What comes out of all this is that several source peoples established colonies in Se Georgia and that this was driven by mining of some sort. all of this is post Bronze Age as well so far as we can tell. However one such people were from Europe and brought deer milking and likely riding as well. they may well have been Bronze Age derived when active shipping made immigration possible.
Appalachian turns out to be the plural of a Peruvian word and an elite group had come from Peru. Nicely clarified.
We also remark on the discovery of an advanced peoples whose script was preserved during contact. We are slowly developing a rich and healthy understanding of peoples met at contact.
Apalachee, Apalachicola, Appalachian . . .
What your history teacher never told you
Posted by Richard Thornton | Oct 31, 2016
https://peopleofonefire.com/apalachee-apalachicola-appalachian-what-your-history-teacher-never-told-you.html
Part Five of the series:
Horse Manure in Your History Books
In
the spring of 2013, Marilyn Rae, a highly educated Renaissance woman,
who grew up in the Shenandoah Valley, stumbled upon an engraving on the
website of the Carter Brown Library at Brown University. It portrayed a
Native American city, built of stone, in North Georgia! The long
forgotten scene was created by Dutch printer, Arnout Leers in 1658 for
the second edition of a book by a French ethnologist and Protestant
minister, the Reverend Charles de Rochefort. The first edition of his
book had been published anonymously in France the previous year, because
until the French Revolution, it was illegal for Protestants to publish
books in France. De Rochefort subsequently moved to Rotterdam to be
permanently rid of religious persecution.
Rae
thought that she had discovered an eyewitness description of the Track
Rock Terrace Complex, which was then part of a controversy in Georgia.
Today, we are fairly certain that it portrays the Nacoochee Valley in
Northeast Georgia, because the image contains both a “sun temple” on a
cone-shaped hill and a nearby Spanish trading post with a small mission
attached.
Intrigued, Rae tracked down the book . . . , l’Histoire Naturelle et Morale des isles Antilles de l’Amérique. It
had lain for many generations, gathering dust, in the “Fantasy and
Utopia” bin of the Carter Brown Library. Some long-forgotten Ivy League
professors had condemned the book to ignominy in the 1800s because two
chapters of the book described an advanced indigenous civilization in
the Georgia Highlands.
Knowing
for a fact, that civilization couldn’t have possibly occurred in the
backward South before Anglo-Saxons arrived, the entire book was labeled
“fiction.” Little did these academicians realize that this book is
still considered the premier reference on North America in the 1600s by
European scholars.
The
trail of evidence necessary to understand who the Apalachee and
Apalachicola really were, will require a lengthy article . . . but it is
very important information . . . and well worth the time of reading.
As
it turned out, this book would be the key to unraveling many mysteries
about the Southeast’s past that have baffled North American scholars for
over 250 years. It helped explain who the Apalache were and intriguing
details for where they came from.
Because
Charles de Rochefort’s description of the immediate ancestors of the
Creek Indians seemed so different than how the history books portray the
Creeks in the late 1700s, I was also intrigued by the book, but assumed
that much of it was fictional or at least exaggerated.
The
two chapters about the Lower Southeast in the mid-1600s were thoroughly
studied by Marilyn Rae, Michael Jacobs and me. One by one, the details
that seemed preposterous to Ivy League professors long ago were
“fact-checked” and found to be either true or probable. Currently, the
only item that has not been verified is a 200 feet long, 20 feet high
cavern, which De Rochefort said was used as a temple. Another dubious
worship site . . . a temple overlooking a waterfalls with a second
temple in a cave under the waterfalls . . . turned out to be none other
than De Soto Falls in Mentone, AL on top of Lookout Mountain.
In
the same approach that POOF used in analyzing the myth about the Battle
of Taliwa, we will next take a step by step approach to chronologically
list the key events that will help us understand the real history of
the Apalachee, Apalachicola and Appalachian Mountains.
The
final article on the Apalachee and Apalachicola will include a
linguistic analysis of the words Apalache, Apalachicola, Appalachian,
Palache, Palachicola and Chicora. This will be grounded in the cultural
information furnished by René de Laudonnière, Commander of Fort
Caroline (1564-1565) and the Rev. Charles de Rochefort in 1658.
