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Yuchi Indians
None of all the
allophylic tribes referred to in this First
Part stood in closer connection with the
Creeks or Maskoki proper than the Yuchi or
Uchee Indians. They constituted a portion of
their confederacy from the middle of the
eighteenth century, and this gives us the
opportunity to discuss their peculiarities
more in detail than those of the other
"outsiders." They have preserved their own
language and customs; no mention is made of
them in the migration legend, and the Creeks
have always considered them as a peculiar
people.
General Pleasant Porter
has kindly favored me with a few ethnologic
points, gained by himself from Yuchi
Indians, who inhabit the largest town in the
Creek Nation, Indian Terr., with a
population of about 500. "In bodily size
they are smaller than the Creeks, but lithe
and of wiry musculature, the muscles often
protruding from the body. Their descent is
in the male line, and they were once
polygamous. It is a disputed fact whether
they ever observed the custom of flattening
their children’s heads, like some of their
neighbors. They call themselves children of
the Sun, and sun worship seems to have been
more pronounced here than with other tribes
of the Gulf States. The monthly efflux of
the Sun, whom they considered as of the
female sex, fell to the earth, as they say,
and from this the Yuchi people took its
origin. They increase in number at the
present time, and a part of them are still
pagans. Popularly expressed, their language
sounds Mike the warble of the prairie
chickens. It is stated that their conjurers
songs give a clue to all their antiquities
and symbolic customs. They exclude the use
of salt from all drugs which serve them as
medicine. While engaged in making medicine
they sing the above songs for a time; then
comes the oral portion of their ritual,
which is followed by other songs."
Not much is known of
their language, but it might be easily
obtained from the natives familiar with
English. From what we know of it, it shows
no radical affinity with any known American
tongue, and its phonetics have often been
noticed for their strangeness. They are said
to speak with an abundance of arrested
sounds or voice-checks, from which they
start again with a jerk of the voice. The
accent often rests on the ultima (Powell’s
mscr. vocabulary), and Ware ascribes to
them, though wrongly, the Hottentot cluck.
The numerals follow the
decimal, not the quinary system as they do
in the Maskoki languages. The lack of a dual
form in the intransitive verb also
distinguishes Yuchi from the latter.
The earliest habitat of
the Yuchi, as far as traceable, was on both
sides of the Savannah River, and Yuchi towns
existed there down to the middle of the
eighteenth century.
When Commander H. de
Soto reached these parts with his army, the
"queen" (señora, caçica) of the country met
him at the town Cofetaçque on a barge, a
circumstance which testifies to the
existence of a considerable water-course
there. Cofetaçque, written also Cofitachiqui
(Biedma), Cofachiqui (Garcilaso de la Vega),
Cutifachiqui (consonants inverted, Elvas)
was seven days march from Chalaque (Cheroki)
" province," and distant from the sea about
thirty leagues, as stated by the natives of
the place. There were many ruined towns in
the vicinity, we are told by the Fidalgo de
Elvas. One league from there, in the
direction up stream, was Talomeco town, the
"temple" of which is described as a
wonderful and curious structure by Garcilaso.
Many modern historians have located these
towns on the middle course of Savannah
river, and Charles C. Jones (Hernando de
Soto, 1880; pp. 27. 29) believes, with other
investigators, that Cofetaçque stood at
Silver Bluff, on the left bank of the
Savannah river, about twenty-five miles by
water below Augusta. The domains of that
"queen," or, as we would express it, the
towns and lands of that confederacy,
extended from there up to the Cheroki
Mountains.
The name Cofita-chiqui
seems to prove by itself that these towns
were inhabited by Yuchi Indians; for it
contains kowita, the Yuchi term for Indian,
and apparently "Indian of our own tribe."
This term appears in all the vocabularies:
kawíta, man, male; kohwita, ko-ita, plural
kohino’h, man; kota, man, contracted from
kow’ta, kowita; also in compounds: kowŭt-ten-chōō,
chief; kohítta makinnung, chief of a people.
The terms for the parts of the human body
all begin with ko-. The second part of the
name, -chiqui, is a term foreign to Yuchi,
but found in all the dialects of Maskoki in
the function of house, dwelling, (tchúku,
tchóko, and in the eastern or Apalachian
dialects, tchíki) and has to be rendered
here in the collective sense of houses,
town. Local names to be compared with
Cofitachiqui are: Cofachi, further south,
and Acapachiqui, a tract of land near
Apalache.
The signification of
the name Yutchi, plural Yutchihá, by which
this people calls itself, is unknown. All
the surrounding Indian tribes call them
Yuchi, with the exception of the Lenápi or
Delawares, who style them Tahogaléwi.
