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Show 1 6 0 MYTHS OF THE CHEROKEE [ KTH. ANN. 19 a neglected band hardly known in the councils of the tribe. In his many- sided capacity he strikingly resembles another white man prominent in Cherokee history, General Sam Houston. Thomas was born in the year 1805 on Raccoon creek, about two miles from Waynesville in North Carolina. His father, who was related to President Zachary Taylor, came of a Welsh family which had immigrated to Virginia at an early period, while on his mother's side he was descended from a Maryland family of Revolutionary stock. He was an only and posthumous child, his father having been accidentally drowned a short time before the boy was born. Being unusually bright for his age, he was engaged when only twelve years old to tend an Indian trading store on Soco creek, in the present Jackson county, owned by Felix Walker, son of the Congressman of the same name who made a national reputation by " talking for Buncombe.'" The store was on the south side of the creek, about a mile above the now abandoned Macedonia mission, within the present reservation, and was a branch of a larger establishment which Walker himself kept at Waynesville. The trade was chiefly in skins and ginseng, or % fcsang," the latter for shipment to China, where it was said to be worth its weight in silver. This trade was very profitable, as the price to the . Indians was but ten cents per pound in merchandise for the green root, whereas it now brings seventy- live cents in cash upon the reservation, the supply steadily diminishing with every year. The contract was for three years' service for a total compensation of one hundred dollars and expenses, but Walker devoted so much of his attention to law studies that the Waynesville store was finally closed for debt, and at the end of his contract term young Thomas was obliged to accept a lot of second- hand law books in lieu of other payment. How well he made use of them is evident from his subsequent service in the state senate and in other official capacities. Soon after entering upon his duties he attracted the notice of Yon-aguska, or Drowning- bear ( Ya'na- gfin'skl, " Bear- drowning- huirv), the acknowledged chief of all the Cherokee then living on the waters of Tuckasegee and Oconaluftee- the old Kituhwa country. On learning that the boy had neither father nor brother, the old chief formally adopted him as his son, and as such he was thenceforth recognized in the tribe under the name of Wil- Usdi', or " Little Will, v he being of small stature even in mature age. From his Indian friends, particularly a boy of the same age who was his companion in the store, he learned the language as well as a white man has ever learned it, so that in his declining years it dwelt in memory more strongly than his mother tongue. After the invention of the Cherokee alphabet, he learned also to read and write the language. In 1819 the lands on Tuckasegee and its branches were sold by the |