An Uchee community on contact was wearing Turbins and wore beards and mustaches. Sounds pretty European to me. Throw in that the name means people of the water in old Irish Gaelic and we are soon buried in non asiatic DNA throughout Eastern North America which is why DNA work is now completely contentious as truly ethnic first nations discover they are of European ancestry. Of course they are now avoiding DNA tests in order to avoid losing status.
The European Bronze Age had over one thousand years to pump settlers who were not white generally into Eastern North America between 2400 BC through 1159 BC. The strong imposition of the White lineage came with cattle herders who overran Europe post 1159 BC and dominated the woodlands of northern Europe thereafter. This did not happen in North America.
It is noteworthy that milk deer existed in Ireland and in Georgia. The Irish herds only disappeared after the Romans left England and monks brought over the first cows. What this does suggest is that while white skinned peoples existed throughout most of European history, they were not overly dominant at all. This came about with the application of the iron ax that permitted the clearing of fields in the European forests and the implementation of small dairy farms and a huge population boom. Recall that this is exactly what happened in Eastern North America as well.
Women with ample access to a cow will produce a dozen strong healthy babies who will grow up to be strong and healthy from cheese supplementation. Those babies will need several more farms of their own in twenty years. Thus we have the oddity of a large white skinned population just as we have the oddity of the Han Chinese who had a river valley full of rice to build out.. .
..
WHERE DID THE UCHEE’S LIVE
Richard Thornton | Nov 11, 2018 |
https://peopleofonefire.com/where-did-the-uchees-live.html
Part Five of the Series, Southeast Georgia and the World of Pernell Roberts
This
is a question, which is asked me regularly. The confusion is directly
the responsibility of the past two generations of academicians, who have
not done their homework. They just parrot each other’s speculations
without studying our indigenous languages or the colonial archives . . .
even at academic conferences devoted to the Uchee. No one in academia
seems to know that a host of indigenous ethnic names in the Lower
Southeast mean “Water People.”
Any tribe in the Southeast,
who had a “ree” or “lee” suffix at the end of their name can be assumed
to be Uchee or to have originally contained a Uchee population
component. Most indigenous ethnic groups in the Lower Southeastern
United States and eastern Peru roll their R’s so hard that they sound
like L’s to English and French speakers. Panoans pronounce Peru as Pä :
lú. Explorers from Spain or Portugal typically recorded the sound as an
R, since they also roll their R’s. Thus, Chicora (16th century Spanish)
was written as Chiquola by the 16th century French and Palachicola by
18th century English explorers. The “Re” suffix is from Pre-Gaelic
Ireland and Pre-Germanic Scandinavia. It means “tribe or nation.” “Ue”
was the Pre-Gaelic word for water.
Be wary of any
Southeastern history article that mentions the Cherokees being in the
Southern Appalachians before 1700. During the past 40 years,
academicians in North Carolina universities, the University of Georgia
and the University of Tennessee inserted the word, Cherokee, in
“modernized” colonial documents, where it didn’t exist. They will also
insert inaccurate speculations and treat them as facts. In particular,
they will have the Cherokees occupying the Tennessee River Valley in the
1600s. As you can see in the Beresford Map below, at least as late as
1715, it was occupied by the Cusate Creeks and Uchee. If challenged, the
professors will quote one of their peers or professors and use that
person’s speculations as factual proof.
The most common
mistake is the presumption that Yuchi is the original name for these
widely spread tribes and that they originated in eastern Tennessee. Both
statements are rooted in the fact that most of the academic papers,
which mentioned the Uchee during the latter half of the 20th century
merely replicated these inaccurate statements by Smithsonian
ethnologist, John R. Swanton, without questioning them. They were
speaking from the throne of third hand information and armed with
complete ignorance about the indigenous languages of the Southeast. The
“Yuchi” and “Yuchee” spelling of their name originated in the 1790s
among frontiersmen in eastern Tennessee, but initial contact was made
with the Uchee on the South Atlantic Coast during the early Colonial
Period. All Colonial documents call them the Uchee . . . which is the
Anglicization of Uesi, a Creek word meaning “Water – Offspring from.” A
Muskogean internal S is pronounced like “shē,”chē,” tshē or “jzhē” . . .
depending on which Muskogean language it is.
