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Oglethorpe and Moral agreed not in instigate Indians after each other
Source: Invention of the Creek Nation #95
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Even Georgia’s most dependable allies, the Yamacraws, appear to have waged war not because of Oglethorpe’s influence but for blood revenge or perhaps because of the lure of plunder. For example, in 1736 Oglethorpe began building a series of forts on the Georgia coast that were put in place both to defend the Savannah settlement and to stake Georgia’s claim to disputed territory. To assist in this enterprise Oglethorpe enlisted the Yamacraws to help feed his soldiers and scout the territory. As Oglethorpe was not yet willing to encourage his Indian allies to attack the Spanish, he conveniently struck a deal with Governor Moral Sanchez in 1736 whereby they agreed not to go to war and not to set their Indian allies against each other. In doing so both men hoped to shift the burden of imperial affairs upon the shoulders of diplomats in London and Madrid. Oglethorpe, though pleased to hear Tomochichi and Tooanaway pledge that their people would live and die by the English, remained apprehensive when he learned of a rumor that Tomochichi’s Creek allies “designed to fall on the Spanish.” Seeking to avert a premature war against Spain, he urged Tomochichi to bring no more than two hundred men, a number he deemed “sufficient for any service we can have for them.” Oglethorpe’s apprehensions proved to be well-founded, for in the years that followed Tomochichi’s Yamacraws and other Creek warriors independently waged a guerrilla war against the Spanish presidios.
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