Question:

Can anyone tell me who is Tomo Chi Chi?

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Indian from Savannah GA

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  1. Little is known about the youth of this warrior and chieftain because of the absence of accurate documentation. Presumably, he was Creek and participated in their early activities with Englishmen in South Carolina, both peaceful and hostile. About 1728 Tomochichi created his own tribe of the Yamacraws from an assortment of Creek and Yamasee Indians after the two nations disagreed over future relations with the English and the Spanish.

    http://www.newgeorgiaencyclopedia.org/ng...


  2. He is a welsh stand up comedian and the phonetic pronunciation is t-omo-shshy

  3. Hello, I hope the following helps you

    It is taken from a web site on visiting historic Savannah

    The original Tomo-Chi-Chi Monument, which paid tribute to the Chief of the Yamacraw Indians, and friend and ally to Jame Oglethorpe and the first Georgia colonists, was a pyramid of stone which was placed over his burial site in the center of Wright Square. Some 150 years later, it was decided that his burial site was the most fitting place for the monument to William Washington Gordon, founder and president of the Central of Georgia Railroad. Tomo-Chi-Chi’s gravesite was bulldozed in the early 1880s, and the monument to Gordon erected in its place.

    It is said that Gordon’s widow felt bad about the desecration of the Indian Chief’s grave, and worked with the Colonial Dames of the State of Georgia to obtain a granite boulder from the Stone Mountain Monument Company to memorialize the life and death of the man who was indispensable to the founding and success of the Georgia Colony. This massive granite boulder stands in the southeast corner of Wright Square.

    The Tomo-chi-chi Monument bears a plaque with this text:

    In Memory of

    Tomo-Chi-Chi

    The Mico of the Yamacraws

    The Companion of Oglethorpe

    And the friend and ally of the

    Colony of Georgia.

    This stone has been here placed

    By the Georgia Society of the

    1739-1899

    Tomo-Chi-Chi’s Grave

    Tomo-Chi-Chi, Mico of the Yamacraws, a tribe of the Creek, Indian Nation, is buried in this square. He has been called a cofounder, with Oglethorpe, of Georgia. He was a good friend of the English, a friendship indispensable to the establishment of the Colony as a military outpost against Spanish invasion. He negotiated with Oglethorpe the treaty, formally ratified on May 21, 1733, pursuant to which Georgia was settled. Mary Musgrove, half-breed niece of Emperor grim of the Creek Indians, acted as interpreter between Oglethorpe and Tomo-Chi-Chi and lent her great influence to the signing of that treaty and to the treaties negotiated by Oglethorpe with other tribes of the Creek Nation.

    In 1734, at the age of 84, with his wife, Senauki, Tomo-Chi-Chi visited the English Court and was received by the King and by the Archbishop of Canterbury. He was a man of fine physique, tall and of great dignity.

    He died October 5, 1739 at Yamacraw Indian Village, and at his request was brought to Savannah to rest among his English friends. He was buried here with military honors.

    This answer was provided by Enquire, a 24-hour, live question answering and enquiry service offered by public librarians across England and Scotland in collaboration with partners in the United States. If you liked our answer and would like us to help you find another, you can chat with one of us right now by clicking on Enquire on the People’s Network site at http://www.peoplesnetwork.gov.uk

    025-4 GEORGIA HISTORICAL COMMISSION 1952

    From Tomi-Chi-Chi Monument back to Monuments and Memorials

  4. Tom Chi Chi was a sixteenth century Creek leader and the head chief of a Yamacraw town on the site of present day Savannah, Georgia.

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