Many references
state matter-of-factly that the Ichesi, Chiska and Tamahiti (Tamahitan)
were Uchee. Books by North Carolina-educated authors state that the
Chiska were Uchee and that the Tamahiti were Cherokees. They were not.
Ichesi is the Europeanization of Itza-si, which means “Itza-descendants
of.” The Chiska in the Southeast were immigrants from Peru, where the
Chiska still live today. The word is Panoan and means, “Bird.” Most of
the Chiska survivors in the Appalachians became the Cherokee Bird Clan,
which is named the Chisqua. Tamahi is a Totonac word that means,
merchant. It was borrowed by the Itza and Itsate Creeks. Tamahiti is the
Itza and Creek word for “merchant people.” What happened was that in
the early 20th century, ethnologist John R. Swanton speculated that the
Ichesi, Chiska and Tamahiti might be Uchee tribes, without knowing the
meaning of the words. Then, in several of his late 20th century books,
Charles Hudson stated this speculation as a fact. Thereafter, all of his
worshipers in anthropology took his false statement as orthodoxy.
Example of extremely bogus history
I found this sentence in several Wikipedia articles:
“The Yuchi occupied the Savannah River Valley until they were defeated by the Cherokee in 1681.”
The
oldest statement of this horse manure in a 1967 Cherokee history
article by a North Carolina history professor. The article showed all of
Georgia down to Savannah being Cherokee territory in 1733, when
Savannah was settled. However, the statement now appears in many
anonymous Wikipedia articles and “Cherokee history” websites . . .
except in the Cherokee websites it is stated “Cherokees capture all of
Savannah River Valley from Yuchi’s in 1681!”
The word
Cherokee does not appear on any map until 1715. Until that time, maps
show western North Carolina occupied by the Shawnee and Itsate Creeks.
Uchees are shown on maps, living along several areas of the Savannah
Basin until after the American Revolution. In 1681, a band of Westo did
capture a Uchee town, where Augusta, GA is now located. The Westo
settled there. However, the Westo were not Cherokees and they did not
capture all of the Savannah River Valley. Nevertheless, until I filed a
formal complaint with Wikipedia in 2018, its article on Tomochichi
stated that he was a Cherokee chief of the powerful Yamacraw Band.
Actually, there were just 50 people living in his village and they were
all Creeks! LOL Meanwhile, there are several Cherokee history websites
that label the Yamacraw a branch of the Cherokees. They use Wikipedia as
their source.
This is the appearance of “Ocute” when visited
by De Soto. The town’s ruins are located in Hancock County, GA and
called Shoulderbone Mounds.
Colonial Era contacts with the Uchee
(1)
Hernando de Soto Expedition (March 1540): The Spanish entered the
province of the Water People (Okvte) after leaving the Ocmulgee Basin.
They were described as being very tall and wearing turbans. The leaders
wore beards, while the adult men wore mustaches. One elderly leader had a
beard that reached his belly button. The Kingdom of Apalache was
immediately north of Okvte, which the Spanish wrote down as Ocute.
Apalache was a no-go zone, so the Okvte hoodwinked the Spanish into
turning eastward toward a town named, Kofitvcheki . . . an arch-enemy of
the Okvte. It was located two days walk from the ocean. The Spanish
said that they followed the azimuth of the sunrise, which would have
placed Kofitacheki at the Santee Mound on the Santee River in South
Carolina. South Carolina archaeologists labeled the Mulberry Mound on
the Wataree River, about 140 miles from the Atlantic Ocean. Reading
comprehension is not mandatory for doctoral candidates in most
anthropology programs in the Southeast.
