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Purchase a framed print of the photograph "Red Eagle, William Weatherford, Creek #2" by British Library. Choose from multiple print sizes and hundreds of frame and mat options. All framed prints are professionally printed, framed, assembled, and shipped within 3 - 4 business days and delivered ready-to-hang on your wall.
Red Eagle, William Weatherford, Creek Art Print by British Library. Choose from multiple sizes and hundreds of frame and mat options. All prints are professionally printed, packaged, and shipped within 3 - 4 business days.
Red Eagle, William Weatherford, Creek is a photograph by British Library which was uploaded on June 14th, 2016. The photograph may be purchased as wall art, home decor, apparel, phone cases, greeting cards, and more.
William Weatherford, also known after his death as Red Eagle (c. 1765 – March 24, 1824), was a Creek chief of the Upper Creek towns who led many of the Red Sticks actions in the Creek War (1813–1814) against Lower Creek towns and against allied forces of the United States.
Compare DNA and explore genealogy for William Weatherford born abt. 1781 Coosada, Elmore County, Alabama, USA died 1824 Little River, Baldwin, Alabama, USA including ancestors + descendants + 3 photos + 24 genealogist comments + questions + DNA connections + more in the free family tree community.
3 Ιουλ 2024 · William Weatherford (ca. 1781-1824), arguably the best known Red Stick war leader in the Creek War of 1813-14, was born around 1781 near the town of Coosada, an Alabama town of the Creek confederacy.
George G. Eggleston’s Red Eagle and the Wars with the Creek Indians (1878) William Weatherford led the Red Stick Creek attack against Fort Mims on August 30, 1813, thereby transforming a civil war among the Creek Indians into an American war of retaliation against the Creek Nation.