Word of the
massacre spread quickly and John Sevier raised a force to combat the Cherokee. The Cherokee were forced to divide, with some heading toward
Kentucky and some toward North Carolina, but most headed toward Georgia. Sevier's men caught the Cherokee at the village of what he called Hightower (Etowah, or
Itawayi), which is near the present-day site of
Rome, Georgia. The Cherokee created a defensive position on
Myrtle Hill and used a guard to try to prevent Sevier from fording the rivers. Sevier left a written account of the battle, in which he described an attempt to cross the
Etowah River about a mile south of Myrtle Hill, drawing the Cherokee defenders out of their prepared positions, then galloping back to Myrtle Hill to cross there. The Cherokee rushed back to contest the crossing of the Etowah, but failed. When the
Red Chief (or war chief) of the Cherokee, Kingfisher, was killed, the remaining warriors fled and Sevier burned the village. ==Aftermath==