In 1785, Hawkins had served as a representative for the Congress in negotiations with the Creek Indians. He was generally successful, and convinced that tribe to lessen their raids for several years, although he could not conclude a formal treaty. The Creek wanted to deal with the head man, and finally signed the
Treaty of New York after Hawkins convinced George Washington to become involved.
In 1796, Washington appointed Benjamin Hawkins as General Superintendent of Indian Affairs dealing with all tribes south of the
Ohio River. He personally assumed the role of principal agent to the
Creek tribe. He moved to the area that is now
Crawford County in
Georgia. He was adopted by the Creeks, and took one of their women as his common-law wife.
He began to teach agricultural practices to the tribe, starting a farm at his home on the Flint River. In time, he brought in slaves and workers, cleared several hundred acres and established mills and a trading post as well as his farm. His operation expanded until he had over 1,000 cattle and a large number of hogs. For years, he would meet with chiefs on his porch and discuss matters while churning butter. His personal hard work and open-handed generosity won him such respect that reports say that he never lost an animal to Indian raiders.
He was responsible for the longest period of peace between the settlers and the tribe, overseeing 19 years of peace. When a fort was built, in 1806, to protect expanding settlements, just west of modern
Macon, Georgia, it was named
Fort Benjamin Hawkins.
Hawkins saw much of his work toward building a peace destroyed in 1812. A group of Creeks, led by
Tecumseh were encouraged by British agents to resistance against increasing settlement by whites. Although he personally was never attacked, he was forced to watch an internal
civil war among the Creeks, the war with a faction known as the
Red Sticks, and their eventual defeat by
Andrew Jackson.
During the
Creek War of 1813-1814, Hawkins organized the friendly Creeks under Major
William McIntosh to aid the Georgia and Tennessee militias during their forays against the Red Sticks. After the Red Stick defeat at the
Battle of Horseshoe Bend, activities in Georgia and Tennessee prevented Hawkins from moderating the
Treaty of Fort Jackson in August 1814. Hawkins later organized friendly Creeks against a British force on the
Apalachicola River that threatened to rally the scattered Red Sticks and reignite the war on the Georgia frontier. After the British withdrew in 1815, Hawkins began organizing a force to secure the area when he died from a sudden illness in June 1816.
Benjamin never recovered from the shock of the Creek civil war. He had tried to resign his post and return from the Georgia wilderness, but his resignation was refused by every president after Washington. He remained Superintendent until his death on
June 6, 1816. On his death bed, he married the woman who had given him four children over the years. Benjamin Hawkins was buried at the Creek Agency, on the Flint River near
Roberta, Georgia. The modern
Ocmulgee National Monument includes the site of the original Fort Hawkins.
Hawkins County in
Tennessee is named in his honor.