The U.S. began the
Second Seminole War December 1835, with the expressed goal to find every Seminole village, destroy it, and send any living Seminole to Indian Territory. The war's first battle was a successful Seminole ambush of two U.S. Army's companies under the command of Frances
Dade. Only 4 men survived and the deaths of 106 U.S. troops put the Seminole war and its warriors on the front pages of U.S. newspapers. As a young adult and the son of a micco, Coacoochee joined raiding parties against Florida white settlers and US Army forts. Wild Cat's father, Emathla or King Philip was captured by American soldiers in September 1837, and imprisoned at
Fort Moultrie in South Carolina. After his father died in 1838 and the more visible leader Osceola was imprisoned in 1837, Wild Cat became the most important leader of the Seminoles. Newspapers reported that Wild Cat's band of warriors included both Seminoles and formerly enslaved people and that he was especially crafty as a leader. After Osceola's capture in 1837, Coacoochee appeared before American forces in a ceremonial peace headdress, claiming to be an emissary of the war chief
Osceola. After he negotiated with Colonel
Thomas S. Jesup, American authorities agreed to peace talks, but when the Seminole representatives arrived without weapons and intending to agree to a peace treaty, Jessup ordered their arrest. While imprisoned at
Fort Marion, Wild Cat escaped with nineteen other Seminole. They reportedly fasted for six days until they could slide between the bars of their jail cell; they then dropped from the walls into the moat on the outside of the fort. Wild Cat and several other leaders continued to fight the U.S. Army for two more years by using Florida's swamps and heavily forested interior to regroup and plan attacks. == Removal to Indian Territory ==