The Muscogean-Itza
elite of the Okvte lived in palisaded compounds, containing several
mounds. The Uchee commoners lived in family or extended farmsteads
dispersed throughout the province. Apparently, when an enemy approached
the province, the commoners would flee (if possible) to the heavily
fortified compounds, where the elite lived. Archaeologists have found
exactly the same pattern on the lower Savannah River.
(2)
Hernando de Soto Expedition (April 1540): The next province reached by
the conquistadors was Okesi, whose capital was called Cofeta (means
mixed race in the Creek languages). This has to be the large ruins of a
town on the Ogeechee River in Taliaferro County, GA. The entire Ogeechee
River Basin as originally occupied by Uchee with a Muskogean or Itza
elite . . . hence, the name of its capital.
(3) Hernando de
Soto Expedition (June 1540): While coming down out of the North Carolina
Mountains, the expedition’s chronicles mentioned the Utsi (Uchee), but
did not tell us much about them.
(4) First Jean Ribault
Voyage (1562): While establishing Charlesfort on Port Royal Sound, SC
the French made friends with the king of Owate (Ouada in French). This
Uchee province was located between Port Royal and the Savannah River and
included Hilton Head and Kiawah Islands. Owate means “Water People” in
an Itsate-Creek dialect. Their capital was located at the mounds now
situated in the community of Okatie, SC . . . which means “Water People”
in another Itsate Creek dialect. The Kiawah or Kiale, an offshoot of
the Okate on the Oconee River, developed their capital in present day
Watkinsville, GA, but had villages in the South Carolina Mountains and
on Kiawah Island, SC. Their descendants are in the Kialeki Tribal Town
in Oklahoma.
(5) Fort Caroline Expeditions (1564-1565): The
French colonists, who built Fort Caroline, renewed their friendship with
the Owate, but also sent six trading expeditions into the interior of
Georgia. The longest expedition lasted six months and was led by Lt.
LaRoche Ferrière. He made contacts with Kofita, but his longest stay in
any province was with the Uchee province of Ustanauli in Northeast
Georgia, on the west side of the Savannah River. The Ustanauli were a
hybrid people of mixed Uchee, Chickasaw and Southern Shawnee villages.
Although typically considered to be Uchee by early colonists in Georgia
(See Charles Wesley), when they moved to northwest Georgia, they were
considered to be Chickasaw. After the Cherokees were given northwest
Georgia in 1794, the town of Ustanauli moved to western Tennessee. Their
NW Georgia town became a cluster of Cherokee farmsteads and a
stagecoach station.
The French also sent expeditions
westward, up the Satilla and St. Marys Rivers in Southeast Georgia. They
made contact with the Okvni (Oconee) in the Okefenokee Swamp, whose
large capital was called Sarope. The Okvni were not terribly friendly
with the French. Okvni means “Born on water” or “Live on water” in
Itsate Creek. This name makes me strongly suspect that they lived on
timber platform villages deep within the Okefenokee Swamp. Even as late
as 1776, explorer William Bartram was told that the Okvni (Oconee)
villages were almost impossible to find, if one was not intimately
familiar with the Okefenokee Swamp.
(6) Captain Juan Pardo
Expedition (1568): Among provinces and towns that met with Pardo to
unknowingly swear allegiance to the King of Spain were the people that
the Spanish called Toque. That’s the Tokah-re, who occupied a province
around present day Highlands, NC and along the Tuckasegee River.
Tuckasegee is the Anglicization of the Muskogee word Tokah-se-ki, which
mean “Freckled people-descendants of”in Muskogee. As will be explained
below, tokah has a different meaning in Gaelic. Their descendants are
the Tokasee Branch of the Seminoles and the Tuckabachee Branch of the
Creek Confederacy. Pardo made brief contact again with the Utsi (Uchee)
living somewhere in Western North Carolina or Eastern Tennessee, but his
chronicles tell us very little about them.
