President John Quincy Adams did not consider the treaty to be valid, and pressured Troup to stop white incursions onto Creek territory.
It voided the Treaty of Indian Springs and ceded to the United States all Creek territory on the east side of the Chattahoochee River for a one-time payment of $217,600 and a yearly annuity of $20,000.
The United States would then fund the relocation, as well as providing for a full year's subsistence, a full-time U.S. Indian Agent, an interpreter, a blacksmith and a wheelwright.
Not pleased with the new treaty and under intense pressure from expansionists, Troup ordered the land surveyed for a lottery, including the piece that was to remain in Creek jurisdiction.
The United States government allowed Troup to quickly renegotiate the agreement and seize all remaining Creek territory bordering Georgia.