While some Cherokee leaders still called for peace, a few led retaliatory raids on outlying English pioneer settlements. A number of Muskogee under Big Mortar moved up to Coosawatie. These people had long been French allies in support of the Cherokee pro-French faction centered in Great Tellico.
South Carolina Governor
William Henry Lyttelton embargoed all gunpowder shipments to the Cherokee and raised an army of 1,100 men which marched to confront the Lower Towns of the Cherokee. Desperate for ammunition for their fall and winter hunts, the nation sent a delegation of moderate chiefs to negotiate. The 38 chiefs were taken prisoner as hostages and sent to
Fort Prince George, escorted by the provincial army. Lyttleton thought this would ensure peace. Lyttleton returned to Charleston, but the Cherokee were angry and began to attack frontier settlements into 1760. In February 1760, they
attacked Fort Prince George in an attempt to rescue their hostages. The fort's commander was killed. His replacement massacred all of the hostages and fended off the attack. This resulted in the Cherokee declaring open war against the British colonies. The Cherokee also attacked
Fort Ninety Six, but it withstood the siege. By February 1760, the Cherokee expanded their retaliatory campaign into North Carolina, as far east as modern day Winston-Salem. An attack on
Fort Dobbs in North Carolina was
repulsed by Colonel
Hugh Waddell. However, lesser settlements in the North and South Carolina back-country quickly fell to Cherokee raids. Lyttleton appealed for help to
Jeffery Amherst, the British commander in North America. Amherst sent
Archibald Montgomerie with an army of 1,200 troops (the
Royal Scots and
Montgomerie's Highlanders) to South Carolina. Montgomerie's campaign razed 10 Cherokee Lower Towns, including Keowee. It ended with a
defeat at Echoee (Itseyi) Pass when Montgomerie tried to enter the Middle Towns territory. Later in 1760, the Overhill Cherokee defeated the British colonists at a
siege of Fort Loudoun and took it over. In 1761, a second expedition against the Cherokee under
James Grant was planned. He led an army of 2,800 men (the largest force to enter the southern
Appalachians to date) against the Cherokee. His army moved through the Lower Towns, defeated the Cherokee at
Echoee Pass, and proceeded to raze about 18 Middle Towns while burning fields of crops along the way. The army of British Regulars, Provincial Soldiers, and allied Catawba, Chickasaw, Mohawk, and Stockbridge Indians destroyed the homes and food of approximately 5,000 Cherokee people. ==Treaties==