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settlements when he traded there between 1736 and 1743. This included Eno, Cheraw, Wateree, Congaree, Natchez, Yamasee, Coosah, and others. He could probably have added Saponi, Waccamaw, Pedee, Santee and others to his list. The groups varied in size. If large enough, each language tribe tended to
313:
The
Wateree appeared to have been able to maintain their culture and distinct language as late as 1744. A record of land sale noted that Wateree Indians sold to a white man. The tribe as a group culture has become extinct, but some present-day Catawba are likely genetic descendants of the Wateree.
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289:. The British observed that the chiefs of the Wateree had a higher degree of power than those of other Indian tribes of the region.
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in his journal, which was also given as the name of their village. Bandera described them as ruled by two female chiefs.
212:
300:. The latter tribe absorbed remnant bands of many other tribes of the region from the chaos of intertribal fighting.
136:, they migrated to the southeast and what developed as South Carolina by 1700, where English colonists noted them.
195:'s scribe Juan de la Bandera during their expedition through the interior of the Carolinas. Bandera called them the
250:
95:
20:
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War of 1715 against
Carolina colonists. The Wateree became allies in a tribal confederation dominated by the
285:'s expedition, the Wateree had migrated south to settle along the Wateree River near the site of present-day
433:
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282:
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369:
The
Indians' New World: Catawbas and Their Neighbors from European Contact through the Era of Removal
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215:. In 1670, English colonists and explorers mentioned the Wateree as inhabiting the area of the upper
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Native
American tribe in the interior of the present-day Carolinas in the United States
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408:. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1952; reprint, 1984, pp. 90โ92.
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304:"James Adair heard more than twenty different languages spoken by the Indians in the
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tribe in the interior of the present-day
Carolinas. They probably belonged to the
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was far from the coast. The settlement is believed to have been in present-day
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Originally a large tribe, the
Wateree had their power broken during the
293:
125:
147:. Originally a large tribe, they suffered high mortality during the
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of 1715. By the middle of the 18th century, they joined with the
415:. Publisher: Printed for Edward and Charles Dilly, London, 1775.
371:(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1989), 110.
387:
Handbook of
American Indians North of Mexico: N-Z, Part 2
352:
Catherine Clabby, "Dig finds evidence of
Spanish fort"
155:
nation and lived near the modern
Catawba Reservation.
191:
This people were recorded in 1567 by
Spanish captain
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create its own village and appoint its own leaders."
132:
family. First encountered by the Spanish in 1567 in
401:. Washington, DC.: Government Printing Press, 1894.
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89:
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143:, near the site of what developed as present-day
429:Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands
390:. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office.
265:) following the displacements of a century of
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219:, to the northwest of their later habitat.
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444:Native American history of South Carolina
439:Native American history of North Carolina
454:Native American tribes in South Carolina
449:Native American tribes in North Carolina
277:. The Wateree are labelled as "Waterie".
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44:Regions with significant populations
406:The Indian Tribes of North America
358:, 1 Aug 2004, accessed 26 Jun 2008
174:, "to float on the water" or from
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139:There they had settled along the
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413:History of the American Indians
384:Hodge, Frederick Webb (1912).
1:
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176:yeh is-WAH h'reh / ye iswฤ
สre
82:unknown, possibly an Eastern
213:Rowan County, North Carolina
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281:By 1700, when observed by
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399:Siouan Tribes of the East
207:The Spaniards noted that
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96:Native American religion
21:Wateree (disambiguation)
287:Camden, South Carolina
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145:Camden, South Carolina
134:Western North Carolina
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102:Related ethnic groups
367:James Hart Merrell,
238:annotated copy of a
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404:Swanton, John R.
392:Wateree language.
159:Language and name
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130:Catawba language
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34:Total population
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397:Mooney, James.
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25:Ethnic group
283:John Lawson
275:Yamasee War
271:enslavement
245:map of the
236: 1724
149:Yamasee War
423:Categories
378:References
251:Charleston
193:Juan Pardo
19:See also:
342:Hodge 921
163:The name
107:probably
77:Languages
259:Virginia
249:between
240:deerskin
169:Catawban
90:Religion
298:Catawba
294:Yamasee
267:disease
243:Catawba
209:Guatari
197:Guatari
182:History
172:wateran
165:Wateree
153:Catawba
120:were a
118:Wateree
39:extinct
29:Wateree
257:) and
247:tribes
126:Siouan
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318:Notes
263:right
269:and
255:left
116:The
425::
354:,
325:^
233:c.
231:A
178:.
261:(
253:(
128:-
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60:(
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