the Creek War of 1813-1814 and the First Seminole War of 1818.
Remini, Robert V. Andrew Jackson. 3 vols. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998. The first volume of this distinguished biography covers Jackson’s military activities and career before he became president of the United States.
Woodward, Thomas S. Woodward’s Reminiscences of the Creek, or Muscogee Indians, Contained in Letters to Friends in Georgia and Alabama. Tuscaloosa: Alabama Book Store, 1859. Reprint. Mobile, Ala.: Southern University Press, 1965. A veteran of the war, Woodward knew many Muscogee leaders and their culture. Although written with the wisdom and common sense of later years, this entertaining little volume has its errors and must be read with a critical eye.