-
Tomochichi (to-mo-chi-chi') (c. 1644 –
October 5, 1741) was the head
chief of a
Yamacraw town on the site of present-day Savannah, Georgia, in the 18th...
- A 20-foot (6.1 m)
statue of
Tomochichi was
temporarily installed outside the
Millennium Gate
Museum in Atlanta, Georgia, in 2021.
There are
plans to relocate...
- The
Tomochichi Federal Building and
United States Court House is a
court house of the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of Georgia...
- water,
negotiated with
Tomochichi and the
Yamacraw agreed to move
their village upriver. A mid-19th
century history of
Tomochichi noted dissension over...
-
might be an
Anglicized form of Scenawki, the wife of the
Yamacraw chief Tomochichi, for whom Georgia's
founder James Oglethorpe named the island. In a March...
-
perceived insult to
Tomochichi thus she and
other members of the
Colonial Dames of the
State of
Georgia erected a new
monument to
Tomochichi, made of granite...
-
governing board on July 7, 1732. His
action culminated a
lengthy process.
Tomochichi was a
Native American that
resides along the
Savannah River that allowed...
-
first two
Seminole Wars and the
Civil War,
treaty signer,
American ally
Tomochichi (1644–1741), Cr****
chief who
mediated with the
British who established...
-
mustard seed"
Nikolaus Ludwig von
Zinzendorf 1700-1760 (The
Cyber Hymnal)
Zinzendorf Do****entary at IMDb
Count von Zinzedorf's
Letter to King
Tomochichi...
- the Indians". He
negotiated with
Tomochichi,
chief of the
Yamacraw tribe for land to
build Savannah on.
Tomochichi became Oglethope's "strongest ally...