Some of these units were raised primarily in Oklahoma and composed of mounted cavalry from the Five Southeastern Tribes. The most famous of these were the Cherokee Mounted Rifles, raised in Oklahoma by Col. Stand Watie, later a Brigadier General. Another famous unit was Thomas' Legion (69th NC Infantry), which included both infantry and cavalry raised by William Holland Thomas from Cherokee in North Carolina. Mounted Units formed from the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, Seminole and Osage. Ironically, some of these men had prior military experience fighting against United States forces trying to force them off their land. Opposing them were Native regiments raised primarily in Kansas and known as the Indian Home Guard. They included tribes primarily from the Northeast, such as the Delaware, Kickapoo, Shawnee, Quapaw, and even some Osage and Cherokee. As the war drew on, some Natives who had originally signed on to the Confederacy later changed sides and fought for the Union's Indian Home Guard.
Two officers, one on each side, both the highest ranking Natives in either army. Bvt. Ely S. Parker of the Seneca, who served on the staff of General Grant, drafted the surrender documents for the Army of Northern Virginia and was present when Lee and Grant met at the McLean House in Appomattox. On the other side, Brig. Gen. Stand Watie of the Cherokee, who surrendered the last Confederate Army at Doaksville, Oklahoma on June 23, 1865.
(This post also appears in https://greatwarriorsII.blogspot.com).


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