- Fort
Tombecbe (Fort de
Tombecbé), also
spelled Tombecbee and Tombeché, was a
stockade fort
located on the
Tombigbee River near the
border of
French Louisiana...
- 9 km2), all land.[citation needed] Epes has its
origins in Fort de
Tombecbé (Fort
Tombecbe), one of the
major fortifications built under Louis XIV of France...
-
American colonies to
house British soldiers if necessary.
April 4 – At Fort
Tombecbe, near what is now the town of Epes, Alabama,
representatives of the British...
-
Studies Center Gallery. Taitt,
David (1771). "A plan of part of the
rivers Tombecbe, Alabama, Tensa, Perdido, &
Scambia in the
province of West Florida; with...
-
closed to the
public Fort
Sinquefield Fort
Stoddert Fort
Strother Fort
Tombecbe, open to the
public Fort Toulouse, open to the
public Fort Williams, destro****...
- Press. pp. 277–279. ISBN 978-0-300-05917-5.
Retrieved 2011-03-21. Fort
Tombécbe,
Alabama Forts "Fort San
Fernando De Las Barrancas"
Archived 2016-03-03...
-
Tombigbee River. On
April 23, the army
reached its
forward depot at Fort
Tombecbé (which had been
prepared at present-day
Jones Bluff,
Sumter County, Alabama...
-
about 10,000
acres (40 km2) of
Choctaw land,
including the site of Fort
Tombecbe, also
known as Fort Confederation. The
preamble begins with. For the mutual...
- Toulouse, near the
junction of the
Coosa and
Tallapoosa rivers, and Fort
Tombecbe on the
Tombigbee River. The
French and the
English engaged in competition...
- boys
school founded in 1811, was
located on a
prominent hill in town. The
Tombecbe Bank, the
first to be
chartered in the state, was
established by Israel...