Colonial Era archives and literature
1536 – Núñez Cabeza de Vaca
The
first mention of the Apalache was the report made by one of the four
survivors of the Pánfilo de Narváez Expedition (1528-1536). De Vaca
stated that the Natives in the vicinity of Tampa Bay, Florida told him
that the Apalache, living in the mountains about two weeks journey north
of them had so much gold that the important buildings in their towns
were covered with gold. Actually, as we will learn from the Rev. De
Rochefort, this was true. Nevertheless, the story kicked off a century
of fruitless search by Spanish for the “Seven Golden Cities of Civola” .
. . somewhere in the hinterland of North America.
Note: The Wikipedia article on “Apalachee People,” inaccurately attributes events during the De Soto Expedition to the Narváez expedition.
1539 – Hernando de Soto Expedition
When
the Spanish first explored Florida, the only region that was conducive
to growing Indian corn was the Red Clay Hills east of the Apalachicola
River. The first village that the Spaniards encountered in this region
was named Apalachen. De Soto assumed that he had found the Province of
Apalache, but never could find any evidence of gold deposits. From then
on, the Spanish called these people Apalache, even they did not call
themselves by that name. The significance of Apalachen will be
explained under linguistics.
The
people that de Soto encountered in northwest Florida were not living in
the town sites with large mounds at this time. The capital of their
province, Anihaica, was 5.33 miles southeast
of Lake Jackson Mounds, which archaeologists believe was abandoned
around 1500 AD. It is quite possible that a smallpox plague had
decimated the population of the original capital.
Note: Anihaica
is labeled a “Southern Muskogean word of unknown meaning” by Florida
anthropologists. Actually, its meaning is known by the People of One
Fire. It is a Southern Arawak word from Peru and means, “Elite – Place
of.”
In late February
of 1540, as De Soto was departing the Florida Panhandle, he asked the
locals where he could find gold. They told him that two week journey
northward was the King of Yupaha. That province had plenty of gold.
Yupaha appears to be the words Yupa Ahau or Yupa Lord. It is not clear
where this lord lived in 1540, but the ethnic name survived among the 18th century Creeks as the Upataw (Upitoi) People. The chroniclers of DeSoto never mentioned Yupaha or Apalache again.
When
the De Soto Expedition reached the southern edge of the Kingdom of
Apalache at the towns of Tama and Okvte (Ocute in Spanish), it was
encouraged to turn eastward by talks of a wealthy province in what is
now eastern South Carolina. Otherwise, the conquistadors would have
headed straight toward the heart of Apalache.
A
sketched map prepared in 1544 that accompanied the final report on the
De Soto Expedition to the King of Spain does not mention either
Apalachen in Florida or the Apalache People in the Highlands. The first
map to mention the Apalache was drawn by Spanish Royal Cartographer, Diego Guttierez, in 1562. It is shown above. The province is called Apalchen
and placed far beyond the first range of mountains in the Southeast . .
. appearing to be somewhere around Tennessee or Kentucky. Civola
(Seven Cities of Cibola) is in the Southern Piedmont. There is no
mention of an Apalache People in Florida. This map seems to be based on
information obtained by the Narvaez Expedition with some of the towns
and villages mentioned by De Soto’s chroniclers in arbitrary locations.
1562-1565 – René de Laudonnière
The
commander of Fort Caroline wrote that he dispatched six small
expeditions in a northwestward direction up the May (Altamaha) River to
establish trade contacts with powerful provinces in the Piedmont and
Mountains of Georgia. At least one expedition, led by La Roche Ferrière
visited for a period of time with the Apalache in the Georgia
Mountains. They were friendly and interested in establishing a trade
partnership with the French. Ferrière confirmed that the Apalache had
access to large deposits of gold. They fabricated the gold into foil
and chains for trade with other provinces. However, their greatest
wealth came from the export of a particular type of greenstone, which
occurs in the Georgia Gold Belt. The greenstone was considered the best
material for wedges and axes. Apalache greenstone was traded all over
eastern North America.
De
Laudonnière was so impressed with the report brought back from the
Kingdom of Apalache that he planned to build the capital of New France
at the headwaters of freight canoe transportation on the May River. The
location was about two days walk from the Apalache centers of gold
mining activity around present day Dahlonega and Helen, GA. The French
considered the Oconee River to be a continuation of the May River. The
campus of the University of Georgia is located where the capital of New
France was planned. Obviously, the geography of the May River bears no
resemblance to that of the St. Johns River in Florida, where a 1/12th scale reproduction of Fort Caroline is now located.
The
Thamagoa (Tamakoa), who lived upstream from Fort Caroline about 20
miles on the May River, were living in Jackson County, GA on the Middle
Oconee River in the 1700s. By then, they had joined the Creek
Confederacy. This is more proof that Fort Caroline was in Georgia.
