enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Amerindian slave ownership - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amerindian_slave_ownership

    The Chickasaw obtained many slaves born in Georgia, Tennessee, or Virginia . [51] [46] In 1790, Major John Doughty wrote to Henry Knox that Chickasaws owned a great many horses, and some families owned slaves and cattle. [51] Among the Chickasaw who were slaveholders many had European heritage, mostly through a white father and a Chickasaw ...

  3. Indian slave trade in the American Southeast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_slave_trade_in_the...

    By 1715 the Native American slave population in the Carolina colony was estimated at 1,850. [11] Prior to 1720, when it ended the Native American slave trade, Carolina exported as many or more Native American slaves than it imported Africans. [3] [4] [5] This trade system involved the Westo tribe, who had previously come down from further north.

  4. Chickasaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chickasaw

    They are headquartered in Hemingway, South Carolina. [49] Historian Edward J. Cashin, a professor of colonial era history and Director of the Center for the Study of Georgia History at Augusta State University, was unable to ascertain the organization's connection to the Savannah River Chickasaws or other bands of Chickasaw. [50]

  5. Savannah Town, South Carolina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_Town,_South_Carolina

    Savannah Town, South Carolina is a defunct settlement that was located in the colonial years on the Savannah River below the Fall Line in present-day Aiken County. In the 1670s the Westo had a village here, but they were displaced by the Savannah (as the English called a local Shawnee band) in a trade war, and it became known by 1685 as ...

  6. Treaty of Hopewell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Hopewell

    On November 28, 1785, the first Treaty of Hopewell was signed between the U.S. representative Benjamin Hawkins and the Cherokee Indians. In addition to circumscribing a large part of the northern and eastern boundary of the Cherokee Nation not already defined by previous treaties and land cessions, the treaty ceded a wedge of land south of the Cumberland river in north central Tennessee around ...

  7. Georgia slave descendants submit signatures to fight zoning ...

    www.aol.com/news/georgia-slave-descendants...

    Since 1976, the state of Georgia has owned most of its 30 square miles (78 square kilometers) of largely unspoiled wilderness. Hogg Hummock, also known as Hog Hammock, sits on less than a square mile.

  8. Slave descendants on Georgia island fighting to keep ...

    www.aol.com/news/slave-descendants-georgia...

    The rules were enacted in 1994 for the sole purpose of protecting one of the South's few remaining communities of people known as Gullah, or Geechee in Georgia, whose ancestors worked island slave ...

  9. James Adair (historian) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Adair_(historian)

    Adair went forward under the direction of South Carolina Governor James Glen but then vehemently blamed him for the mission's failure and the loss of his personal fortune. In the 1760s, he led a contingent of Chickasaw warriors against the French in the French and Indian Wars which resulted in 1763 with most French territory east of the ...