Saturday, January 17, 2015

'Indian village of Piachi escaped DeSoto's cruelty'

George Buster Singleton
(For decades, local historian and paranormal investigator George “Buster” Singleton published a weekly newspaper column called “Somewhere in Time.” The column below, which was titled “Indian village of Piachi escaped DeSoto’s cruelty” was originally published in the Oct. 13, 1994 edition of The Monroe Journal in Monroeville, Ala.)

Picture yourself looking over the mighty river from the high bank somewhere near where the large grain elevator is now located near Claiborne. The day is Tues., Oct. 12, 1540.

It is a beautiful, dry autumn day; the river is at a very low level due to the exceptionally dry weather in the area for the past two months or so. You have come down river from your village of Piachi, gathering mussels along the sandy banks. The current of the river is almost at a standstill because of the lack of water from up in the hills to the northeast. Looking out across the river, it looks as if a grown man or a large deer could almost wade across it.

Looking across to the west side, you wonder what is about to happen. There is a large gathering of what is said to be soldiers and war horses near the water’s edge. The men on the bank with shiny clothing sit on the backs of these strange animals called horses. The horses, too, have on a white shining cover. You have watched other strange animals being herded down the west bank of the river from an unknown area upstream.

Strange animals

You have been told by some of your people that the smaller animals are swine or hogs. The larger ones have horns like the deer that roam the areas along the great river. They are called cattle. Men with dark skin are herding the strange animals. There is much yelling and hollering going on around them.

There has been talk in your village of Piachi, which is located up the river aways, that a strange man by the name of Hernando DeSoto has come this way from a country across the great waters called Spain. He has brought with him this strange group that he calls his army.

It is said that he and his army have journeyed from the northeast in search for something called gold. The story is circulated in the village that the man called DeSoto has been cruel to the native people to the northeast and to those of your village he has come in contact with.

He has with him several who speak your tongue, and he always has them ask something about a city made of that stuff he calls gold. When no one answers, he has them beaten or even killed. The talk in the village is that he thinks that there are seven of these gold cities, and that he is holding a great chief from the northeast prisoner. The chief’s name is said to be Tuscaloosa. It is said that this man called DeSoto thinks that chief Tuscaloosa knows the location of these seven cities of gold.

Watching a tall man

You look across the river again; it is true. There is a tall man dressed as your people do sitting on an animal called a horse. The man is so tall until his feet are touching the ground There are several men in shining clothing close to the tall man as though watching him.

If this tall man is chief Tuscaloosa, he does not seem to be worried. He is watching the men bunching together driftwood that they have gathered from along the water’s edge. They are making what are believed to be some type of crude rafts out of the wood.

The men are taking off their shining clothing and that of their horses. They are placing it on the bunches of driftwood. The horses are being led into the river; some of the almost naked men are riding them. The animals called horses are swimming the deep water in the middle of the river. Some have made it across to the east bank. These are yelling to the other side and motioning for the rest to start across.

The rough wood rafts have now started across with the animals called cattle swimming alongside. The waters of the river must be quite cold; the men are yelling and shaking. Fires have been started on the east bank as those who have crossed gather around them.

The hogs are being caught and their feet are tied together. Then they are placed on the driftwood rafts for the trip across the river. Strange noise like squeals are coming from the swine as the rafts leave the west bank. The dark-skinned herders are watching the rafts and are holding on the sides as they make their way across the deep waters in the middle of the large stream.

Drowning man

Alongside one raft, a scream is heard as one of the dark-skinned men sinks beneath the river’s surface. No effort is made to try and help the drowning man; he disappears from sight down the river aways.

Looking to the west, the evening sun is slowly making its way down on the distant horizon. Before too long, the shadows of the coming darkness will begin to creep across the east bank of the mighty river.

The strange gathering of DeSoto’s army begins to move up river in the direction of the village of Piachi. Seeing that they are heading in a northeastwardly direction, you leave your observation point and hurry toward the village to warn everyone of the coming of these strangers who are dressed in strange and shining clothing.

Reaching the village of Piachi, word is quickly passed among the villagers of the coming army of DeSoto. The women and small children quickly disappear in the heavy woods to the east of the village. You find out that the chief of your village has known about these strangers for some time. They have been watched since that night, two days past, when they camped at the mouth of the large creek on the east bank.

You also learn that several messengers have come down river from the neighboring villages, telling your chief of the pillaging and cruelty done to their people by DeSoto’s followers.

As the evening shadows slowly creep across the large clearing to the east of the village of Piachi, the first of the moving columns of riders come to a halt as the village chief and his council slowly move out to meet them. You hear the man called DeSoto, speaking through his interpreter, that his army is sick. They became sick from food that they had eaten during the past two days.

He goes on to say that they are week and need rest. He asks if there is anything the village medicine men, or wind walkers, can do to cure his men of this sickness.

A medicine man is summoned and told of the sickness; the medicine man disappears from sight. Shortly he reappears, carrying with him a large bundle of weeds. He tells DeSoto to have his men burn these weeds and mix the ashes with the food of the evening meal. DeSoto instructs one of his men to give the medicine man a large string of beads. Across the clearing, the evening fires have already been lighted as the army of DeSoto begins to settle in for the night.

The army of DeSoto will camp at the village of Piachi for a period of three nights and two days. On the morning of Oct. 15, word was passed that the army had recovered from its sickness. DeSoto had demanded guides from the village of Piachi to show him and his army the way to the large central village of Maubila in the high hills to the northeast.

Here, he expects to find much of the gold and riches he searches for. Little does he know that runners have already been sent to warn Maubila of his coming army.

Before the sun has set three days later, DeSoto and his army will have suffered a devastating defeat. He would lose over 65 of his best soldiers; he would also lose over 200 of his best war horses and much of his swine and cattle.

DeSoto himself will receive a serious head wound; this will affect his ability to reason for the rest of his life. But the bloody battle of Maubila is another story.


(Singleton, the author of the 1991 book “Of Foxfire and Phantom Soldiers,” passed away at the age of 79 on July 19, 2007. A longtime resident of Monroeville, he was born on Dec. 14, 1927 in Marengo County and served as the administrator of the Monroeville National Guard unit from 1964 to 1987. He is buried in Pineville Cemetery in Monroeville. The column above and all of Singleton’s other columns are available to the public through the microfilm records at the Monroe County Public Library in Monroeville. Singleton’s columns are presented here each week for research and scholarship purposes and as part of an effort to keep his work and memory alive.)

No comments:

Post a Comment