Ironically, Tamakoa is the origin of the ethnic name Timucua, which the
Spanish gave to all tribes in Northeast Florida.
1565 – Evolving names of the Appalachian Mountains
In
his memoirs, René de Laudonnière took credit for naming the mountains
of present day Georgia after the Apalache. Resident Fort Caroline
artist, Jacques Le Moyne, painted a water color map of Florida Française, which labeled this range Montes Apalatci. A section of the painting is presented above. The town name, Appalou, in the bottom center, is the Europeanization of the the Native word, Aparu,
which means “From Peru” in several Peruvian languages. In 1618, French
cartographer, Marc Le Carbot, labeled the Georgia Mountains by their
French name, Montangnes Palasi.
A French map from 1620 labeled the range, Monts Apalatay, ou Palan. The place name Palan is very important, because, as will be described in Linguistics, it provides grammatical evidence. The 1657 map of Florida Française by Nicholas Sanson labels these mountains, Apalachi Montes, and correctly labels the indigenous people, south of them, Apalache. It makes not mention of the Apalache in Florida, but rather shows the names of a few major villages.
The
1684 Carte du Louisianne by Jean Baptiste Franquelin did not even name
the mountains, but includes detailed cartographic and ethnological
descriptions of the Chattahoochee and Upper Tennessee Rivers. The Apalache are shown to live in Northeast Georgia, while the Apica Creeks occupy the headwaters of the Chattahoochee.
The 1688 Vincencio Coronelli Map of the Southeast labeled these mountains,”Montes Apalatay o Apalatchi o Palassi. He also spelled the ethnic name, Apalache, and clearly places them within the Georgia Mountains.
The 1693 Map of North America
by Robert Morden was the last English language map to mention the
Apalache People, but he did not label the mountains. A town in the
Nacoochee Valley, roughly where the Kenimer Mound sits, was labeled, Apalache.
An earlier Morden map labeled Northeast Georgia, Domus Regae, which in Latin means “House of the King.” The last High King of Apalache was named Mahdo (Mvto in Muskogee). His name has become the word for “thank you” in modern Creek.
The 1701 map of La Louisiane by Guillaume De Lisle also does not label the mountains, but placed the Apalates (using the Itza Maya suffix for people) farther south in Northeast Georgia than earlier maps.
The
1715 map of the Lower Southeast by John Beresford was the first British
Colonial document to specifically mention the Cherokee People. Their
main location was then in the northeast corner of Tennessee. All
earlier claims by Cherokee histories are based on ignorance by the
authors of the Creek languages and cultural history. It labeled North
Georgia, “the Appalachee Mountains.”
De Lisle’s 1717 map of La Louisiane is the first European map to mention the Cherokees (Charaquis). He placed the Apalachicolas in North Georgia along the Etowah and Chattahoochee Rivers.
He included a note, which stated that “the people called the
Conchaqui’s by the French, were called the Apalachicola by the Spanish.”
The
1721 map of South Carolina by Colonel John Barnwell, was the first to
provide detailed information on the locations and names of the branches
of the Creek Confederacy. Over North Georgia, it contains this
statement: “A Ridge of High Mountains Reaching to the Charokees, called by the Spaniards, the Apalachean Mountains.” (Actually, the Spanish word was Apalachen.)
For many decades that name would only apply to the mountains in
Georgia. It is significant that Cherokee territory began, where the
Apalachean Mountains ended. . . roughly the North Carolina line.
Nevertheless, from 1721 onward the North Georgia Mountains were called
the Appalachian Mountains. After the Cherokees were forcibly removed
from the Southern Highlands, this geographic label was gradually
extended northward to include all the mountains, except the Adirondacks,
from Alabama to Quebec and Newfoundland in Canada.
Guess what? Apalachen is the plural of Apalache in the Panoan languages of Eastern Peru.
1565 – Melilot
Ten
members of the Fort Caroline colony were away on trading expeditions
when the fort was massacred by the Spanish. They were invited to take
refuge in the Kingdom of Apalache, but only six survived the journey to
the mountains, because the Spanish had placed a bounty on their heads.
These six married Apalache women and founded the French
Protestant-Sephardic Jewish colony of Melliot in late 1565. Through the
decades that followed, they were joined by hundreds, if not thousands of
European Protestant and Jewish refugees. The region became known to
European Jews as New Jerusalem. Melilot and Apalache remained on
European maps until 1707.
