<P> Oglethorpe returned to England in June 1734 with goodwill ambassadors in the persons of Yamacraw chief Tomochichi, Senauki, his wife, their nephew Toonahowi, and six other Lower Creek tribesmen . The Indians were regarded as celebrities, feted by the Trustees, interviewed by the king and queen, entertained by the archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth Palace, and made available to meet the public . All but two of them posed with a large number of Trustees at the Georgia office for the painter William Verelst . One of the absent Indians died of smallpox, despite the ministrations of the eminent physician Sir Hans Sloane, and was buried by his grieving comrades in the burial plot of St. John's in Westminster . After performing their social obligations, the Indians became tourists, visiting the Tower of London, St. Paul's Cathedral, Oglethorpe's Westbrook Manor, and Egmont's Charlton House, and enjoying a variety of plays, from Shakespearean dramas to comic farces . </P> <P> The Indians departed on October 31, 1734 . With them went fifty - seven Salzburgers to join the forty - two families already in Georgia at Ebenezer . In 1734 and 1735 two groups of Moravians went to Georgia . As pacifists they opposed doing military duty and left Georgia by 1740 . After delivering the Indians and Salzburgers to Georgia, Captain George Dunbar took his ship, the Prince of Wales, to Scotland . Dunbar and Hugh Mackay recruited 177 Highlanders, most of them members of Clan Chattan in Inverness - shire . In 1736 the Highlanders founded Darien on Georgia's southern boundary, the Altamaha . Dunbar subsequently served as Oglethorpe's aide in Georgia and in Oglethorpe's campaign against the Spanish in 1745 . </P> <P> Oglethorpe went to Georgia in 1736, with the approval of his fellow Trustees, to found two new settlements on the frontiers, Frederica on St. Simons Island and Augusta at the headwaters of the Savannah River in Indian country . Both places were garrisoned by troops . In 1737 Oglethorpe returned to England to demand a regiment of regulars from a reluctant Walpole . Not only did he get his regiment and a commission as colonel, but Egmont persuaded Walpole to pay for all military expenses . </P> <P> In 1735, the Trustees proposed three pieces of legislation to the Privy Council and had the satisfaction of securing the concurrence of king and council . An Indian act required Georgia licenses for trading west of the Savannah River . Another act banned the use of rum in Georgia . A third act outlawed slavery in Georgia . South Carolina protested the Indian act vehemently and objected to the Trustees' order to restrict the passage of rum on the Savannah River . The Board of Trade sided with South Carolina, and a compromise was reached, allowing traders with Carolina licenses to continue their traditional trade west of the Savannah River . The Trustees objected to the Board of Trade's tampering and refrained from proposing any additional legislation requiring approval of the Privy Council . </P>

Who ran the colony and under what authority in the trustee period