Known as Coosaponakeesa
among the Creek Indians, Mary Musgrove served as a cultural liaison between
colonial Georgia and her Native American community in the mid-eighteenth
century. Musgrove took advantage of her biculturalism to protect Creek
interests, maintain peace on the frontier, and expand her business as a trader.
As Pocahontas was to the Jamestown colony and Sacagawea was to the Lewis and
Clark expedition, so was Musgrove to the burgeoning Georgia colony. Musgrove was the
daughter of the English trader Edward Griffin and a Creek Indian mother who was
related to Brims and Chigelli,
Mary Musgrove (pictured
with her third husband, the Reverend Thomas Bosomworth) served as a cultural
liaison between colonial Georgia and her Native American community in the
mid-eighteenth century. She took advantage of her biculturalism to protect
Creek interests, maintain peace on the frontier, and expand her business as a
trader.
Mary Musgrove
two Creek leaders. She
spent most of her childhood straddling the two worlds of her Creek village,
Coweta, and the colony of South Carolina. During these years she learned to
speak the Creek language of Muskogee as well as English, and she learned
firsthand about the deerskin trade and the different customs and expectations
of colonial and Native American societies. Despite her mixed heritage Musgrove
was considered a full member of Creek society and the Wind Clan. In this
matrilineal society, children took the clan identities of their mothers. Later
in life she would claim royal heritage, a claim few scholars have accepted.
Businesswoman and
Diplomat
In 1717 she married
English trader John Musgrove, and together they set up a trading post near the
Savannah River. (Archaeologists excavated the site of this trading post in
2002, prior to the beginning of a construction project by the Georgia Ports
Authority.) Musgrove helped her husband as an interpreter and probably used her
kin ties to attract clients. The establishment of Georgia in 1733 provided the
Musgroves an opportunity to expand their role on the southern frontier. In
1734, after John Musgrove and a group of Creeks accompanied James Oglethorpe on
a trip to England, the Trustees officially granted John Musgrove some land at
Yamacraw Bluff on the Savannah River, four miles upriver from Savannah itself.
John Musgrove died in 1735, and Mary Musgrove subsequently moved the trading
post to Yamacraw Bluff. The post, known as the Cowpens, became a major commerce
site and was probably the center for the English-Indian deerskin trade.
From the colony's inception
Musgrove placed herself in the center of Oglethorpe's dealings with neighboring
Creek Indians. As interpreter for Oglethorpe and Yamacraw Indian chief
Tomochichi, Musgrove was instrumental in the peaceful founding of Savannah, and
by extension, the Georgia colony. She served as Oglethorpe's principal
interpreter from 1733 until 1743, receiving financial compensation for her
assistance and the prestige that accompanied her position. During this period
she repeatedly used her connections to foster peace between the British and the
Creeks. Oglethorpe obtained most of his understanding of the Creek Indians
directly from Musgrove.
Musgrove remarried in
1737. With the assistance of her husband, Jacob Matthews, Musgrove established
another trading post at Mount Venture on the Altamaha River. In 1742 Matthews
died, and Musgrove remarried once again. Her third and final husband was the
Reverend Thomas Bosomworth. This marriage provided an opportunity for Musgrove
to further increase her power. The couple probably met when she interpreted for
Bosomworth, who was sent to the young colony as a Christian missionary. When
the marriage was announced, however, few Georgians believed it to be true.
Musgrove's marriage signified a rise in status that few had foreseen. Musgrove,
who had earlier married among the lower branches of the colonial order, now
connected herself to "respectable" society. The daughter of an Indian
trader and a Creek mother had risen to the upper echelon of colonial society.
Bosomworth's status and
Musgrove's skills formed a powerful combination. Together they traveled into
Creek villages with messages from Oglethorpe and the English king, brought back
speeches from various Creek leaders, and hosted Creek and American visitors at
their home. They occasionally taught Christian missionaries the Muskogee
language, and otherwise tried to mediate interactions between Creeks and
colonists.
Controversial Land
Claim
Despite her central
role in Georgia's Indian affairs, Musgrove is more often remembered for her
controversial land claims in Georgia. The controversy began in 1737 when
Yamacraw chief Tomochichi granted her a plot of land near Savannah. The claim
was unsettled when Musgrove married Bosomworth. In the following years Lower
Creek chief Malatchi granted the Bosomworths three of the Sea Islands that the
Indians claimed as their own—Ossabaw, Sapelo, and St. Catherines. British
officials, however, refused these claims on the grounds that a nation can cede
or grant land only to a nation, not to individuals.

Musgrove pursued her
claims to the lands for the next decade. In 1749 more than 200 Creeks
accompanied her to Savannah to support her claim. With Georgia officials
unwilling to accept the grant, Musgrove eventually traveled to England to plead
her case. In 1754 the Board of Trade heard her case and referred it to the
Georgia courts. When she returned to Georgia, the disputed land had come under
Georgia control. In 1760 a compromise was finally reached under royal governor
Henry Ellis—in return for the right to St. Catherines Island and £2,100,
Musgrove relinquished her claims to the other lands. Afterward Musgrove ceased
to play a central role in Georgia-Creek relations. She died on St. Catherines
Island sometime after 1763.
In 1993 Musgrove was
inducted into Georgia Women of Achievement.
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