1567-1568 – Juan Pardo Expedition
Juan
dela Bandera, the notary for Pardo, made no mention of Apalache in his
journal. However, the expedition did pass through towns such as Nokose
and Cauche, which were within the boundaries of the Apalache Kingdom.
1568-1584 – Trade between Apalache and Spanish Colony of Santa Elena
According to sworn depositions, obtained by English scholar, Richard Hakluyt in 1587, covert
trade occurred between the Spanish colony of Santa Elena and the
Apalache. Usually, the Spanish were not allowed to enter the higher
mountains where the Itsate lived and traded only with the Apalalache in
the vicinity of the Nacoochee Valley and Dahlonega, GA.
1599-1610 – Blocked Spanish expeditions
The
governor of Spanish Florida heard repeated rumors of non-Spanish
Europeans living in what is now North Georgia. The most alarming story
was that a large company of white men were riding back and forth across
the countryside. Four small military expeditions were sent up the
Altamaha River to investigate these rumors. All four were told if they
continued northward or westward, they would be killed. Either direction
would have taken them into the Kingdom of Apalache.
1633-1638 – Establishment of missions among the Florida Apalachee
Florida
Governor Luis de Horruytiner sponsored two Franciscan missionaries to
convert the Florida Apalachee to Catholicism. This governor also
negotiated a peace treaty between the Florida Apalache, Apalachicola,
Chatot and Amacano Peoples. This is one of the earliest, if not the
earliest mention of the Apalachicolas. There is no mention of the
Apalachicola on 16th century maps of the Southeast.
1645-1715 – Locations of the Spanish Apalache and the Apalachicola
During
the 1600s, the people that the Spanish labeled “Apalache” lived on BOTH
SIDES of the Apalachicola River AND along the Chattahoochee River in
deep southwestern Georgia. The Apalachicola lived in the vicinity of
present day Columbus, GA and Phenix City, AL until their towns were
attacked and burned by the Spanish in 1645. They then moved northward
into the West Georgia Piedmont and Etowah River Valley of Northwest
Georgia. By the late 1600s, Muskogee-speaking towns had taken their
place in the Columbus, GA area. This confirms De Rochefort’s statement
that the Apalache preferred to live near shoals, rapids and water falls .
. . “white water.” The Chatot occupied the Choctawhatchee River Basin
in Alabama and Florida.
So the belief by 20th
century ethnologists that the Apalachicola were “the people on the
other side of the river” as stated in almost all contemporary references
is totally erroneous. Apalachicola towns would not show up on the
Apalachicola River in Florida until after the end of the French and
Indian War in 1763, when Great Britain took control of Florida.
However, the Muskogee-speaking towns would always be located near the
shoals at Columbus, GA. A close examination of 18th century
maps revealed that all of the towns south of the Columbus Area were
occupied by ethnic groups, who had moved there from the Georgia Coastal
Plain or the Savannah River. They were members of the Creek Confederacy
in the 1700s, but were not ethnic Muskogeans.
1646 – Spanish trading post in the Nacoochee Valley
Florida
Governor Benito Ruíz de Salazar Vallecilla established a fortified
trading post in the Nacoochee Valley on the headwaters of the
Chattahoochee River. That same year, English Royalist Edward Bland,
ended his five year exile in Spain by first traveling to Virginia then
immediately heading southward to the Southern Appalachians. Presumably,
he went to the Nacoochee Valley, since he had been heavily involved with
international trade, while in Spain.
1653 – Richard Briggstock
Briggstock
was a Royalist planter in Barbados and first cousin of Edward Bland,
who spent an extensive period of time in the Kingdom of Apalache. He
provided an extensive description of the indigenous people in Georgia to
ethnologist Charles de Rochefort. At the time, Barbados was under
attack by a fleet from the English Commonwealth. Briggstock was
considering the relocation of Royalist families to Mellilot or
establishing another European colony elsewhere in the Kingdom of
Apalache.
After touring most
of North Georgia, plus the De Soto Falls temples on Lookout Mountain in
Alabama and Spanish-speaking gem miners in the Franklin, NC area,
Briggstock decided to move to Virginia instead. The Kingdom of Apalache
did not allow slavery and considered all Europeans to be subjects of
their High King, whose title was Paracusiti. The Briggstocks moved to
Virginia around 1658 and eventually became, along with the Blands,
members of its aristocracy.
