The creek has a
Choctaw language name and a large
Choctaw town, Center, once stood on its banks. Center was the county seat of Hancock until the expulsion of Native Americans from the South in the 1830s.
Catahoula Creek has frequently been used for scientific studies of fish. Treasure hunters following rumors of buried treasure frequently dig holes in the banks.
The
headwaters have high gradients, 3.8–4.8 m/km (20–25 ft/mile) but becomes much more gentle in the lower reaches.[5] Rainfall in the area is one of the highest in the US at an annual average of 154.2 cm (52.8 in).[6] The high gradient and heavy rainfall can lead to fast-flowing water causing major shifts in the sandy stream bed. This seasonal high flow usually declines after a few days.[7]
Native American connection
Catahoula Creek is a name derived from the
Choctaw language. Sources vary whether it means "beloved lake" or "lake people".[8]
Center
The fork between Catahoula Creek and Playground Branch (about a mile east of the town of
Caesar) was the site of the major
Choctaw settlement Center. The name is a translation of a
Muskhogean word meaning "coming together" or "where everybody meets." Center was founded by the Choctaw chief Muchihira, after he sold his settlement at
Picayune in 1800 to Frenchman Steven Jarrell.[9] It was the largest Native American town in South Mississippi with a population of 1,500 in 1815. Center became the first county seat of Hancock County. It gained a courthouse, post office, and many other civic buildings during this period. In 1830, the Choctaw were expelled in the
Trail of Tears episode, the county seat was moved to
Gainesville, and Center was abandoned.[10]
Scientific studies
Catahoula Creek has been the location of a number of scientific studies
Multiple studies (in 1975, 1987, and 2000) of the
blacktail shiner have been based on a large sample of the fish taken from Catahoula Creek in 1970. The entire sample was taken at the same time and in the same place (below the mouth of Dead Tiger Creek). The reason so many studies have used this sample is that a single, large sample elimates variables introduced by taking smaller samples at different times and places.[13]
Buried treasure
A large sum of money was supposedly buried somewhere along the banks of Catahoula Creek in 1856 or 1857 by the outlaw gang led by
James Copeland. The money, said to be contained in three kegs, has never been found and numerous treasure hunters continue to look for it.[14] Many holes exist along the banks of the creek as a result of this activity.[15]
Heins, David C.; Rooks, Russell, "Life history of the naked sand darter, Ammocrypta beani, in southeastern Mississippi, pp. 61–70 in, Lindquist, David G.; Page, Lawrence M., Environmental Biology of Darters, Springer Science & Business Media, 1984
ISBN9061935067.
Pecora, William T. (director), Surface Water Supply of the United States 1961–65: Part 2. South Atlantic Slope and Eastern Gulf of Mexico Basins: Volume 3.
Basins from Apalachicola River to Pearl River, Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1970.
Perrin, Rosemarie D., Explorers Ltd. Guide to Lost Treasure in the United States and Canada, Cameron House, 1977
ISBN0811720748.