North and South Carolina
Kiawah, Cherokee, and the Catawbas.
The Catawbas were farming people. Catawba women harvested crops of corn, beans, and squash. Catawba men hunted deer, wild turkeys, and small game, and went fishing in the rivers. Catawba dishes included cornbread, soups, and stews.
for fishing, they used long spears, and for hunting, they used bow and arrows
The Catawba Indians lived in settled villages of homes and small farm plots. Catawba houses had wooden frames and bark walls. Here are some pictures of Native American dwellings like the ones Catawba Indians used. The Catawbas also built larger circular buildings for town meetings, and most villages had a sports field with benches for spectators. Today, Catawba people live in modern houses and apartment buildings just like you.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern ---AWB-S. That is, eight letter words with 4th letter A and 5th letter W and 6th letter B and 8th letter S. In alphabetical order, they are: catawbas
Initially the many small Muskogean tribes that came to be collectively called "Creeks" by white Americans waged war on most of their neighbours: Alibamu, Coushatta, Hitchiti, Tuskegee and Natchez. These neighbouring tribes were gradually defeated and absorbed by the Creeks. Later they fought intermittent wars against the Catawbas, Choctaws and Cherokee, as well as being involved in fighting against white Americans.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 5 words with the pattern C-T-W---. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter C and 3rd letter T and 5th letter W. In alphabetical order, they are: catawbas cetywall cityward citywide cutaways
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 3 words with the pattern C-T--B-S. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter C and 3rd letter T and 6th letter B and 8th letter S. In alphabetical order, they are: catawbas cattabus cottabus
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 6 words with the pattern C----BAS. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter C and 6th letter B and 7th letter A and 8th letter S. In alphabetical order, they are: cabombas calumbas cassabas catawbas copaibas cordobas
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern CAT--B-S. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter C and 2nd letter A and 3rd letter T and 6th letter B and 8th letter S. In alphabetical order, they are: catawbas cattabus
Live Live Live Extra was created on 1995-12-31.
The recent growth in this area has been phenomenal. From 1990 to 1998, the township's population rose from 17,300 to 25,000. When we reach the year 2015, our projected growth will be 35,219. From the resort community of Tega Cay to the small-town charms of Fort Mill to the unspoiled rural stretches of Indian Land, people are finding it the ideal place to call home. It's no wonder, since Fort Mill Township has a rich history that enlivens the community. Much of the area's history stems from the Catawba Indians, the only surviving Native American tribe in South Carolina. At one time, 30,000 Catawbas roamed this area. Unfortunately, few records exist about the tribal nation before 1760, when smallpox and other European diseases diminished it to 1,000. The oldest artifact dates to about 600 A.D. In 1763, the English "gave" the Catawbas 144,000 acres-land originally theirs anyway-as a reward for helping them defeat the French in the French and Indian War. That original reservation sprawled both the township, originally called Fort Hill, and Indian Land. The Catawbas began leasing that land to settlers soon afterward, renting between 30 and 1,000 acres to each. Both settlers and Catawbas used the ancient Nation Ford Road, which dates back to at least 1650, to travel and trade from Pennsylvania to Charles Towne (now Charleston). The trail passed through the Catawba Nation's five villages and crossed the Catawba River where the railroad trestle now exists. Parts of the trail can still be seen, especially on the Anne Springs Close Greenway. Settlers opened a post office in 1820. By 1826 the Catawbas had rented all their land out, an event that forced them off their own reservation. In 1840 the Catawbas signed the Treaty of Nation Ford and sold the land to the state, which ended their control over this area. Because there was another Fort Hill in South Carolina, settlers changed the name to Fort Mill around 1830, after an old grist mill near Steele Creek and a small garrison fort built by the British in the 1750s, just south of the town limits. In 1852, the Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad first traveled through the area, with a station in Fort Mill. The trestle over the Catawba River, built in 1851, burned down during an 1865 Civil War skirmish and was rebuilt a year later. Jefferson Davis and the Confederate Cabinet passed through the area in their flight from Richmond in 1865. The last meeting of the full Confederate Cabinet was held at the White Homestead near downtown Fort Mill. Thirteen years later, in 1873, Fort Mill received its charter as a town. In 1887 Samuel Elliot White founded the Fort Mill Manufacturing Co., a textile business. A second mill was built five years later, which paved the way for Springs Industries, the area's main employer for generations. White's great-great-granddaughter, Crandall Close Bowles, is now the fifth generation to run the textile giant as both chief executive officer and chairman of the board. (www.springs.com) The following sites in Fort Mill are listed on the National Register of Historic Places: Springfield Plantation (before 1806), White Homestead (1831), Fort Mill Downtown Historic District (17 buildings built between 1860 and 1940), Wilson House (c. 1869), Banks Mack House (c. 1871), John M. White House (1872), Thornwell-Elliot House (c. 1877), Mack-Belk House (c. 1890), Mills House (1906), National Guard Armory (1938) and Unity Presbyterian Church Complex (church, manse, Unity Cemetery, Old Unity Cemetery).