Topics in the History of South-Carolina

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Topics in the History of South-Carolina
William J William James Rivers
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Gov.
Glen gives the distance of the Chickesaws from 36 TOPICS IN THE Charleston as nearly 800 miles, and of the Choc- taws as somewhat further.* By repetition it is likewise admitted as an his- torical fact, that 28 tribes of Indians inhabited our State. This assertion depends on the list in Gov.
Drayton's Carolina, (p. 100.) Now of these 28 tribes, I object to ten, as distinct tribes in South- Carolina at the time mentioned by Drayton. On the other hand, several tribes that did dwell here, are
... omitted from the list. The Westoes had been driven from the State before 1700. The Wateree # That the Cherokees had a permanent abode, is evident from their holding the same lands at the period of our Revolution which they held before 1693, at which time they sent a deputation to Charleston. The Catawba country is part of the same which their nation held, perhaps for centuries before the arrival of the English, as they are reported to have been at war with the Five Nations time immemorial. In Oglethorpe's Treaty of 1739, it is said that from the seaboard in Georgia, to the Mountains, was the ancient possession of the Creek Nation, maintained against all opponents, and that they could " show the heaps of bones of their enemies, slain by them in defence of said lands." At this period the Upper and Lower Creeks were computed at 25,000 men, women, and children.

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