There is a little
more information from the soldiers, who were left behind by De Soto to
man small infantry forts. One of those was Sergeant Hernando Moyano. A
Spanish party under the command of Moyano attacked a Uchee town, which
specialized in the making of salt.
Map of Native American salt-panning sites
In
2009, the Yuchi (Uchee) were placed in Southwest Virginia by a book
entitled Virginia’s Montgomery County. It was published in
Christiansburg, VA, under the auspices of the Montgomery Museum and
Lewis Miller Regional Art Center. The author reasoned that since the
salt mines in Saltville, VA were important to the Confederacy’s Army of
Northern Virginia, Saltville was obviously the place that Moyano
attacked. North Carolina proponents of the Burke Site, with its three
feet high, 40 feet diameter mound, making this metropolis the most
important Native American city in the Southeast, saw the Saltville
connection as proof of their fantasy. By October 2018, press releases
were going around the national news circuit stating the speculation
about Saltville as fact.
What the well-meaning folks in
Southwest Virginia were not told by the North Carolina academicians was
that . . . as you can see in the map on the right . . . there were far
more locations in eastern Tennessee, where Native Americans produced
salt than in Virginia. Those Tennessee salt panning sites are EXACTLY
where there are multiple eyewitness accounts of Uchee villages and salt
traders. The Uchee village attacked by Moyano was most likely in the
Holston River Valley or the eastern edge of the Cumberland Plateau in
Tennessee.
(7) Spanish missionaries (early 1600s): Anonymous
Spanish expeditions made contact with Ocvni on the edge of the
Okefenokee, which the Spanish called Lago de Oconi. Clearly, it was more
of a lake than a swamp at this time. A road was built to connect the
Camino Real, running east-west in northern Florida with the Rio Secco
(Altamaha River). It skirted the western edge of the Okefenokee. Three
mission stations were constructed along this road. They only lasted two
or three decades. Contemporary Florida scholars label the Okvni in the
Okefenoke Swamp as a “Timicua” tribe, because they don’t know the
etymology of the tribal name.
(8) Johann Lederer (1669): This
German immigrant physician and explorer traveled along the eastern
flank of the Blue Ridge. He passed through the province of the Okvnasi,
which Virginia frontiersmen wrote down as Occonechee. Some 20th century
scholar decided that the Okvnasi were a Siouan tribe, because there were
Siouan tribes nearby. In fact, no Okvnasi words survive and their real
name is Muskogean. It means “Oconee – descendants of.”
(9)
James Needham and Gabriel Arthur (1673-1674): A letter by their
employer, Abraham Wood, describing their journey to Southwestern
Virginia makes many mentions of the Occoneechees, but does not describe
their villages and customs. Gabriel Arthur was killed by the Tamahiti.
(10)
French exploration of the Tennessee and Little Tennessee Rivers (1680s
and 1690s): LaSalle encountered Uchee villages paired with Chickasaw
villages in western Kentucky . . . probably in the vicinity of present
day Paducah, KY. Archaeologists have also found substantial evidence
that on the Upper Savannah River, Uchee villages were paired with
Proto-Creek villages.
Anonymous French explorers and Marines
on the Tennessee, Hiwassee and Little Tennessee Rivers encountered a
Uchee province along the south side of the Hiwassee River. They called
themselves the Tokah-re, which the French wrote down as Togaria.
Tokah-re means “Elite Tribe or Province” in Pre-Gaelic and Gaelic Irish.
(11)
French fort on Bussell Island (1690?-1716?): French maps, published
between 1700s and 1717, show another branch of the Uchee, the Hogeloges,
living on the Tennessee River between the Little Tennessee and Hiwassee
Rivers. Hogeloge is the Algonquian name for Tokah-le. “Ge” is an Irish
Gaelic and Algonquian suffix means “tribe or people.” Both French and
English maps showed the Tennessee River upstream from the Little
Tennessee River, occupied by the Upper Creeks.
