Pursued by federal soldiers, Tsali and a few companions sought refuge in the remote, rocky fastnesses of Deep Creek (now in the heart of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park). No one knows exactly where they hid, although most authorities agree it was somewhere in the cliffs high up on Deep Creek's Left Fork.
Wherever his precise hiding place may have been, Tsali eventually surrendered with the understanding that his life would be forfeited in return for the remaining Cherokees being allowed to stay in their traditional homeland. He was subsequently shot, as were his two sons and brother, on the banks of the Tuckaseigee River near Bryson City.
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