Collections, Volume 3, Part 1The Society, 1848 - Georgia |
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Page 27
... continues as long as there is hope to obtain presents , the infallible mode heretofore in use , to gain a point . 2. Took - au - bat - che . The ancient name of this town is Is - po - co - gee ; its derivation uncertain ; it is situated ...
... continues as long as there is hope to obtain presents , the infallible mode heretofore in use , to gain a point . 2. Took - au - bat - che . The ancient name of this town is Is - po - co - gee ; its derivation uncertain ; it is situated ...
Page 28
... continues that width for four miles . Within this scope are four islands , which were formerly cultivated , but are now old fields margined with cane . The bed of the river is here rocky , shoally , and covered with moss . It is ...
... continues that width for four miles . Within this scope are four islands , which were formerly cultivated , but are now old fields margined with cane . The bed of the river is here rocky , shoally , and covered with moss . It is ...
Page 29
... continues so to Talesee on the Eu- fau - bee , and half a mile still lower , to the hills between this creek and Ca - le - bc - hat - che . The hills extend nearly two miles , are intersected by one small creek and two branches , and ...
... continues so to Talesee on the Eu- fau - bee , and half a mile still lower , to the hills between this creek and Ca - le - bc - hat - che . The hills extend nearly two miles , are intersected by one small creek and two branches , and ...
Page 35
... continues so westward for sixty to one hundred miles . The Coo - sau - dee generally go to market by water , and some of them are good oarsmen . A part of this town moved lately beyond the Mississippi , and have settled there . The ...
... continues so westward for sixty to one hundred miles . The Coo - sau - dee generally go to market by water , and some of them are good oarsmen . A part of this town moved lately beyond the Mississippi , and have settled there . The ...
Page 53
... continue three or four miles nearly of the same width , about one hundred and twenty yards ; the river then expands to thrice that width , the bottom being gravelly , shoal and rocky ; there are several small islands . within this scope ...
... continue three or four miles nearly of the same width , about one hundred and twenty yards ; the river then expands to thrice that width , the bottom being gravelly , shoal and rocky ; there are several small islands . within this scope ...
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Common terms and phrases
agent for Indian Alabama appointed BENJAMIN HAWKINS bluff bordering broken land cabin called cane cattle cattle and horses ceremony Chat-to-ho-che Che-au-hau Cherokees Chickasaws chiefs clay Coleraine confederacy Coosau corn Cowetuh cultivated Cussetuh death whoop Eu-fau-lau falls flat land Flint river Foosce-hat-che fork Fort Wilkinson four miles Georgia gravelly half a mile hat-che Haujo Hawkins hickory Hill-au-bee hills hogs and horses horses and hogs Indian affairs joins left bank left side limestone little creek margins Mic-co mounds nation negroes New-yau-cau oak and hickory Oc-fus-kee Oconee river peach trees pine barren pine forest pine land ponds post oak red oak reed reedy branches rich flats ridge right bank right side Savannah saw palmetto season settled settlements stiff stocks of cattle swamp Tal-e-see Tal-la-poo-sa Tallapoosa thence thluc-co three miles Took-au-bat-che town house traders treaty tribes Uchees village warriors Yamassees yards wide