

Not the same as Wu-te-he 'Wuttah'
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Watts-3165
The mother of Bob and Lucy Benge is often referred to as "Wurteh Watts," a name for which there is no documentation. "Watts" comes from the apparent fact that Cherokee Chief John Watts was her brother, but a time line makes it unlikely that white trader John Watts was her father. He does not appear in records relating to the Cherokee until after 1750. "Wurteh's" son, Bob Benge was born no later than 1765, probably closer to 1760, meaning his mother must have been born no later than 1750, and probably closer to 1745.
As with most early Cherokee women, almost nothing is known of the woman called “Wurteh Watts,” the mother of Bob “The Bench” Benge. She is named in no records and is known only by extrapolation from references to her father, her brother, and her son. She was born in the Cherokee Nation about 1750, usually listed as the daughter of white trader/interpreter John Watts and a Cherokee woman who was the sister of chiefs Old Tassel and Doublehead. The family lived in or near the Cherokee town of Chota. John Watts came into the Cherokee Nation before 1752 when he accompanied a Cherokee delegation to Williamsburg, VA as interpreter. [1] A deposition from Trader Robert Due/Dews from 1777 stated that Old Tassel was the uncle of the Cherokee John Watts/“Young Tassel.” [2] Bob Benge and his brother “The Tail” are described as the nephews of John Watts, leading to the conclusion that their mother was the daughter of John Watts the elder and sister of John Watts the younger. [3]
“Wurteh” may have had more than one husband, but only one, white trader John Benge, is certain. They were the parents of two, possibly three children, Bob “The Bench” Benge, Lucy Benge, and “The Tail,” who is described as a brother of Bob Benge but whose father is uncertain. [4]
Her date of death is unknown.
Note: for discussion of other possible spouses and children please see the G2G thread attached to this profile.
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Benge-104
John Benge, who spent much of his life as a trader in the Cherokee Nation, [1] was a white man from Virginia. He married Elizabeth Lewis about 1760 in Ablemarle County, Virginia; they were the parents of three children, a son, (possibly William Lewis Benge), a son Obediah, and a daughter Sally. According to "The Fielder Family Record"an unsourced family history written in 1857 by Herbert Fielder, the grandson of Sally Benge Fielder, :“The father of Sally abandoned her while an infant, in Virginia, and came to the Cherokee nation and married an Indian [woman], by whom he raised the Indian family of half-breeds named Benge, who were somewhat famous with their tribe."
John fathered three Cherokee children:
by a Cherokee woman often referred to as Wurteh, believed to be a sister of John Watts, the Cherokee chief. [2] It was common for white traders to have concurrent white and Cherokee families, but it appears that he simply abandoned his white family at some point in the 1760's. His date of death is unknown, but he was still alive in 1793 when he warned Indian Agent John McKee that his life was in danger from John Watts. [3] [4]
1750 |
1750
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Tasagi Town, Cherokee Nation East
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1762 |
1762
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Toqua, Cherokee Nation East
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1768 |
1768
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Toqua, Cherokee Nation East
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1776 |
1776
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RattleSnake Springs, (Tennessee), Cherokee Nation
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1814 |
1814
Age 64
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Willstown, Cherokee Nation East
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