Selocta Chinnabee's name is also written as Shelocta, Se-loc-ta, Chinnabby, and Apuckshunubee[5][4])
Family
Chinnabby was possibly born in 1795 near Choccolocco Creek and was the son of a Natchez chief, Moss Micco Chinnabby, and a Muscogee mother.[3][6] After the Natchez revolt, a portion of the Natchez moved to central Alabama and settled in an abandoned village near the Coosa River on Tallaseehatchee Creek. This new village was known as Natchee, Natchez Town,[3] or Notchietown.
During the Creek War, Chinnabby sided with the United States in fighting the Red Sticks. In 1813, a defensive stockade named Fort Chinnabee was built three miles north of Chinnabby's village, which was on the north shore of Choccolocco Creek near the influx of Wolfskull Creek.[a][8] Chinnabby fought in a number of battles, including the Battle of Talladega, Battles of Emuckfaw and Enotachopo Creek, and Battle of Horseshoe Bend.[9] Prior to the Battle of Talladega, it was reported that Chinnabby escaped Fort Leslie covered in the skin of a wild hog and was able to warn Jackson at Fort Strother that Fort Leslie was under siege by Red Stick warriors.[10] Prior to the Battle of Emuckfaw Creek, Chinnabby led warriors allied with the United States in an attack on a Hillabee village. Chinnabby's brother was killed in this attack.[11]
Chinnabby was present at the signing of the Treaty of Fort Jackson. He supported yielding Muscogee lands along the Alabama River in exchange for keeping land west of the Coosa River in Muscogee possession. Jackson did not agree with this arrangement, as he felt this allowed Great Britain a connection to supply inland Native Americans in their continued conflicts with the United States.[4]However, Chinnabby later pleaded with Jackson that the ones who helped him should keep their land. He died just before the Trail of Tears.[12]
Chinnabby also controlled bands of Cherokee,[13] who called him Apuckshunubee, as well as Chickasaw that had previously been under the rule of his brother, Taski Etoka.
An early source stated that Chinabby died after a horse race. He was intoxicated and rode headfirst into a tree.[15] Other sources indicate Chinnabby was traveling to Mardisville on October 15, 1834 to purchase supplies prior to his death.[2] His death has also been recorded as occurring on February 10, 1835.[3] He was buried with his silver medal near the community of Munford, and his cabin was ceremonially burned. Chinnabby's grave marker is located at 33°29′11″N85°57′43″W / 33.48639°N 85.96194°W / 33.48639; -85.96194.[16]
^Wolfskull Creek joins Choccolocco Creek six miles east of Oxford.
References
^Se-loc-ta; Painting in holdings; Renwick Gallery, Smithsonian American Art Museum (SAAM): [Copy after Charles Bird King, hand-colored lithograph on paper; (1836)]; via WebPage; accessed February 3, 2023.
^ abcWright, Amos J. Jr. (2003). Historic Indian Towns in Alabama, 1540-1838. University of Alabama Press. p. 35. ISBN0-8173-1251-X.
^ abcdeMullendore, Tommy (March 1982). "Selocta Chinnobee". Talladega County Historical Association Newsletter (113): 11-12.
^ abcMcKenney, Thomas Loraine (1872). History of the Indian Tribes of North America (1 ed.). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: D.Rice & Co. p. 221.
^Eaton, John Henry (1824). The Life of Andrew Jackson. Philadelphia: S.F. Bradford.
^ abEast, Don (December 2008). A Historical Analysis of the Creek Indian Hillabee Towns. iUniverse, Inc. pp. 56–7. ISBN978-1-4401-0163-2.
^Pickett, Albert James (1878). History of Alabama, and Incidentally of Georgia and Mississippi, from the Earliest Period. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: Willo Publishing Company. p. 404. ISBN978-1-363-31084-5.
^Harris, W. Stuart (1977). Dead Towns of Alabama. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. p. 38. ISBN0-8173-1125-4.
^Braund, Kathryn E. Holland (2012). Tohopeka: Rethinking the Creek War & the War of 1812. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. p. 152. ISBN978-0-8173-5711-5.