424 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Tbull. 73 
Only one or two Indians of Apalachee blood are now known to be in 
existence in Louisiana and Texas. There are a very few among the 
Alabama in Oklahoma. 
We have no estimate of the number of Apalachicola Indians until 
they were removed to the Savannah. In 1708 the number of their 
men was 80. x In the census of 1715 they are credited with 2 villages, 
64 men, and 214 souls. 2 After the Yamasco war they settled upon 
Chattahoochee River, at first all in one town. Later several bands 
left, most of them going south into Florida. By the census of 
1738, 3 and the French census of 1760, 4 those that remained were 
credited with 60 men, by the French estimate of 1750 with more 
than 30, 3 by the English census of 1761 with 20, 5 by the Georgia cen- 
sus of 1792 with 100, including the Chiaha (p. 435), and in the census 
of 1832 with 2 settlements and 239 persons besides 7 slaves. 6 The 
census of 1738 gives, however, what is probably another band of 
Apalachicola Indians under the name of their chief, Cherokee leechee, 
and credits them with 45 men. 7 At the present time there are only 
a few left, living near Okmulgee, Oklahoma. 
The Franciscan missionaries reported 300 conversions among the 
Chatot in 1674. When they settled near Mobile Bienville states 
that they could muster 250 men, but in 1725-26 they had become 
reduced to 40 men. 8 Du Pratz says this tribe occupied about 40 
cabins, circa 1730. 9 In 1806, after their removal to Louisiana, they 
numbered 30 men. 10 In 1817 there were, all told, according to 
Morse, 240, u a figure much too large. They have now disappeared, 
unless they are represented by some band of Choctaw and their 
name concealed by that of the larger tribe. 
No separate enumeration of the Tawasa and Pawokti is available, 
except in the census of 1760, which returns about 40 Tawasa 12 
men, the Georgia census of 1792, which reports about 60, and the 
1832 census, where, including Autauga, 321 are given, with 21 negro 
slaves. 13 It is probable, however* that this last includes all of the 
Alabama at that time remaining in the Creek Nation. 
The Sawokli united with the Lower Creeks. In 1738 the Spaniards 
estimated the number of their men at 20. li In 1750, however, four 
Sawokli settlements appear to be named with more than 50 men 14 
and in 1760 four with a total of 190. 15 The Tamali are perhaps 
i Pub. Rec. of S. C, MS., pp. 207-209. " Du Pratz, Hist, de la Louisiane, n, pp. 212-213. 
a Rivers, Chap, in Early Hist. S. C, p. 94. >° Sibley, Annals of Cong., 9th Cong., 2d sess., l()S7. 
3 Copy of MS. in Ayer Coll., Newberry Lib. " Morse, Rept. to the Sec. of War, p. 373. 
* Miss. Prov. Arch., I, p. 96. 12 Miss. Prov. Arch., I, pp. 94-95. 
6 Ga. Col. Rec, vm, p. 522. i J Sen. Doc. 512, 23d Cong., 1st sess., iv, pp. 258-260. 
6 Sen. Doc. 512, 23d Cong., 1st sess., pp. 345-347. " MS., Ayer Coll. 
1 Copy of MS. in Ayer Coll., Newberry Lib. i& Miss. Prov. Arch., I, p. 96. 
s Copy of MS. in Lib. Cong. 
