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The Creek Indian Trails
A correct and detailed
knowledge of the Indian trails leading
through their country, and called by them
warpaths, horse trails, and by the white
traders "trading roads," forms an important
part of Indian topography and history. Their
general direction is determined by mountain
ranges and gaps (passes), valleys, springs,
watercourses, fordable places in rivers,
etc. The early explorers of North American
countries all followed these Indian trails:
Narvaez, Hernando de Soto, Tristan de Luna,
Juan del Pardo, Lederer and Lawson, because
they were led along these tracks by their
Indian guides. If we knew with accuracy the
old Indian paths of the West, we would have
little difficulty in rediscovering the
routes traveled by Coronado’s and
Peñalossa’s troops in New Mexico and in the
great wastes of the Mississippi plains. In
hilly lands these trails are, of course,
easier to trace than in level portions of
the country.
The best-known trails
leading from the east to the Creek towns
were as follows:
- The upper trail or
"warpath" crossed Chatahuchi River at
Che’láko-Nini by a horse ford, about sixty
miles above Kasiχta; cf.
Schoolcraft, Indians, V, 255, and Adair,
History, pp. 258, 368.
- The "High Tower
path" started from High Shoals on Apalachi
river, which is the southern branch of Okóni
River, and went almost due west to "Shallow
Ford" of Chatahuchi River, about twelve
miles right north of Atlanta, Georgia, in
the river bend.
- The southern trail
crossed the Chatahuchi River, coming from
the Okoni and Okmulgi Rivers,1 at the
"Broken Arrow," ‘Lé-kátchka, while other
travelers crossed it at the Yuchi towns,
which cannot have been distant from the
"Broken Arrow. The Tallapoosa River was
passed at Tukabatchi; cf. Schoolcraft,
Indians, V, 254. From Tukabatchi it
crossed over almost due west, as represented
in Em. Bowen’s map, to Coosa River, which
was passed by a horse-ford, then followed
the Coosa River up to Coosa old town. This
is the trail partly traveled over by the
Kasiχta tribe, as described in
the migration legend.
- The trail leading
from St. Mary’s River, Georgia, to the Creek
towns went into disuse since 1783, and at
the time of Swan’s visit (1791) was
difficult to trace. Cf. Schoolcraft, V, 256.
If correctly represented in Tanner’s map of
1827, a road then running from St. Mary’s
River to the Hitchiti ford of the Chatahuchi
River crossed that river at Hitchit-ú-dshi.
Footnotes:
- Bartram, Travels, p.
54, gives the following particulars: "On the
east bank of the Okmulgee this trading road
runs nearly two miles through ancient Indian
fields, the Okmulgee fields . . . with
artificial mounds or terraces, squares,
etc." This horse path began at the Rock
Landing on Okoni River, a British post just
below Wilkinson and about four miles below
Milledgeville, Georgia, passed Fort Hawkins
built upon the Okmulgi old fields, then the
site of Macon, on the shore opposite, then
Knoxville, then the old Creek agency on
Flint river, then crossed Padshiläika creek,
the usual ford on Chatahuchi river lying
between Kasiχta and Apatá-i
Creek.
Back to: Creek Indians
Notes About Book:
Source: Gatschet, Albert S., A Migration Legend of the Creek Indians.
Pub.
D.G. Brinton, Philadelphia, 1884.
Notes about Online Publication: This manuscript has been ocr'd and heavily
edited. Many of the Native American words have been reproduced as clearly as
online publication will allow us, but not all are exactly the way they were in
the original work. The structure of this manuscript has been changed to allow
better online presentation.
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