Tombigbee River

The Tombigbee River is a tributary of the Mobile River, approximately 200 mi (325 km) long, in the U.S. states of Mississippi and Alabama. Together with the Alabama, it merges to form the short Mobile River before the latter empties into Mobile Bay on the Gulf of Mexico. The Tombigbee watershed encompasses much of the rural coastal plain of western Alabama and northeastern Mississippi, flowing generally southward. The river provides one of the principal routes of commercial navigation in the southern United States, as it is navigable along much of its length through locks and connected in its upper reaches to the Tennessee River via the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway.

Tombigbee River
Tombigbee River at White Bluff (Ecor Blanc) in Demopolis
Tombigbee and Alabama river basins
Location
CountryUnited States
StateAlabama and Mississippi
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationConfluence of Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway and Black Warrior River
Mouth 
  location
Mobile River, at Mobile, Alabama
Length200 miles (320 km)

The name "Tombigbee" comes from Choctaw /itumbi ikbi/, meaning "box maker, coffin maker", from /itumbi/, "box, coffin", and /ikbi/, "maker". The river formed the eastern boundary of the historical Choctaw lands, from the 17th century when they coalesced as a people, to the forced Indian Removal by the United States in the 1830s.

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