"Richly detailed and well-researched, this heartbreaking history unfolds
like a political thriller with a deeply human side."--Publishers
Weekly
Toward the Setting Sun chronicles one of the most significant but
least explored periods in American history, recounting the unknown story
of the first white man to champion the voiceless Native American cause.
Son of a Scottish trader and a quarter-Cherokee woman, John Ross was
educated in white schools. It was not until he was twenty-two, when he
fought alongside "his people" against the Creek Indians, a neighboring
rebel tribe, that he knew the Cherokees' fate would be his. Cherokee
chief for forty years, he would guide the tribe through, its most
turbulent period.
As increasing numbers of whites settled illegally on the Cherokee
Nation's native land, including Ross's beloved home at Head of Coosa,
the chief remained steadfast in his refusal to sign a treaty agreeing to
removal. When a group of renegade Cherokees betrayed him and negotiated
an agreement with Jackson's men behind Ross's back, he was forced to
give way and begin the journey west.
In one of America's great tragedies, thousands of Cherokees died during
the tribe's migration on the Trail of Tears to Oklahoma.