In 1801, President
Thomas Jefferson apointed 60-year old Meigs to the combined position of US
Indian agent to the
Cherokee and military agent for the
United States War Department. The government's trading or factory operations were linked with Indian relations in the War Department during these years.Initially Meigs' office and the Cherokee Agency were at
Fort Southwest Point in what is now
Kingston, Tennessee. In 1807 he relocated these operations to a new post further south, named Hiwassee Garrison. It was near the mouth of the
Hiwassee River, at its confluence with the
Tennessee River.
Charles R. Hicks, a mixed-race (European and Cherokee) and bilingual Cherokee, worked as his interpreter for some time. Hicks later became a chief of the Cherokee. Meigs' role as military agent ended in 1813 when the Federal soldiers stationed at Hiwassee Garrison were withdrawn. He continued as Cherokee agent on the Hiwassee River until his death on January 28, 1823. During his 22 years as agent, Cherokee land cessions to the United States totalled leaving the Cherokee in possession of of land, mostly in northern Georgia. The Cherokee at this time were divided by dissention, although the majority opposed land sales or cessions to the United States. Meigs worked with tribal leaders favorable to ceding land, providing them "special considerations" (bribes) for their cooperation. Meigs believed that the Cherokee should move west of the
Mississippi River, as some were doing. In 1808, he said, "It is my opinion that there will never be quietness on any of these frontiers until the Indians are removed over the Mississippi." Removal across the Mississippi was envisioned by many as a permanent solution to the Indian problem. Thomas Jefferson believed that white settlement of the trans-Mississippi region would take 1,000 years. In reality, it was only two decades later, in 1828, before the
Cherokee in Arkansas were surrounded by white settlers. His promotion of Cherokee land cessions notwithstanding, Meigs was in some respects a competent and dedicated agent. He was diligent in attempting to have U.S. the government prosecute crimes, of which there were many, by whites against Cherokee and expelling squatters on Cherokee land. "Meigs endeavored honestly and fairly to support the rights of the Indians." In 1823, he died of pneumonia after giving his quarters to a visiting Cherokee chief and sleeping outside in a tent. Meigs is buried in the Garrison Cemetery in
Rhea County, Tennessee, near the site of the former Hiwassee Garrison. ==Legacy==