Records of the Moravians Among the Cherokees
Volume Nine: March to Removal, Part 4 ‘They Shall Not Be Forsaken’, 1830–1833
Edited by Richard W. Starbuck
Published by: Cherokee Heritage Press
Imprint: Cherokee Heritage Press
516 Pages | 7 x 10 | 136 b&w illus.
$40.00
Continuing the subtitle series March to Removal, volume 9 opens with an air of peace and quiet that belies the future. That tranquility is shattered when Georgia orders all white men in the Cherokee Nation to take an oath of allegiance to the state’s laws or leave the country.
The new law ushers in a year of upheaval, terror, and imprisonment, as Georgia Guards sweep the land of white laborers, artisans, and especially, as Br. Gottlieb Byhan reports, the “Yankee Missionaries” of the American Board in Boston. The jailing of Samuel Worcester eventually becomes a national cause célèbre before the United States Supreme Court, to no avail.
The Moravian missionaries too suffer. First Oochgeelogy, their mission station near New Echota, the Cherokees’ capital, is lost to “renters.” Then on New Year’s Day, 1833, the Moravians’ beloved Springplace, the first mission station in the Cherokee Nation, is overrun by whites who have “won” it through Georgia’s lottery of land sales in the Cherokee Nation.
With this loss, the Moravians have no recourse but to seek refuge in Tennessee beyond the reach of Georgia law. Must they abandon their little congregation of Cherokee members? Back home in Salem, North Carolina, church authorities vow: “They shall not be forsaken.”
Records of the Moravians among the Cherokees uses original diaries, minutes, reports, and correspondence in Moravian Archives in North Carolina to provide a first-hand account of daily life among the Cherokees throughout the nineteenth century. Though written by missionaries from their perspective, these records give much insight into Cherokee culture, society, customs, and personalities.
Richard W. Starbuck was born and raised in the Moravian Church. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Williams College and worked for twelve years as a writer and editor for the Winston-SalemJournal and Sentinel newspapers. In 1986 he joined the Moravian Archives, where he has been instrumental in editing numerous works for publication in print and online. He is the coauthor of With Courage for the Future: The Story of the Moravian Church, Southern Province and editor of eight volumes of Records of the Moravians among the Cherokees. Starbuck was appointed and briefly served as the Archivist of the Moravian Church, Southern Province, before retiring in 2017.