Uchee town in flames after the Cherokee slave raid.
(12)
Massacre of Uchee Village of Choestoa (1713): In 1710, Indian trader
Alexander Long was partially scalped and relieved of one of his ears by
Uchees living in a village named Choestoa. During this era, the Highland
Uchee were generally called “the Round Town People.” Choestoa means
“Rabbit Clan” in Uchee. Three years later, he and his partner, Eleazer
Wiggins, approached the Cherokees with a “deal”. They would supply the
Cherokees with firearms, if the Cherokees would destroy the Uchee town
of Choestoa. The traders also agreed to buy all slaves captured at
Choestoa.
The governor of Carolina sent a letter to the
Cherokees, ordering them not to attack Choestoa, but Wiggins insured
that the letter was delayed. Long and Wiggins apparently “pulled some
political strings” among some prominent colonial leaders to insure that
the colonial militia would not interfere.
Wiggins and the
Cherokees waited until most of the warriors in Choestoa were away
hunting. The remaining defenders of the town were overwhelmed by the
firearms. They only had bows and slings. Those Uchee, who were not
initially killed or captured took refuge in the council house, then
committed suicide by setting it on fire in order to avoid slavery. The
captives were quickly sold at the Charleston slave market and whisked
away to the Caribbean Islands, where they would suffer short, brutal
lives as sugar plantation slaves.
The modern Cherokee version
of this story states that Long-Wiggins trading post was at the” great”
Cherokee town of Chota and that the conquerors of Choestoa went on to
capture all of eastern Tennessee from the Upper Creeks. You can see from
the map below that clearly didn’t happen. In 1715, there were no
Cherokees living on the Tennessee River and as late as 1725, a Uchee
town named Choestoa still thrived immediately downstream from the
confluence of the Tennessee and Hiwassee Rivers. All lands south of the
Hiwassee River in North Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee remained Upper
Creek territory until 1763, when the British seized the lands of the
Upper Creek allies of the French in Tennessee and gave it to the
Cherokees.
What did happen, though, was that after the
massacre of “some village” named Choestoa, the Uchee went on the
warpath, attacking English traders, who passed through their lands and
also massacring several Cherokee villages in northeastern Tennessee. The
Carolina fur and deerskin trade was being disrupted. Long and Wiggins
were arrested then brought to trial. The court proceedings became the
first Carolina colonial government archive to mention the Cherokees in
northeastern Tennessee.
Twentieth century and twenty-first
century academicians have written several professional papers on this
incident . . . all produced in the fog of total ignorance of the Uchee
and Creek languages, plus historical maps. They pondered why the Uchees
would “give a Cherokee name to one of their towns.” <Rolling in
the floor laughing & It never dawned on any of these astute
scholars that the incident could not have occurred in east central
Tennessee in 1713, because the Cherokees were nowhere around and at that
time, without the aid of white men, the Cherokees generally got their
tails whipped by Uchee war parties. Cherokee villages did not have
fortifications like Uchee and Creek towns.
Then I came upon
astounding information. Wiggins and Long operated a “factory” or trading
post at Conasi (Quanasse in Cherokee). That is where Hayesville, NC is
located today. The Choestoa that they got revenge on was either in Towns
County or Union County, GA. To this day, the southern end of Union
County is occupied by the Choestoe Community. However, a large,
fortified Upper Creek town remained at the confluence of Coosa Creek and
the Nottely River in present day Blairsville, GA until the 1780s or
later. In fact, there are STILL Upper Creek descendants living in Union
County.
