Answer:
During the French and Indian War, Georgia was most vulnerable to raids by the Creek and Cherokee Indian nations.
Step-by-step explanation:
The French and Indian War was an armed confrontation between Britain and France in North America, regarding their different colonies on the continent. Most of the great Native American tribes allied with the French, as they had conflicting relations with the British colonies.
Of these tribes, the Creek and the Cherokee were some of the most contributing to the French side, making continuous attacks on different British populations in the southern colonies. These tribes were in territories corresponding to the present-day states of Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma and the Carolinas, so that colonists in the province of Georgia were directly exposed to such attacks from the west. This caused the Georgian forces to focus more on the defense of the colony than on an active collaboration on the main battle front. In addition, another threat, not so close and imminent but equal or more dangerous was a possible Spanish invasion from Florida.