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The Creek Settlements
The towns and villages
of the Creeks were in the eighteenth century
built along the banks of rivers and their
smaller tributaries, often in places subject
to inundation during large freshets, which
occurred once in about fifteen years. The
smallest of them contained from twenty to
thirty cabins, some of the larger ones up to
two hundred, and in 1832 Tukabatchi, then
the largest of all the Creek settlements,
harbored 386 families. Many towns appeared
rather compactly built, although they were
composed of irregular clusters of four to
eight houses standing together; each of
these clusters contained a gens ("clan or
family of relations," C. Swan), eating and
living in common. The huts and cabins of the
Lower Creeks resembled, from a distance,
clusters of newly-burned brick kilns, from
the high color of the clay.1
It will be found
appropriate to distinguish between Creek
towns and villages. By towns is indicated
the settlements which had a public square,
by villages those which had none. The square
occupied the central part of the town, and
was reserved for the celebration of
festivals, especially the annual busk or
fast (púskita), for the meetings of chiefs,
headmen and "beloved men," and for the
performance of daily dances. Upon this
central area stood the "great house," tchúka
láko, the council-house, and attached to it
was a play-ground, called by traders the
"chunkey-yard." Descriptions of these places
will be given below.
Another thoroughgoing
distinction in the settlements of the Creek
nation was that of the red or war towns and
the white or peace towns.
Red Towns
The red or kipáya
towns, to which C. Swan in 1791 refers as
being already a thing of the past, were
governed by warriors only. The term
red
refers to the warlike disposition of these
towns, but does not correspond to our
adjective bloody; it depicts the wrath or
anger animating the warriors when out on the
warpath. The posts of their cabin in the
public square were painted red on one side.
The present Creeks
still keep up formally this ancient
distinction between the towns, and count the
following among the kipáya towns:
Kawíta, Tukabátchi,
‘La-‘láko, Átasi, Ka-iläídshi, Chiáha, Úsudshi, Hútali-huyána,
Alibamu, Yufala, Yufala hupáyi, Hílapi,
Kitcha-patáki.
White Towns
The white towns, also
called peace towns, conservative towns, were
governed by civil officers or míkalgi, and,
as some of the earlier authors allege, were
considered as places of refuge and safety to
individuals who had left their tribes in
dread of punishment or revenge at the hand
of their pursuers. The modern Creeks count
among the peace towns, called tálua-míkagi
towns, the following settlements:
Hitchiti, Okfúski, Kasiχta,
Ábi’hka, Abiχkúdshi, Tálisi,
Oktcháyi, Odshi-apófa, Lutchapóka, Taskigi,
Assi-lánapi or Green-Leaf, Wiwuχka.
Quite different from
the above list is the one of the white towns
given by Col. Benj. Hawkins in 1799, which
refers to the Upper Creeks only: Okfúski and
its branch villages (viz: Niuyáχa,
Tukabátchi Talahássi, Imúkfa, Tutokági,
Atchinálgi, Okfuskū’dshi, Sukapóga,
Ipisógi); then Tálisi,
Átasi, Fus’-hátchi,
Kulúmi. For this list and that of the kipáya
towns, cf. his "Sketch," p. 51. 52.
The ancient distinction
between red and white towns began to fall
into disuse with the approach of the white
colonists, which entailed the spread of
agricultural pursuits among these Indians;
nevertheless frequent reference is made to
it by the modern Creeks.
Segmentation of
villages is frequently observed in Indian
tribes, and the list below will give many
striking instances. It was brought about by
over-population, as in the case of Okfúski;
and it is probable that then only certain
gentes, not a promiscuous lot of citizens,
emigrated from a town. Other causes for
emigration were the exhaustion of the
cultivated lands by many successive crops,
as well as the need of new and extensive
hunting grounds. These they could not obtain
in their nearest neighborhood without
warring with their proprietors, and
therefore often repaired to distant
countries to seek new homes (Bartram,
Travels, p. 389).
The frequent removals
of towns to new sites, lying at short
distances only, may be easily explained by
the unhealthiness of the old site, produced
by the constant accumulation of refuse and
filth around the towns, which never had
anything like sewers or efficient
regulations of sanitary police.
The distinction between
Muscogulge and Stincard towns, explicitly
spoken of in Wm. Bartram s Travels (see
Appendices), refers merely to the form of
speech used by the tribes of the
confederacy. This epithet (Puants in French)
may have had an opprobrious meaning in the
beginning, but not in later times, when it
simply served to distinguish the principal
people from the accessory tribes. We find it
also used as a current term in the Naktche
villages.
Bartram does not
designate as Stincards the tribes speaking
languages of another stock than Maskoki, the
Yuchi, for instance; not even all of those
that speak dialects of Maskoki other than
the Creek. He calls by this savorous name
the Muklasa, Witumka, Koassáti, Chiaha,
Hitchiti, Okóni, both Sawokli and a part of
the Seminoles. He mentions the towns only,
and omits all the villages which have
branched off from the towns.
The present Creeks know
nothing of such a distinction. Although I do
not know the Creek term which corresponded
to it in the eighteenth century, it is not
improbable that such a designation was in
vogue; for we find many similar opprobrious
epithets among other Indians, as Cuitlateca
or "excrementers in Mexico; Puants or
Metsmetskop among the Naktche2; Inkalik,
"sons of louse-eggs" among the Eskimo;
Kä’katilsh or "arm-pit-stinkers" among the
Klamaths of Southwestern Oregon; Móki or
Múki, "cadaverous, stinking," an epithet
originally given to one of the Shínumo or
Moki towns for lack of bravery, and
belonging to the Shínumo language: múki
dead.
The plural forms:
tchilokóga and tchilokogálgi designate in Creek persons
speaking another than the Creek language;
tchilókäs I speak an alien language. "Stincards"
would be expressed in Creek by ísti fámbagi.
Of all the gentes of the Chicasa that of the
skunk or hushkoni was held in the lowest
esteem, some of the lowest officials, as
runners, etc., being appointed from it;
therefore it can be conjectured that from
the Chicasa tribe a term like "skunks," "stinkards,"
may have been transferred and applied to the
less esteemed gentes of other nations.
Footnotes:
- Cf. Yuchi, p. 22. At
the time of the conquest of Mexico by
Cortez, many of the interior towns of that
country were whitewashed in the same manner,
by means of a shining white clay coating.
- Dumont, Mem. histor.
de la Louisiana, I, 181.
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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