So, there was a large Uchee population living along
the Hiwassee, Nottely and Toccoa Rivers, plus Rabun and northern
Stephens Counties, GA. In fact, there were still Uchee communities in
the Cohutta Mountains of Georgia and Unaka Mountains of Tennessee in
1911. They hauled firewood for the copper smelters in Copper Hill,
Tennessee. When the US Forest Service used imminent domain to assemble
the Chattahoochee National Forest in the 1920s and 1930s, the Uchee
families scattered. Those with the most Native American DNA probably
moved to the Snowbird Cherokee Reservation in Graham County, NC.
Georgia
Colonial maps consistently labeled what is now Rabun and northern
Stephens Counties as Hogeloge (Highland Uchee). The southern boundary of
the Cherokee Nation was the NC-GA line and the Chattooga-Tugaloo Rivers
(present GA-SC line) until 1784. The Georgia historical markers and
tourist brochures that describe Tugaloo as Georgia’s first Cherokee town
are ludicrous. The town was Creek until around 1700 then burned then a
section of the plaza was re-occupied by a small Uchee village.
(13)
Yamasee War (1715-1717): Still angry about the massacre at Choestoa,
Highland Uchee villages generally sided with the coalition of tribes
that with the backing of France and Spain, declared war on the Colony of
Carolina. The coalition considered Virginia to be a separate nation and
generally did not attack Virginia-based traders. In December 1715,
Creek and Lower Cherokee leaders met at the Hogeloge village of Tugaloo
on the Tugaloo River. At the behest of a conjurer named Charate Hagi
(Charity Hagey in frontier English) the Cherokees murdered 32 members of
the Creek delegation in their sleep. This precipitated the 40 year long
Creek-Cherokee War.
Cherokees and Wannabe Cherokees get
really angry when I point this out, but the information is undeniable.
Charate is an Itsate Creek word meaning “Splinter People.” It’s
equivalent in Muskogee is Charake. Charate is not a Cherokee word.
“Hagi” is the Middle Eastern word for a conjurer. Something is very,
very wrong with the current official version of Cherokee history.
Some
academic papers state that the Coastal Plain Uchee along the Ogeechee,
Savannah, Pon Pon and Ogeechee Rivers joined this coalition. However,
there is really no evidence of any battles between the Coastal Uchee and
Carolina colonists. Whereas Yamasee in Carolina were either killed or
sold into slavery, there were no reprisals against the Uchee. Relations
between the Uchee and British colonists were quite amiable during the
remainder of the Colonial Period.
(14) Beresford Map of
the Southeast (1715): A map, hand drawn by South Carolinians, Richard
and John Beresford, also show this branch of the Uchee living on the
south side of the Hiwassee River, but labels them the Tchogalegas. This
is the first map to mention the Cherokees. It labels them as “Charakeys”
and places them in the extreme northeast corner of Tennessee.
(15)
Reports by Thomas Christie (1733-1743): By far, the most accurate and
comprehensive information about the Uchee comes from Thomas Christie,
Colonial Secretary of the Province of Georgia during its earliest years.
Christie documented conversations that he had with Uchee elders.
Unfortunately, few, if any, academicians have read Christie’s reports to
the Archbishop of Canterbury. They contain the Uchee Migration Legend,
describing an origin across the Atlantic Ocean, and provide information
on ceremonies, political organization and lifestyles. It is clearly
stated that the Uchee’s ancestors first reached North American at the
mouth of the Savannah River then spread over much of the lower
Southeast. When they first arrived, the region was inexplicably
uninhabited, but they could see the mounds, shell rings and middens
constructed by earlier peoples. The Coastal Uchee became manufacturers
of sea salt and traders of other items unique to the South Atlantic
Coast. Their trading network stretched to much of Eastern North America.
Uchee
salt refining technology was surprisingly sophisticated. This is a
Uchee salt plant on Tybee Island, GA. Tybee’s name is derived from the
Itza word for salt, taube.
