History Instructor Vickie Everitte conducted a historical exploration of Georgia’s Wiregrass Region and the complex stories of survival, resistance, and adaptation that unfolded there after the 1814 Treaty of Fort Jackson.
WWALS Board Member Janet Martin gave a brief introduction to this WWALS Webinar. Questions and answers were at the end, including a distinguished guest.
Geography of Opportunity, by Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar, 2025-12-11
Here is a zoom video of this WWALS Webinar:
Her slides are on the WWALS website in PowerPoint and PDF. Images of each page are below.
Native American and Passageways to Freedom within the Wiregrass Region1
As settlers moved south of the Oconee River, drawn by the land’s economic promise, waves of migration and militia efforts reshaped the landscape—and the lives of the Native American families who called it home. Through rivers, streams, and the vast Okefenokee Swamp, Indigenous people found ways not only to endure but to carve out paths of freedom and self-determination amid the U.S. Indian Removal Policy of the 1830s.
Drawing from original correspondence between settlers, militia, and Georgia’s governors in Milledgeville, this presentation reveals how waterways became corridors of escape and survival. As Everitte reminds us, “Swamps are places on the margins — as much, they are places of transition, opportunity, and challenge.”2
About the Speaker
Vickie Everitte is an adjunct History Instructor at Valdosta State University, where she earned her M.A. in History with a concentration in Public History. She also holds an M.E. from the University of Alaska-Fairbanks and a B.S. in Secondary Social Science Education from Valdosta State College.
Now living in Tucson, Arizona, Vickie volunteers as an Educator with the Arizona Historical Society and continues her passion for historic preservation and local history projects in Valdosta. Originally from Valdosta, she grew up along the Alapaha River near Willacoochee, which was an early influence on her lifelong interest in the region’s cultural and natural heritage.
1 Joyce Chaplin used “Geography of Opportunity” to describe Georgia’s post-American Revolutionary migratory onslaught of the planter elite into the state. I am using these words to explore Native American utilization of the Wiregrass Region, including the waterways.
2 Megan Kate Nelson, “The Landscape of Disease: Swamps and Medical Discourse in the American Southeast, 1800-1880.” Mississippi Quarterly 55, 1 (Fall 2002): 567.
For other WWALS Webinars, see:
https://wwals.net/about/wwals-webinars/
They are usually on the second or third Thursday of the month, from noon to 1PM. After a brief introduction, the speaker has about 45 minutes, with the remaining time for questions and answers and discussion.
They are recorded, so if you miss one, you can see it later on
YouTube. Here’s a WWALS video playlist:
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKwQ5xfKf-QxWRGrV9iExlyXQIVnzOtPX&si=0Atnjwrm_ikyV-sh
WWALS Webinars are organized by the WWALS Events Committee; maybe you’d like to join that committee and help.
For more WWALS outings and events as they are posted, see the WWALS outings web page, https://wwals.net/outings/. WWALS members also get an upcoming list in the Tannin Times newsletter.
About WWALS: Since June 2012, WWALS Watershed Coalition, Inc. (WWALS) is an IRS 501(c)(3) nonprofit charity working for a healthy watershed with clean, swimmable, fishable, drinkable water.
Mission: WWALS advocates for conservation and stewardship of the surface waters and groundwater of the Suwannee River Basin and Estuary, in south Georgia and north Florida, among them the Withlacoochee, Willacoochee, Alapaha, Little, Santa Fe, and Suwannee River watersheds, through education, awareness, environmental monitoring, and citizen activities.
Our Watershed: The 10,000-square-mile WWALS territory includes the Suwannee River from the Okefenokee Swamp to the Gulf of Mexico, plus the Suwannee River Estuary, and tributaries such as the Withlacoochee and Alapaha Rivers as far north as Cordele in Georgia, as well as parts of the Floridan Aquifer, which is the primary water source for drinking, agriculture, and industry for millions of Georgia and Florida residents.
Suwannee Riverkeeper: Since December 2016, WWALS is the WATERKEEPER® Alliance Member for the Suwannee River Basin and Estuary as Suwannee RIVERKEEPER®, which is a project and a staff position of WWALS focusing on our advocacy.
-jsq, John S. Quarterman, Suwannee RIVERKEEPER®
You can help with clean, swimmable, fishable, drinkable, water in the 10,000-square-mile Suwannee River Basin in Florida and Georgia by becoming a WWALS member today!
https://wwals.net/donations/
Stills
Movie: Good stewards for our waterways, Vickie Everitte, 2025-12-11 –jsq for WWALS
Withlacoochee River, 2025-12-11, 12:05:36 –jsq for WWALS
Creek Nation, Treaty of Fort Jackson, 2025-12-11, 12:07:14 –jsq for WWALS
Indian land claim extinguished at the Treaty of Ft Jackson, 2025-12-11, 12:09:04 –jsq for WWALS
Slides
Geography of Opportunity, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Withlacoochee River, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Treaty of Fort Jackson 1814, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Indian land cessions in the United State, 1899, Royce & Thomas, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Indian land claim extinguished at the Treaty of Ft Jackson, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
1830 Map of Georgia, Okefinocau Swamp, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
1831 Map of Georgia, OKE FEN O CAU SWAMP, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Cypress knees, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Palmettos, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Lily pads and cinnamon ferns, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Wetland hardwoods, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
A New Map of Part of the United States of North America by John Cary, 1806, , 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Franklinville, Irwins (Alapahoochee) River, and Micco Town, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Photos are from Lowndes and Ware Counties and taken by Vickie Everitte, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Swamps are places on the margins… places of transition, opportunity, and challenge, Megan Kate Nelson, 2002,, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Thank you! with tea-colored river water, 2025-12-11 –Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar
PDF
Short Link:

Pingback: Geography of Opportunity, by Vickie Everitte, a WWALS Webinar, 2025-12-11 | WWALS Watershed Coalition (WWALS) is Suwannee RIVERKEEPER®