(the river is on the right)
Etymology The root of the name "Tomotley" is unknown, although it is generally believed to have originated before the Cherokee occupation. Ethnologist
James Mooney suggested a possible
Muscogee Creek origin, pointing out the phonetic similarity to the Creek town of ''Tama'li'', which was located on the
Chattahoochee River in Georgia, and Creek occupancy of this area prior to the Cherokee. Others have theorized that Tomotley was formed by Lower and Valley town
Cherokee refugees fleeing warfare with the Creek in the mid-18th century. The name was also used for Lower and Valley Cherokee towns in South Carolina and North Carolina.
Town Tomotley first appears in the European colonial historical record in 1756, when it was led by Cherokee chief
Attakullakulla. That same year, a small English force under Captain Raymond Demeré arrived in the area to build and garrison
Fort Loudoun on the Little Tennessee River near the Tellico. The British were trying to protect the Cherokee, whom they wanted as allies in the
French and Indian War. The garrison was greeted at Tomotley by the chief,
Conocotocko (Old Hop), who told Demeré, "I am now old and lie upon a bad bearskin. My life is not more than an inch long."
William de Brahm, who designed the fort, resided at Tomotley while the fort was being constructed in late 1756. Around this time, a sharp political rift occurred in the Cherokee hierarchy between those who were aligned with pro-French and pro-English factions. Tensions were increasing as the French and British were engaged in the
Seven Years' War in Europe, known as the
French and Indian War on its North American front. When pro-French sentiments began to prevail in the key Overhill town of
Great Tellico, its pro-English headman
Ostenaco was forced to flee to the Little Tennessee Valley. During the
American Revolution and
Cherokee–American wars, most of the Overhill towns were destroyed by American forces. Because Tomotley was located at a strategic ford along the Little Tennessee, it was the first of the Overhill towns to be captured in 1776 by
William Christian's expedition. When
John Sevier invaded the valley three years later, he reported that Tomotley was still in ruins. ==Archaeology==