(16) Philipp Georg Friedrich von
Reck (1733-1740): Hanoverian Count Georg Von Reck received a 500 acre
grant from the Georgia Board of Trustees in advanced payment for his
organizing the transportation of the Salzburg Protestant Refugees from
Europe to Georgia. He arrived in Savannah in January 1733 before it was
actually founded. He immediately became close friends with the Uchee and
Creeks living near the site of the new town. He documented their
appearance and villages with water colors and charcoal sketches. In
fact, Von Reck’s sketches and water colors are just about the only
visual information we have on the appearance and cultural practices of
the Uchee and Creeks, living in the Atlantic Coastal Plain during the
1700s. Von Reck especially bonded with the Uchee and actually lived
among them for periods of time. He wrote back to England . . .
Von Reck stated that the Uchee wove their own clothing. These Uchee outfits certainly don’t look European.
“They
are very courteous, friendly, and hospitable towards strangers, with
whom they quickly become acquainted. Their table is open to everyone,
and one can sit at it uninvited. When an Indian want to assure someone
of his friendship, he strikes himself with his right hand on his left
breast and says, my breast is like your breast, my and your breast is
one breast the equivalent of my and your heart is one heart, my heart is
closely bound with your heart, etc. And it is all so a sign of
friendship and welcome to light a pipe of tobacco and hold it up before
the arriving stranger so that he can take a couple of draws on it, also
to hold up a bottle of rum, so he can take a swallow from it. … They are
satisfied with the little that they have, even if it consists only of a
gun, kettle, and mirror. They keep their word, and hate lies. When they
praise a European, they say that he has never told them an untruth.
They are affectionate and live peaceably with their wives.”
(17)
The Rev. Charles Wesley at Tugaloo (1737): As Indian Agent for the
Province of Georgia, Charles Wesley was dispatched to Tugaloo to obtain a
treaty with the Uchee Indians. Both South Carolina and Georgia claimed
the vast region from Augusta northward that is now called Middle and
North Georgia. The Cherokees were cozy with South Carolina, while the
Creeks were best buddies with Georgia and hated South Carolinians.
Supervising Trustee James Edward Oglethorpe hoped that by getting the
Uchees in Northeast Georgia on their team, Georgia’s claim would become a
fait accompli. Most people don’t realize that until the early 1790s,
the only maps, which showed Middle and North Georgia to be in Georgia,
were published by Georgia. Even the first official maps of the United
States showed these regions to be in South Carolina.
Wesley
described Tugaloo as a unimpressive village containing about 100 Uchee
residents. He had nothing good to say about the Uchee living there,
calling them slovenly and filthy. Apparently, a treaty was signed,
however, which opened up trade by the new town of Augusta with the
Creeks and Uchees living in Northeast Georgia. Pretty soon, all the
traders based on the South Carolina side of the Savannah moved to
Georgia. Wesley later remarked that he never saw a Cherokee Indian the
whole time in Georgia.
After he and his brother, John,
returned to England, they along with the Rev. George Whitfield became
the key leaders in the formation of Methodist Societies, which later
became the Methodist Church after the Wesley Brothers died. They never
actually left the Church of England, even thought they were banned from
preaching in Anglican churches. Charles Wesley composed some of his most
famous songs, including “Hark the Herald Angels Sing” while living in
Savannah.
(18) Uchee & Creek Relocations
(1745-1754): The War of Jenkin’s Ear marked the last time that South
Carolina and Georgia feared an invasion from Spanish Florida. It was the
first time that a regiment of colonial American troops was raised (by
General James Oglethorpe) and placed “on the Establishment” – made a
part of the regular British Army – and sent to fight outside North
America. This regiment along with their Creek and Uchee allies defeated a
Spanish invasion in the Battle of Bloody Marsh on St. Simons Island, GA
then later invaded Spanish Florida.
1754 – The letter A marks former Uchee lands opened up to settlement.
