190 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY I pill. 73 
haps Kealedji. The first two, however, occur independently in Adair's 
list, and the others are well-known Muskogee divisions which appear 
alongside of the Tamahita among the Upper Creeks. The Yamasee 
were also here for very brief periods but at a point much farther down 
the river than that where the Tamahita are placed. 
Thirdly, Yuchi are known to have lived at or in the neighborhood 
of most of the places assigned to the Tamahita. The topography 
of the De Crenay map is too uncertain to enable us to base any conclu- 
sions upon it, but in the census of 1750 the Tamahita are given at 
approximately the same distance from Fort Toulouse as Coweta and 
Kasihta, and 3 leagues nearer than Chiaha, very close to the position 
which the (unnamed) Yuchi then occupied. As we shall see when we 
come to discuss the Yuchi as a .whole, there was at least one band of 
Indians belonging to this tribe among the Upper Creeks, remnants 
apparently of the Choctawhatchee band. The Tamahita which 
figure in this section of the Creek country may, therefore, have been 
a part of these. I believe, however, that there was a second band of 
Yuchi here, which had had a somewhat different history. When we 
come to discuss the Yuchi Indians we shall find that a section of 
these people, called generally Hogologe or Hog Logee, accompanied 
the Apalachicola Indians and part of the Shawnee to the Chatta- 
hoochee River about 1716. The Apalachicola were satisfied with this 
location, but some time later the Shawnee migrated to the Talla- 
poosa, and I think it probable that at least a part of the Hogologe 
Yuchi went with them. We know that relations between these two 
tribes must have been intimate for Bartram was led to believe that 
the Yuchi spoke "the Savanna or Savanuca tongue," and Speck 
testifies to cordial understandings between them extending down to 
the present time. 1 But Hawkins gives us something more definite. 
In a diary which he kept during his travels through the Creek Nation 
in 1796 he states, under date of Monday, December 19, when he was 
following the course of the Tallapoosa River toward its mouth and 
along its southern shore, "half a mile [beyond a large spring by the 
river bank is] the Uchee village, a remnant of those settled on the 
Chattahoochee; half a mile farther pass a Shawne village." 2 In his 
Sketch, representing conditions a few years later, he says, in the 
course of his description of the same Shawnee village, ' 'Some Uchees 
have settled with them," and there is every reason to believe that they 
were the Yuchi who had formerly occupied a town of their own half a 
mile away. 3 
Last of all, we must not lose sight of the fact that the origin of the 
Tamahita, like that of the Yuchi, may be traced far north to the 
i Bartram, Travels, p. 387; Speck, Anth. Pub., « Ga. Hist. Soc. Colls., IX, p. 41. 
U. of Pa. Mus., I, p. 11. 3 See p. 320; also plate 8. 
