Collections, Volume 3, Part 1The Society, 1848 - Georgia |
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Page 22
... corn . The Tal - la - poo - sa from its falls to its confluence with the Coosau , about thirty miles , has some good flat land . The broken land terminates on its right bank , and the good land spreads out on its left . There are ...
... corn . The Tal - la - poo - sa from its falls to its confluence with the Coosau , about thirty miles , has some good flat land . The broken land terminates on its right bank , and the good land spreads out on its left . There are ...
Page 28
... flat , between the creek and the river , bordering on the town , is covered with oak and the small hard shelled hickory . The trees are all small ; the land is light , and fine for corn , 28 A Sketch of the Creek Country .
... flat , between the creek and the river , bordering on the town , is covered with oak and the small hard shelled hickory . The trees are all small ; the land is light , and fine for corn , 28 A Sketch of the Creek Country .
Page 29
... corn , cotton and melons , oak , hickory , and short leaf pine . From this flat to its source , it is margined with cane , recd , and palmetto . Ten miles up the creek , between it and Kebihatche , the next creek below and parallel with ...
... corn , cotton and melons , oak , hickory , and short leaf pine . From this flat to its source , it is margined with cane , recd , and palmetto . Ten miles up the creek , between it and Kebihatche , the next creek below and parallel with ...
Page 33
... these hills there is a rich swamp of from four to six hundred yards wide , which , when reclaimed , must be valuable for corn or rice , 5 and could be easily drained into the river , which A Sketch of the Creek Country . 33333.
... these hills there is a rich swamp of from four to six hundred yards wide , which , when reclaimed , must be valuable for corn or rice , 5 and could be easily drained into the river , which A Sketch of the Creek Country . 33333.
Page 34
... industrious , work with their women and make plenty of corn ; they have no cattle , and but few horses and hogs ; the town house is an oblong square cabin , roof eight feet pitch , the sides and 34 A Sketch of the Creek Country .
... industrious , work with their women and make plenty of corn ; they have no cattle , and but few horses and hogs ; the town house is an oblong square cabin , roof eight feet pitch , the sides and 34 A Sketch of the Creek Country .
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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