
The vision of London greatly impressed the chiefs as being a great city with a large number of people. As they saw the splendour of the army and court, they were admitted into the presence of the King where they promised to continue as his Majesty's faithful and obedient subjects. A treaty was accordingly drawn up, and signed by the secretary to the Lords Commissioners of trade and plantations (one one side of the document) and by the marks of the six chiefs (on the other side). The treaty fashioned the King and the Cherokees together by a chain of friendship and ordered trade among the Indians. Britain agreed to furnish them all manner of goods and to build houses and plant corn from Charleston towards the towns of the Cherokees in the great mountains. This was the substance of the first treaty between the King and the Cherokees, every article of which was accompanied with presents of different kinds, such as cloth, guns, shot, vermilion, flints, hatchets, knives.
Source: An Historical Account Of The Rise And Progress Of The Colonies Of South Carolina And Georgia, Volume 2 by Alexander Hewatt.
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