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  1. Lyncoya Jackson, born in 1812, also known as Lincoyer, was a Creek Indian child adopted and raised by U.S. President Andrew Jackson and his wife, Rachel Jackson. Born to Creek ( Muscogee / Red Stick ) parents, he was orphaned during the Creek War after the Battle of Tallushatchee .

  2. Jan 26, 2023 · On November 3rd 1813, 1,000 cavalry from the Tennessee militia attacked a village called Tallushatchee, on the orders of future U.S. President Andrew Jackson. The village was Muscogee (sometimes called Creek, as noted by The Muscogee Nation.) By the end of the day, approximately 200 Muscogee people had been killed.

  3. Jackson also had three Creek children living with them: Lyncoya, a Creek orphan Jackson had adopted after the Battle of Tallushatchee, and two boys they called Theodore and Charley. For the only time in U.S. history, two women acted simultaneously as unofficial first lady for the widower Jackson.

  4. Apr 29, 2016 · In bringing Lyncoya into his family, Jackson joined other Southern slaveholders, Indian agents, and Northern Quakers in a short-lived, but politically potent, tradition of assimilative adoption.

  5. Significance: Adopted child of Andrew Jackson. Date of Birth: c. 1813. Date of Death: 1828. Lyncoya, a Creek Indian orphan, was raised at the Hermitage, the household of Andrew and Rachel Jackson.

  6. Jun 16, 2019 · Though Jackson referred to Lyncoya as his son, the adoption doesn't qualify him for a Father's Day card, some historians say.

  7. In 1813, Andrew Jackson sent home to Tennessee a Native American child who was found by Jackson’s translator on a Creek War battlefield with his dead mother. Named Lyncoya, he may have originally been intended as merely a companion for Andrew Jr., but Jackson soon took a strong interest in him.

  8. Apr 7, 2023 · Very little is known about Lyncoya, the adopted Muscogee (Creek) son of seventh President, Andrew Jackson. During the Creek War (1813-1814), Colonel Andrew Jackson, accompanied by around 5,000 Tennessee militia troops, was sent to the Mississippi Territory (modern day Alabama) to quell and halt the recent uprising of Creek peoples against White ...

  9. Apr 29, 2016 · Lyncoya was a child of the Red Sticksa faction of traditionalist Creeks, mostly from the northwestern, or “Upper,” towns of the Creek Confederacy, that was determined to resist white encroachment.

  10. Jun 17, 2019 · “I send on a little Indian boy,” Jackson wrote as a general after U.S. forces attacked a Creek village in what is known as the Battle of Tallushatchee, The Washington Post reported. The boy's name was Lyncoya, though in a Jackson biography his name is written as Lincoyer .

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