When she was about eight years old, Sehoy III moved into the household of Alexander's advisor and eventual father-in-law, the Dutch trader Jacob Moniac, and his wife Polly.
[3] In about 1776, in Little Tallassee, Sehoy III married David Taitt, a Scottish surveyor and mapmaker who was Deputy Superintendent of Indian Affairs to the Creek Nation at the time.
David Taitt left Little Tallassee in 1778 due to the request of his superintendent and the danger posed to him by factional fighting there, and he does not appear to have maintained contact with Sehoy III and their children.
[5] In 1779/80, Sehoy III met and married Charles Weatherford, a trader from Virginia who had come to Coosada to seek refuge from Revolutionary War fighting.
[7] Charles had moved to a smaller residence downstream and Sehoy, defending her matrilineal wealth from him, ran a trading establishment and lived 'in some taste, but expensively.