Anglo-Cherokee War | |||||||
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Part of the Seven Years' War | |||||||
After the Anglo-Cherokee War, bitterness remained between the two groups. In 1762, Henry Timberlake took three of the former Cherokee adversaries to London to help cement the newly declared friendship | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Cherokee | Great Britain | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Attakullakulla Oconostota |
William Henry Lyttelton Archibald Montgomerie James Grant |
The Anglo-Cherokee War (1758–1761; in the Cherokee language: the "war with those in the red coats" or "War with the English"), was also known from the Anglo-European perspective as the Cherokee War, the Cherokee Uprising, or the Cherokee Rebellion. The war was a conflict between British forces in North America and Cherokee bands during the French and Indian War.
The British and the Cherokee had been allies at the start of the war, but each party had suspected the other of betrayals. Tensions between British-American settlers and Cherokee warriors of towns that the pioneers encroached on had increased during the 1750s, culminating in open hostilities in 1758.