[20] Mooney, The Cherokee Ball Play, in The American Anthropologist, III, p. 107, April, 1890. [↑]
[21] Bartram, Travels, p. 518, 1791. [↑]
[22] Adair, History of American Indians, pp. 227, 247, 252–256, 270, 276–279, 1775. [↑]
[23] Ramsey, Annals of Tennessee, pp. 81, 84, 1853. [↑]
[24] Mooney, Siouan Tribes of the East (bulletin of the Bureau of Ethnology), p. 83, 1894. [↑]
[25] Bienville, quoted in Gayarré, Louisiana. [↑]
[26] Haywood, Natural and Aboriginal History of Tennessee, pp. 105–107, 1823. For a sketch of the Natchez war and the subsequent history of the scattered fragments of the tribe, see the author’s paper, The End of the Natchez, in the American Anthropologist for July, 1899. [↑]
[27] Adair, History of American Indians, p. 257, 1775. The other statements concerning the Taskigi among the Creeks are taken from Gatschet’s valuable study, A Migration Legend of the Creek Indians, I, pp. 122, 145, 228, 1884. [↑]
[28] Haywood, Natural and Aboriginal History of Tennessee, p. 24, 1823. From a contemporary reference in Rivers, South Carolina, page 57, it appears that this war was in full progress in 1757. [↑]
[29] Margry, quoted in Gatschet, Creek Migration Legend, I, pp. 16, 87, 1884. [↑]