TTHN Ep 11 - Red Stick Ruination
Division.
Before there was Horseshoe Bend…there was a nation tearing itself apart.
In the years leading up to the Creek War, the Muscogee Confederacy found itself divided over one question that would reshape the future of the American South:
How do you survive the unstoppable expansion of the United States?
Some Creek leaders believed accommodation and diplomacy offered the best chance for survival. Others believed that path would only lead to the destruction of their people, their culture, and their lands.
The result was civil war.
As violence spread across the Southeast, Red Stick warriors struck at those they believed had aligned themselves with the Americans. American frontier settlements answered with retaliation. The conflict spiraled…until finally it came to a bend in the Tallapoosa River called Tohopeka.
Known today as Horseshoe Bend.
There, in March of 1814, roughly 1,000 Red Stick warriors fortified themselves behind a massive barricade alongside hundreds of women and children. Facing them was an army under Andrew Jackson made up of Tennessee militia, United States Regulars, Cherokee warriors, and Lower Creek allies.
What followed was brutal.
In this episode, we examine the divisions within the Creek Nation, Tecumseh’s influence, the rise of the Red Sticks, the Creek War campaign, the battle itself, and the devastating aftermath that followed.
Because Horseshoe Bend did more than end a war.
It redrew the map of the American South.
📚 Sources
Braund, K. H. (2024). Mapping Conquest: The Battle Maps of Horseshoe Bend. University of Georgia Press.
Braund, K. H. (n.d.). “American Indians and the War of 1812.” In The War of 1812 Official National Park Service Handbook. National Park Service.
Kanon, T. (2015). Tennesseans at War, 1812–1815: Andrew Jackson, the Creek War, and the Battle of New Orleans. University of Alabama Press.
Peach, S. (2025). Muscogee Creek History and the American South, 1750–1815. Presentation transcript.
Encyclopedia of Alabama. (n.d.). “Battle of Horseshoe Bend.”
Encyclopedia of Alabama. (n.d.). “Battle of Burnt Corn Creek.”
University at Albany Libraries, M. E. Grenander Department of Special Collections & Archives. Espy Project Execution Record: John Woods. Espy File ID 10002. Reviewed by author.
Tennessee Encyclopedia. (n.d.). “Creek War of 1813 and 1814.”
Horseshoe Bend National Military Park museum exhibits, battlefield interpretation, maps, brochures, and interpretive materials reviewed by author.
National Park Service. (n.d.). Horseshoe Bend National Military Park official interpretive materials.
Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). “Battle of Horseshoe Bend.” Wikipedia. Used as supplemental reference material.
🎙️ Credits
Hosted by Big John Summers
Produced by Summers Media Enterprises
Music by Big John Summers
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