Whiskey Chitto Creek
Whiskey Chitto Creek, or Ouiska Chitto Creek, also known officially as Whisky Chitto Creek is an spring-fed creek located in Allen, Beauregard, and Vernon parishes, Louisiana, in the United States. It is a tributary to the Calcasieu River and begins at present-day Fort Polk, flows near Sugartown, near Grant, down to Mittie and near Leblanc.
Description
Whiskey Chitto Creek is part of the Calcasieu River Basin. The creek is surrounded by a mixed pine-hardwood mid-growth forest and passes through low hills. Common wildlife around this creek are livestock, turkeys, deer, and raccoons. It contains largemouth bass, spotted bass, bream, catfish, turtles, and many other species.The northern section in Vernon Parish passes through the Kisatchie National Forest, and is a landmark and common vacation spot for many locals in the region. It is overseen by the Vernon Unit of the Calcasieu Ranger District. Kisatchie National Forest has much appeal for its wilderness-like qualities. The stream is a designated "scenic waterway" by the Louisiana Scenic Rivers Act of 1970, administered by Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers declared it to be a 'navigable stream of the United States' in 2008.
The stream near Mittie, Louisiana, is the site of where a federal agent found evidence of illegal cutting and floating of logs off federal lands that began the Calcasieu Log War of 1877-1879
Based on census records and earliest cemeteries near the stream, the lower section of this stream was permanently settled during the 1850s and 1860s. Early cemeteries established in the 1850s and 1860s along the lower part of stream are named after or connected to these families: Leblanc, Cole, Simmons, and Young The central section near Sugartown was settled in the 1820s and is the oldest settlement area in what is now Beauregard Parish. Sugartown was an important settlement in early Imperial Calcasieu Parish. The sandy soil along the stream is famous for growing "Sugartown Watermelons." The section near Mittie is famous for canoeing and fishing.
Ernest S. Clements, famous local politician, who served as a Senator in the Louisiana Legislature, as Secretary of Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries, and as Louisiana Public Service Commissioner, had a camp along the stream near Mittie and enjoyed his time on the stream and interacting with those who enjoyed this natural resource. The United Methodist Church operates the UskiChitto Retreat Center along the stream north of Leblanc, Louisiana. The natural beauty of the stream corridor is an important aspect of the facility's 120 acres. Visitors to URC can imagine a time when this area was a virtual wilderness and visualize the large log rafts floated down the stream between the 1870s and World War I.
Ouiska Chitto, meaning "Big Cane Creek," is a transliteration of the name given to the creek by the Choctaw people, the original settlers in this area. The Choctaw words were uski for cane and chito for large. French-speaking and Anglo-American settlers adopted this derivation. It was eventually called "Whiskey Chitto Creek." The Choctaws were displaced from Mississippi in the early 1800s by settlers and found the stream to be very suitable as it was similar to colder and fast-running streams they lived along in Mississippi and in a wilderness area. In the 1830s, a Choctaw village was located south of Sugartown along Indian Branch which empties into Whiskey Chitto. The Choctaw are often referred to as "River People." They may have also found the stream to be attractive as a source of cane for making baskets. Even today, many of the descendants of early settlers see themselves as "River People" who have a deep connection with the stream for fishing and recreational activities, an important part of their cultural heritage. Some have even heard family stories that they have some Choctaw in their DNA.
The United States Board on Geographic Names, the official arbiter of geographic names in the United States, decided in 1963 that the official name for the creek is spelled '''Whisky Chitto Creek.'''