But there are two sides
to this question. We find the local name
Kawíta, evidently the above term, twice on
middle Chatahuchi River, and also in
Cofetalaya, settlements of the Cha’hta
Indians in Tala and Green Counties,
Mississippi. Did any Yuchi ever live in
these localities in earlier epochs?
Garcilaso de Vega, Florida III, c. 10,
states that Juan Ortiz, who had been in the
Floridian peninsula before, acted as
interpreter at Cofitachiqui. This raises the
query; did the natives of this "capital"
speak Creek or Yuchi? Who will attempt to
give an irrefutable answer to this query?
The existence of a
"queen" or caçica, that is, of a chief’s
widow invested with the authority of a
chief, seems to show that Cofetaçque town or
confederacy did not belong to the Maskoki
connection, for we find no similar instance
in Creek towns. Among the Yuchi, succession
is in the male line, but the Hitchiti
possess a legendary tradition, according to
which the first chief that ever stood at the
head of their community was a woman.
To determine the extent
of the lands inhabited or claimed by the
Yuchi in de Soto s time, is next to
impossible. At a later period they lived on
the eastern side of the Savannah River, and
on its western side as far as Ogeechee
river, and upon tracts above and below
Augusta, Georgia. These tracts were claimed
by them as late as 1736. John Filson, in his
"Discovery etc. of Kentucky" vol. II, 84-87
(1793), gives a list of thirty Indian
tribes, and a statement on Yuchi towns,
which he must have obtained from a much
older source: " Uchees occupy four different
places of residence, at the head of St. John
s, the fork of St. Mary’s, the head of
Cannouchee and the head of St. Tillis.1
These rivers rise on the borders of Georgia
and run separately into the ocean." To Cannouchee answers a place Canosi, mentioned
in Juan de la Vandera’s narrative (1569);
the name, however, is Creek and not Yuchi.
Hawkins states that formerly Yuchi were
settled in small villages at Ponpon,
Saltketchers and Silver Bluff, S. C., and on
the Ogeechee River, Ga. In 1739 a Yuchi town
existed on the Savannah River, twenty-five
miles above Ebenezer, which is in Effingham
County, Georgia, near Savannah City (Jones,
Tomochichi, p. 117; see next page).
From notices contained
in the first volume of Urlsperger’s "Ausführliche
Nachricht," pp. 845. 850-851, we gather the
facts that this Yuchi town was five miles
above the Apalachicola Fort, which stood in
the "Pallachucla savanna," and that its
inhabitants celebrated an annual busk, which
was at times visited by the colonists.
Governor Oglethorpe concluded an alliance
with this town, and when he exchanged
presents to confirm the agreement made, he
obtained skins from these Indians. Rev. Boltzius, the minister of the Salzburger
emigrants, settled in the vicinity, depicts
their character in dark colors; he states "
they are much inclined to Robbing and
Stealing," but was evidently influenced by
the Yamassi and Yamacraw in their vicinity,
who hated them as a race foreign to
themselves. Of these he says, "these Creeks
are Honest, Serviceable and Disinterested."2
The reason why the
Yuchi people gradually left their old seats
and passed over to Chatahuchi and Flint
rivers is stated as follows by Benj.
Hawkins, United States Agent among the
Creeks in his instructive "Sketch of the
Creek Country" (1799).3
In 1729, "Captain
Ellick," an old chief of Kasi’hta, married
three Yuchi women and brought them to
Kasi’hta. This was greatly disliked by his
townspeople, and he was prevailed upon to
move across Chatahuchi River, opposite to
where Yuchi town was in Hawkins time; he
settled there with his three brothers, two
of whom had intermarried with Yuchis. After
this, the chief collected all the Yuchi
people, gave them lands on the site of Yuchi
town, and there they settled.
Hawkins eulogizes the
people by stating that they are more civil,
orderly and industrious than their neighbors
(the Lower Creeks), the men more attached to
their wives, and these more chaste. He
estimates the number of their warriors
("gun-men"), including those of the three
branch villages, at about two hundred and
fifty. These branch towns were Intatchkálgi,
"beaver-dam people";4 Padshiläika, "pigeon
roost"; and Tokogálgi, "tad-pole people", on
Flint River and its side creeks;
while a few Yuchi had gone to the Upper
Creeks and settled there at Sawanógi. Yuchi,
the main town, lay on the western bank of
Chatahuchi River, on a tributary called
Yuchi creek, ten and one-half miles below
Kawíta Talahássi, and two miles above
Osutchi. Another water course, called "Uchee
river," runs from the west into Oklokoni
River, or "Yellow Water," in the
southwestern corner of the State of Georgia.
