The Cherokee War of 1776: Native Destruction at the Dawn of American Independence
Author(s): Kevin Kokomoor (Author)
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication Date: May 19, 2026
Language: English
Print length: 384 pages
ISBN-10: 1421454564
ISBN-13: 9781421454566
Book Description
The forgotten history of the US war against the Cherokee offers a crucial reframing of America’s origin story.
Americans remember 1776 as the year liberty was declared, the moment they cast off tyranny and proclaimed the self-evident truths of equality and freedom. But that same summer, as patriots celebrated their defiant new nation, American armies launched another campaign―this one aimed at destroying the Cherokee nation.
The Cherokee War of 1776 recasts America’s founding moment by tracing the importance of westward ambition and settler violence to the origins of the Revolutionary War. In this gripping and sobering book, historian Kevin Kokomoor uncovers the rarely acknowledged war waged by the emerging United States against the Cherokee people just days after the Declaration of Independence was signed. Far from a spontaneous frontier skirmish, this war was a coordinated, state-backed campaign with a clear aim: seize Indigenous land and crush Native resistance. Many of the very men who championed liberty on parchment simultaneously advocated for the wholesale destruction of a sovereign Native nation.
At the heart of this story is Cherokee resistance, which was strategic, determined, and deeply rooted in community dynamics. Figures like Dragging Canoe emerged to lead a movement that endured long after American armies had burned Cherokee towns to the ground. Kokomoor foregrounds Cherokee voices, motivations, and resilience, challenging the notion that they were merely pawns in a colonial struggle and forcing us to reckon with the real costs of independence and the long fight for Indigenous sovereignty.
Editorial Reviews
Review
A meticulously researched and readable volume, this is a worthy addition to the discussion of the events leading up to the establishment of the United States. ―Library Journal (starred review)
Kevin Kokomoor’s
The Cherokee War of 1776 shows that it is impossible to understand the American Revolution in the South without recognizing the centrality of the Cherokees and settler colonialism. On the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, this important contribution could not be more timely. ―Jeffrey Ostler, University of Oregon
In this important and ambitious book on the Cherokee theater of the American Revolution, Kevin Kokomoor offers a range of critical new perspectives and insights drawn from extensive research and interpretation. Few know that more revolutionary forces marched upon and burned Cherokee villages in 1776 than in
any other military campaign of that year or that such forces were not under the command of the Continental Congress but determined state governments, particularly South Carolina. As he concludes ‘nothing about the 1776 Cherokee War seems peripheral,’ as this book so clearly establishes. ―Ned Blackhawk, Yale University
Kevin Kokomoor has given us the first book-length study of the Cherokee War of 1776. This fine book does not just bust many myths about the Cherokees, in exploring the nuances of settler-native conflict, Kokomoor has also given us a tome for our own times. ―Woody Holton, author of
Liberty is Sweet: The Hidden History of the American Revolution
Book Description
The forgotten history of the US war against the Cherokee offers a crucial reframing of America’s origin story.
About the Author
Kevin Kokomoor is a lecturer in the history department at Coastal Carolina University. He is the author of Of One Mind and Of One Government: The Rise and Fall of the Creek Nation in the Early Republic and La Florida: Catholics, Conquistadores, and Other American Origin Stories.