This item puts you right in the middle of late eighteenth century intrigue and the accidental way Tennesee became Tennessee.
It is worth recalling that settlers were then just breaking over the mountains after two whole centuries settling the Eastern seaboard and securing all that. The rest took the next century and a huge internal population boom as well.
It was all so inconsequential then even to those involved.
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How Tennessee got its name
https://peopleofonefire.com/how-tennessee-got-its-name.html
There
are several different explanations for the word, Tennessee, out in the
web. All of them are wrong, because the authors always try to interpret
Creek words without knowing the Creek languages.
The
factual explanation of the word made no sense until we fact checked a
statement made by a 17th French ethnologist, Charles de Rochefort. He
said that the Arawaks originated in the Southeast and migrated all the
way to Peru before some of them turned around and ended up in the
Southern Highlands and Appalachian Plateau. Indeed, we did find many
Arawak words in northeastern Tennessee and western North Carolina.
Here is a chronology of how an ethnic name became the name of a river and a state:
(1)
There was an ethnic group living at several locations along the
Tennessee and Little Tennessee Rivers, plus upstate South Carolina,
which the Itsate (Hitchiti) Creeks called the Taenasi,
which means “Descendants of the Taino.” Of course, the Taino were
also the predominant ethnic group in the Greater Antilles Islands of the
Caribbean Basin in 1492.
(2) Muskogee Creeks and Chickasaws in Georgia pronounced the ethnic name as Tenasi. Muskogee Creeks and Choctaws in Alabama called the same people, the Tensaw.
Georgia Muskogee Creeks were often the guides for South Carolina Indian
traders heading into what is now the State of Tennessee.
(3) Until the late 18th century, most of the Tennessee River was called the Calimaco River,
which is an Itza Maya word meaning “House or Palace of the King.” In
the 1600s, the Upper Tennessee River above the mouth of the Hiwassee
River was called the Caskenampo River. Caskenampo is a Koasate word
meaning, “Many Warriors.” In the early 1700s, the Upper Tennessee was
called the Cusate River, which means “Kusa People.” In the mid-1700s, the Upper Tennessee was called the Hogeloge (Uchee) River or Cherokee River.
After the Cherokees went to war with the British until the mid-1780s,
the Upper Tennessee River was only called the Hogeloge River.
(4) The original name (and Creek name) for the Upper Little Tennessee River was the Talasee River. The Lower Little Tennessee River was called the Taenasi River. After the Cherokees rose to power during the Yamasee War, the Upper Tennessee, the Little Tennessee was renamed the Big Tellico River. After the Cherokees went to war with the British in 1757, its name became again the Tanasi or Tenasee River.
(5) Before the American Revolution Colonel John Tipton and Colonel John Sevier,
lived across Toms Brook from each other in what is now Shenandoah
County, Virginia and were the best of friends. In 1780, the two men
began leading wagon trains of settlers from Shenandoah County to
northeastern Tennessee. Initially, it was because the Revolutionary War
was not going well for the Patriots, but later because the war appeared
to be won, and there was a vast tract of unoccupied land in
Northeastern Tennessee.
The
wagon trains passed through southwestern Virginia and what is now
northeastern Tennessee, they observed several “ancient European
villages” (as Tipton and Sevier called them) occupied by Jewish families, who spoke Spanish. That fact has been completely erased from the history books.
(6)
At the close of the Revolution in 1783, Tipton built a copy of his
house in Shenandoah County. That house is now the Tipton-Haynes State
Historic Site near Johnson City, TN. In 1784, Tennessee belonged to
North Carolina, but the new settlers wanted their own state. Sevier
became a leader of the faction of settlers, who wanted to unilaterally
secede from North Carolina and create the State or Republic of
Franklin. Tipton became the leader of the faction, who wanted the
creation of the new state to be done in an orderly fashion by Congress.
(7)
By 1787, the Franklinites were forcibly driving Uchee, Creek and
Chickasaw villages out of the Cumberland Plateau and establishing new
settlements. The State of Franklin had signed a treaty with the
Cherokee Nation to get title for their lands in eastern Tennessee and
therefore created the myth that we have today in the history books that
the Cherokees also lived in Middle Tennessee. Under the Articles of
Confederation, only Congress could have direct treaties with Indian
tribes or remove Indian tribes from their lands. The treatment of the
Indians inflamed the conflict between the Franklinites and the followers
of John Tipton into constant brawls and ultimately, skirmishes.
On
February 28, 1788 Colonel and now Governor John Sevier led 100
Franklinite militiamen in an attack on John Tipton’s house. The
following morning, an approximately equal force of Tiptonites arrived to
reinforce those defending the Tipton House. The Franklinites were
forced to retreat. Already Upper Creek and Chickasaw war parties had
been attacking Franklinite settlements in the Cumberland Plateau, while
Chickamauga Cherokees, who refused to sign a treaty with the State of
Franklin, attacked settlements in southeastern Tennessee.
The
State of Franklin was quickly bankrupted. John Sevier approached
Spanish officials in Louisiana about being annexed to the Kingdom of
Spain in return for being given a bail-out loan. North Carolina and
Congress found out about this intrigue, and quickly squashed the State
of Franklin. Congress created the Southwest Territory in 1790.
\
Leaders
in the Southwest Territory didn’t like the Maya name of the main river
in their soon-to-be state because it would be very embarrassing to
Southeastern anthropology professors in the 21st century. Therefore,
they changed the name of the Callimaco River to Tennessee and the
Tanasee River to Little Tennessee. Soon thereafter, they decided that
the name of the new state would be Tennessee.
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