Mad Town: Difference between revisions

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[[File:1818 Tullavahajah map.PNG|right|thumb|525px|"Tullavahajah" shown on an 1818 map]]
[[File:1818 Tullavahajah map.PNG|right|thumb|525px|"Tullavahajah" shown on an 1818 map]]
'''Mud Town''' (also called '''Mudd Town''' or '''Old Mudtown''' or, in transliteration of its Muscogean name, '''Talooehajah''', '''Tulawahajah''' or '''Tullavahajah''') was a name used for a settlement used by Indian traders on the western bank of the [[Cahaba River]] in present day [[Shelby County]].
'''Mud Town''' (also called '''Mudd Town''', '''Mad Town''', or '''Old Mudtown''' or, in transliteration of its Muscogean name, '''Talooehajah''', '''Tulawahajah''' or '''Tullavahajah''') was a name used for a settlement used by Indian traders on the western bank of the [[Cahaba River]] in present day [[Shelby County]].


Some sources indicate that it was located at the confluence of the [[Little Cahaba River|Little Cahaba]], just above the present crossing of [[U.S. Highway 280]]. Others place it further downstream, at the site where the [[Altadena Valley Country Club]] was later developed.
Some sources indicate that it was located at the confluence of the [[Little Cahaba River|Little Cahaba]], just above the present crossing of [[U.S. Highway 280]]. Others place it further downstream, at the site where the [[Altadena Valley Country Club]] was later developed.
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[[Category:Settlements]]
[[Category:Settlements]]
[[Category:Cahaba River]]

Revision as of 15:50, 9 May 2016

"Tullavahajah" shown on an 1818 map

Mud Town (also called Mudd Town, Mad Town, or Old Mudtown or, in transliteration of its Muscogean name, Talooehajah, Tulawahajah or Tullavahajah) was a name used for a settlement used by Indian traders on the western bank of the Cahaba River in present day Shelby County.

Some sources indicate that it was located at the confluence of the Little Cahaba, just above the present crossing of U.S. Highway 280. Others place it further downstream, at the site where the Altadena Valley Country Club was later developed.

In any case, the town was an important landmark on the Bear Meat Cabin Road or "Great Tennessee Trail" from Ditto's Landing on the Tennessee to Old Town on the Warrior River that later became the Huntsville Pike.

During the Creek Indian War the town was cleared out and burned on May 1, 1814 by John Coffee's forces on Andrew Jackson's orders. Virginia Duffy remembered it still being used by a dwindling band of "vagabond traders" in the mid-1800s.

See also

References