Morse, in his list of Seminole settlements
(1822), mentions a Yuchi town near Mikasuki,
Florida.
The main Yuchi town on
Chatahuchi River was built in a vast plain
rising from the river. W. Bartram, who saw
it in 1775, depicts it as the largest, most
compact, and best situated Indian town he
ever saw; the habitations were large and
neatly built, the walls of the houses
consisted of a wooden frame, lathed and
plastered inside and outside with a reddish
clay, and roofed with cypress bark or
shingles. He estimated the number of the
inhabitants at one thousand or fifteen
hundred. They were usually at variance with
the Maskoki confederacy, and "did not mix"
with its people, but were wise enough to
unite with them against a common enemy
(Travels, pp. 386. 387).
The early reports may
often have unconsciously included the Yuchi
among the Apalachi5 and Apalatchúkla. Among
the chiefs who accompanied Tomochichi, miko
of the Yamacraw Indians, to England in 1733,
was Umphichi or Umpeachy, "a Uchee chief
from Palachocolas."6
William Bartram, who
traveled through these parts from 1773 to
1778, and published his "Travels" many years
later,7 calls them "Uche or Savannuca,"
which is the Creek Sawanógi, or "dwellers
upon Savannah river." This name Savannuca,
and many equally sounding names, have caused
much confusion concerning a supposed
immigration of the Shawano or Shawnee
Indians (of the Algonkin race) into Georgia,
among historians not posted in Indian
languages. Sawanógi is derived from Savannah
River, which is named after the prairies
extending on both sides, these being called
in Spanish sabana. Sabana, and savane in the
Canadian French, designate a grassy plain,
level country, prairie, also in Span,
pasture extending over a plain; from Latin
sabana napkin. It still occurs in some local
names of Canada and of Spanish America. But
this term has nothing at all in common with
the Algonkin word sháwano south, from which
are derived the tribal names: Shawano or
Shawnee, once on Ohio and Cumberland Rivers
and their tributaries; Chowan in Southern
Virginia; Siwoneys in Connecticut; Sawannoe
in New Jersey (about 1616); Chaouanons, the
southern division of the Illinois or
Maskoutens.
These tribes, and many
others characterized as southerners by the
same or similar Algonkin names, had no
connection among themselves, besides the
affinity in their dialects, which for the
Chowans is not even certain. The tradition
that Sháwano existed in Upper Georgia,
around Tugĕlo, and on the head waters of the
large Georgia rivers, requires therefore
further examination. Milfort, in his Memoire
(pp. 9. 10) states that lands were obtained
from "les Savanogués, sauvages qui habitent
cette partie (de Tougoulou)," for the
plantation of vineyards, about 1775. The
name of the Suwanee River, Florida, and that
of Suwanee Creek and town, northeast of
Atlanta, Georgia, seem to contain the Creek
term sawáni echo. By all means, these names
cannot serve to prove the presence of the
Shawano tribe in these eastern parts, but a
settlement of Sháwano, also called Sawanógi,
existed on Tallapoosa River, where they seem
to have been mixed with Yuchi.8
A. Gallatin, "Synopsis
of the Indian Tribes," p. 95, mentions a tradition, according
to which "the ancient seats of the Yuchi
were east of the Coosa, and probably of the
Chatahuchi river, and that they consider
themselves as the most ancient inhabitants
of the country." Of which country? If the
whole country is meant, which was at the
dawn of history held by Maskoki tribes, the
name of the Yazoo River may be adduced as an
argument for the truth of this tradition,
for yasu, yashu is the Yuchi term for leaf
and any leaf-bearing tree, even pines (from
ya, wood, tree], and Kawíta has been
mentioned above. From a thorough comparative
study of the Yuchi language, the Maskoki
dialects and the local nomenclature of the
country, we can alone expect any reliable
information upon the extent and the area of
territory anciently held by the Yuchi; but
at present it is safest to locate their "priscan
home" upon both sides of Lower Savannah
river.
Footnotes:
- The present Satilla
river; falsely written St. Ilia, Santilla,
St. Tillie.
- Extract from Rev. B’s
Journal; London, 1734, 12 mo, p. 37.
- Collections of the
Georgia Historical Society, vol. Ill, part
first, pp. 61-63 (Savannah, 1848).
- See below: List of
Creek Settlements.
- Cf. Gallatin,
Synopsis, p. 95.
- Chas. C. Jones, Tomochichi, pp. 58. 83.
- Published
Philadelphia, 1791.
- Cf. List of Creek
Towns, and Pénicaut, in B. French, Hist.
Coll. La., new series, p. 126; Force, Some
Notices on Indians of Ohio, p. 22.
Back to:
Southern Families of 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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