CoosaponakeesaIn 1700, Coosaponakeesa was born at Coweta on the Ocmulgee River. Her Muskogean-Creek name translates to “Lovely Fawn”, but to generations she is known by her Christian name Mary Musgrove. Her father was Edmund Griffen, a British Indian trader; her mother was the sister of the powerful Brim, Chief Mico (leader) of the Tuckabatchees or Lower Creek Indians, making “Lovely Fawn” an Indian Princess. Oglethorpe's InterpreterIn 1733 Oglethorpe and 116 emigrants set out to found the colony of Savannah. At Yamacraw Bluff, he solicited Mary Musgrove’s help as an interpreter for his meeting with the Yamacraw chief, Tomochichi. Oglethorpe realized that Mary could offer information and alliances he needed to secure British interests. Her services were hired at a salary of one hundred pounds sterling (about $500) per year. Marriage and PropertyMary remarried twice after Musgrove’s death in 1735. Her second husband, Captain Jacob Matthews, died in 1742. Her third marriage to Thomas Bosomworth (1744) was fraught with political strife regarding his debts and gaining official recognition of large property grants, including Sapelo, St. Catherine’s, and Ossabaw Islands, from the Creeks to his wife, making her the largest landowner in colonial Georgia. |
Last updated: October 20, 2022