1658 – Charles de Rochefort
The second edition of De Rochefort’s book, l’Histoire Naturelle et Morale des isles Antilles de l’Amérique,
contained two chapters on what is now the State of Georgia. The first
chapter describes Briggstock’s experiences in the Kingdom of Apalache.
De Rochefort included the ethnic groups, history, religion, cultural
traditions, architecture and geography of present day Georgia in
detail. De Rochefort’s also provided information on how the Apalache
elite and commoners constructed their buildings was not discovered by
archaeologists until the late 20th century. These two chapters have to be based on actual eyewitness accounts.
The
ancestors of the Apalache had come across the ocean from the south.
They had first developed a distinct culture while living around a
shallow lake formed by the Ocmulgee River. Over time, their capitals
had been established further and further north. The Apalache Kingdom had
originally stretched from southwestern Virginia to southwestern
Georgia, but in 1653 was really more of a confederacy, in which the
Paracusite or High King of Apalache functioned in a role similar to the
Emperor of Japan.
The word, Paracusite, was quite odd. It had an Itza Maya suffix for people, te,
but the rest of the word could not be translated by either a Creek or
Itza Maya dictionary. This word, also seen in the memoirs of René de
Laudonnière, was not mentioned when British colonists settled Savannah
and made contact with the Creek Confederacy. It seemed to be the key to
understanding, who the Apalache really were.
The
elite and commoners lived in separate villages. This is also mentioned
by the chroniclers of the De Soto Expedition, while they were traveling
through Georgia. The architecture and clothing of the commoners was
identical to that of the Creeks when Georgia was founded in 1733. The
clothing of the elite was very similar to traditional Seminole and
Miccosukee clothing, but virtually identical to that worn by the Panoan
peoples of Eastern Peru to this day. A signature feature of the Panoan
Peoples until very recently was a conical straw hat. The engravings in
De Rochefort’s book showed the Apalache elite wearing the same style
hat.
Note: Because
no museum or anthropological book in the Southeastern United States
ever portrayed a Native American wearing a conical straw hat, Marilyn
Rae and I assumed that the engraver of De Rochefort’s book had
unilaterally decided to portray them with these odd hats. However,
closer examination of indigenous art within the interior of the
Southeast portrayed several examples of Natives wearing conical straw
hats, but they had been completely ignored by anthropologists and museum
exhibit designers.
The
elite architecture was quite different, however. The elite lived in
large round houses on the tops and sides of hills and mountains. Their
temples were on hill tops or the sides of mountains. Apparently, many
of the temples were built of field stone and plastered with clay.
One
detail of Apalache architecture has never been discerned by
archaeologists. The Apalache coated the clay plaster of their important
public buildings with gold colored mica. They considered mica to be a
form of gold. The mica strengthened the clay plaster and protected it
from the elements. It also made the buildings glisten like gold. This
is the source of the “Seven Cities of Gold” legend.
Florida Apalachee:
De Rochefort specifically stated that Apalache was not the real name of
the people in northwest Florida that the Spanish called Apalache. The
true Apalache established colonies on the Gulf Coast and constructed a
road to interconnect the highest mountains (Great Smokies) and principal
Apalache towns in the Lower Mountains with the colony. This road was
called the Great White Path and is now US Highway 129.
The Apalache, living in the colony called themselves, Tula-Halwesi,
which means “Descendants of Highland Towns.” This obviously is the
origin of the word Tallahassee. Muskogee Creeks, entering Florida in
the late 1700s, heard the word and thought it was Talwa-Hasi, which means “Town-old.” By that time, the ruins of Tula-Halwesi were indeed an Old Town.
De
Rochefort stated that over time, the language of the colonists had
blended with the language of another people living in the region . . .
to the point that the Apalache and Tula-Halwesi could not understand
each other’s language. However, the Highland Apalache and the
Tula-Halwasi had remained friends and trading partners.
Apalache towns and cultural traditions:
The elite of the Apalache lived in separate towns than the commoners.
The elite spoke a different language that the commoners. In fact, the
commoners spoke several languages and originally practice several
religions. The Apalache state religion, based on the worship of a
single, invisible sun goddess, Amana, who created all things, was what
tied all the multiple ethnic groups in their kingdom together. Once a
year a special festival honoring Amana would be held for several days.
It marked the end of the old year and the beginning of the new. Of course, this is the Green Corn Festival.
The religion stressed love for all humans, unless they proved
themselves to be killers, pagans and predators . . . like the despised Cofitachete (Descendants of Mixed Races – People).
