. History of Alabama and dictionary of Alabama biography. Dr. Thomas W. PalmerPresident Alabama Girls Technical Insti-tute and College for Women, Montevallo Dr. Eugene A. Smith Dean of Department of Geology, University of Alabama, and state geologist EDUCATORS HISTORY OF ALABAMA 739 erences attainable, he then made his home inthe Creek Nation. It was perhaps about thistime that his son Timpoochee was born. Tim-poochee is merely an Indian corruption ofTimothy. In February. 1785, probablythrough the influence of Captain PatrickCarr, Timothy Barnard was relieved from thepenalty of treason and per


. History of Alabama and dictionary of Alabama biography. Dr. Thomas W. PalmerPresident Alabama Girls Technical Insti-tute and College for Women, Montevallo Dr. Eugene A. Smith Dean of Department of Geology, University of Alabama, and state geologist EDUCATORS HISTORY OF ALABAMA 739 erences attainable, he then made his home inthe Creek Nation. It was perhaps about thistime that his son Timpoochee was born. Tim-poochee is merely an Indian corruption ofTimothy. In February. 1785, probablythrough the influence of Captain PatrickCarr, Timothy Barnard was relieved from thepenalty of treason and permitted to returnto his former home, there to enjoy and pos-sess every right of citizenship. Being nowa thorough American, he was the deputyagent of the Lower Creeks in 1793 and 1794and was one of the interpreters at the treatyof Coleraine in 1796. He died at an advancedage on Flint River, Georgia, the year notknown. But little is known of the early lifeof Timpoochee Barnard. His mother care-fully taught him to speak her native Yucheedialect, while no do


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookpublisherchica, bookyear1921