The Seminoles were slow to move onto the new reservation. After bands living between the Suwannee and Apalachicola Rivers resisted moving to the reservation, Florida governor
William Pope Duval replace Neamathla as chief representative of the Florida Native Americans with Tuckmose Emathla (called "John Hicks" by whites). Even with many bands refusing to move to the reservation, funding from the U.S. government was not adequate for feeding the Native Americans who had moved to the reservation. The Native Americans soon insisted that the reservation was not large enough to support them, an opinion with which Governor Duval and Indian Agent
Gad Humphreys concurred. A severe drought in 1825 caused food shortages for the Native Americans, and it was reported that some had starved to death. Some Native Americans hunted outside the reservation, killing cattle that belonged to whites. Others left the reservation altogether, even moving to west of the Suwannee River. Continuing shortages led Governor Duval in 1827 and 1828 to permit the Native Americans to leave the reservation to fish along the Gulf coast, despite worries that the Native Americans were trading with Cubans at
fishing ranchos on the coast. The presence of blacks among the Native Americans, many of whom were slaves who had run away from white owners, was a continuing source of friction. While the Native Americans in Florida were supposed to help return run-away slaves to their owners, implementation was uneven. Governor Duval asked for clarification on whether slaves taken by the Native Americans during the
War of 1812 were subject to being claimed by their former owners, and whether Native Americans were entitled to compensation for slaves bought at very low prices by traders who had told the Native Americans that the U.S. government was going to seize the slaves from them. Governor Duval's efforts to feed the Native Americans resulted in expenditures exceeding appropriations.
Thomas Loraine McKenney, United States Superintendent of Indian Affairs, ordered in 1827 that the overexpenditure be made up from the contingency fund, from which the salaries of officials connected to the reservation were paid, and the subagent, blacksmith, and interpreter all resigned whether than take a cut in pay. Late in the term of President
John Quincy Adams, his administration decided that the Native Americans needed to be removed from Florida. President
Andrew Jackson initially proposed that Native Americans be encouraged to move to west of the Mississippi. The
Indian Removal Act of 1830 allowed the government to do whatever was necessary to remove Native Americans from east of the Mississippi. In 1832,
James Gadsden was appointed special agent to negotiate with the Native Americans in Florida the terms of their removal to west of the Mississippi, resulting in the Treaty of Payne's Creek. == See also ==