With
the Spanish threat removed, General Oglethorpe returned to England in
1743. Almost immediately, the officials in charge of Georgia and South
Carolina began reneging on their treaties with the Creeks, Uchee and
Cusabo. They wanted the Indians OUT of the lands that were suitable for
cultivating rice, indigo and tobacco. Creeks and Uchees living near the
coast were pressured to move inland. Creek translator, Mary Musgrove,
essentially had Ossabaw and Wausau Islands stolen from here by a Georgia
court.
Both colonies did not trust the Cherokees and feared
that they would become French allies. Georgia invited refugees from
Majorca to settle in what is now Stephens County. South Carolina moved
several remnant tribes to the region to act as a buffer between
the.Cherokees and white settlements. Their names became such
geographical place names as Mount Enotah (Enote/Enoree), the Soque River
(Soque) and Tesnatee Mountain (Taesna). Chickasaw and Savano (Southern
Shawnee) bands were invited to settle on the west bank of the Savannah
River. The Uchee were encouraged to move upstream on the Savannah and
Ogeechee Rivers. The official 1754 map of Georgia at right reflects
those ethnic changes.
+
A surprising number of residents along
the Savannah River STILL have substantial mixed Uchee-Creek ancestry,
particularly in Jasper, Hampton and Allendale Counties. Hardeeville, SC .
. . just north of Savannah . . . has an annual Native American festival
that honors the Uchee-Creeks in their county. Particularly, in eastern
Allendale County, there are families which look almost fullblood Native
American.
Because they were usually bilingual and
well-acquainted with Anglo-American culture, the Savannah River
mixed-blood Uchee-Creeks had a distinct advantage in dealing with the
rapid cultural changes that occurred in the Creek Nation. A
disproportionate percentage of Savannah River Uchee-Creeks became the
leaders of the Creek Confederacy and ultimately the Muskogee-Creek
Nation. Prominent Savannah River Uchee-Creek heritage families in both
Oklahoma and the Southeast today include: Barnard, Beaver, Benton,
Berry, Berryhill, Best, Bone, Broomfield, Brown, Burden, Childers,
Davis, Hightower, Hill, Holmes, Galphin, Perry, Perryman, Porter, Posey,
Proctor, Roberts and Williams.
The 1790s – Uchee horse
thieves: One of the most pressing problems facing newly appointed Agent
for Indian Affairs in the Southeast, Benjamin Hawkins, in 1795 was the
constant horse-stealing raids by young Uchee men across the Oconee
River. After the American Revolution government officials no longer
treated the Uchee as a separate tribe or ethnic group. The Uchee have
paid dearly for the erasure of their distinct identity. In 1786, the
second treaty signed between the Creek Nation and United States gave
away all Uchee lands in Georgia. Uchee families, who had been friendly
with Anglo-American colonists and generally stayed neutral in the
Revolution, suddenly found themselves cast out of the ancestral lands,
where they had lived for at least 3,000 years. Creek leaders signed the
Treaty of Shoulderbone Creek that mainly gave away Uchee lands.
Forced
to move to the west side of the Oconee River, the Uchees struggled to
survive. The young men found that the quickest way out of poverty was to
steal horses and cattle from white settlers on the east side of the
Oconee then trade them to other tribes. Eventually, the Creek
Confederacy was forced to cede the lands between the Oconee and Ocmulgee
River in order to scatter the Uchee to the winds. Some mixed-blood
Uchee took allotments near present day Hawkinsville, GA in the Treaty of
1805. Their descendants continue to live in the Hawkinsville Area. Most
Uchee families either moved to Florida or to Creek towns on the
Chattahoochee River.
Never again would the Uchees be a
separate entity that would raise the concern of government officials. By
the 20th century academicians would even forget that the Uchee occupied
a substantial area of Southeast and Middle Georgia . . . a region much
larger than where the Cherokee villages were actually located in the
1700s. Contemporary maps of Native America mention the Uchee. If they
have the word, Yuchi, on the map at all, it is a small spot in
Southeastern Tennessee.
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