There
were no human or animal sacrifices. In fact, the intentional shedding
of any blood within two miles of a temple or sacred site was a very
serious crime. The only form of sacrifice was that the elite were
expected to place one of their brightly colored garments and special
foods on the stone altars of temples during certain holidays. These
donations were then distributed by the priests to the commoners.
Note: It is well documented that even in the late 1700s, hunting was forbidden within two miles of a Creek temple or sacred site.
De
Rochefort stated that the Apalache People had developed their cultural
identity, while living in a cluster of villages along the shores of Lake
Tama. Lake Tama has now shrunk to being the Little Ocmulgee River swamp in Middle Georgia. Since
that time their capitals had been located steadily northward until they
occupied the lower mountains. The Apalache had traditionally considered
the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains to be unhealthy places to live.
All of their original major towns were located on the shoals of rivers
or next to waterfalls, where it was thought that the water was purer.
Note: Since 2014, I have been analyzing all known Native American town and village sites in the Creek Motherland
for a private sector client. Consistently, all town sites from the
Woodland and Early Mississippian Periods, considered ancestral to the
Creek Indians, are located on shoals or next to waterfalls.
Apalachicola:
De Rochefort stated that in recent years, some Apalache had migrated
down into what we call the Chattahoochee River Basin of Southwest
Georgia and Southeast Alabama, until their new towns were directly
adjacent to the people, which the Spanish called Apalache. The original
inhabitants of this region had either died off or abandoned it. As
will be explained later in the linguistics section, Apalachicola merely
means “Apalache People” in the language of the Apalache elite.
Melilot:
A later French language edition of De Rochefort’s book included a
letter from Edward Graeves, one of the directors of the European colony
at Melilot. The long letter was dated January 6, 1660. It very
accurately described the flora and fauna of North Georgia, which then
included large herds of both bison and elk. The mentioning of bison
being in Georgia was one of the reasons that New England academicians
dissed De Rochefort’s book. Georgia’s bison suddenly disappeared around
1752, probably due to a European cattle disease and over-hunting.
1735 – Creek migration legends
Upon
the settlement of Savannah in 1733, Thomas Christie, first Colonial
Secretary of the Province of Georgia, took a sincere interest in the
culture of the Creek People. The colonists quickly realized that they
were monotheists and much more culturally advanced that Native peoples,
encountered farther north by the British. The Archbishop of Canterbury,
William Wake, wanted to establish missions among the Creeks and publish
a Bible in the Creek language. At this time, the British did not
realize that there were several Creek languages.
Christie
interviewed numerous Creek leaders and elders to assemble a description
of the Creek’s history, migration legends and religious practices. It
was then that he realized that they were an assimilation of several
ethnic groups, who had originated in various parts of the Americas. He
gave particular attention to the multiple migration legends. The
Palachicola said that they came by water from the south and that their
first town and capital was where Savannah now was situated. They even
pointed out the burial mound of their first emperor. The Upper Creeks
said that they came from the mountains of Mexico. The Itsate (Itza Maya ~
Hitchiti) Creeks said that they came by water from the south, but first
settled in southern Florida, before settling in the mountains and Macon
Area in Georgia. The Uchee said that they came to the coast of Georgia
from across the Atlantic and that there was no one living in the Lower
Southeast, when they arrived.
On
June 7, 1735 the High King of the Creek Confederacy, Chikili,
presented a bison velum on which was written in the Apalache writing
system, the history of the Kashite branch of the Creek Confederacy. He
then read the velum and his words were translated by Mary Musgrove.
Afterward he gave a short speech which described some of the general
history of other branches of the Creek Confederacy and offered permanent
friendship with the Province of Georgia.
Supervising
Trustee, James Edward Oglethorpe, immediately realized that the bison
velum and accompanying English translation were items of extreme
significance. Here was an indigenous people, descended from ancient
American civilizations that had a complete writing system. He directed
Christie to immediately dispatch the velum, English translation and
other accumulated documents on the Creeks on the next ship, headed for
England, in care of the Georgia Board of Trustees. They were to present
the documents to King George II.
The
Creek Migration Legends created quite a stir in London. Portions were
published in newspapers. Then the location of the documents was lost
for 285 years. I finally found the box, containing the documents, at
Lambeth Palace in April 2015, with the extremely valuable help of Dr.
Grahame Davies, Asst. Private Secretary for HRH Prince Charles.
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