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Nacoochee Mound

Coordinates:34°41′01″N83°42′32″W / 34.6835°N 83.709°W /34.6835; -83.709
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Archaeological site in Georgia, US

34°41′01″N83°42′32″W / 34.6835°N 83.709°W /34.6835; -83.709

Nacoochee Mound
Ground-level view of the mound
The Nacoochee Mound
Nacoochee Mound is located in Georgia
Nacoochee Mound
Location within modern Georgia
LocationHelen, GeorgiaWhite County, GeorgiaUSA
RegionWhite County, Georgia
Coordinates34°41′01″N83°42′32″W / 34.68351°N 83.709°W /34.68351; -83.709
History
Founded100 BCE
Abandoned1600 CE
PeriodsEarlyMiddle Woodland,Lamar phase
CulturesSouth Appalachian Mississippian culture
Site notes
Excavation dates1915, 2004
ArchaeologistsFrederick Webb Hodge,George H. Pepper
Architecture
Architectural stylesplatform mound
Architectural detailsNumber of temples: 1
Sautee Valley Historic District
NRHP reference No.86002742
Added to NRHPAugust 20, 1986[1]

TheNacoochee Mound (Smithsonian trinomial 9WH3) is anarchaeological site on the banks of theChattahoochee River inWhite County, in the northeast part of theU.S. state ofGeorgia.Georgia State Route 17 andGeorgia State Route 75 have a junction near here.

First occupied as early as 100-500 CE byWoodland culture people, the site was later developed and occupied more intensively from 1350 to 1600 CE by peoples of theSouth Appalachian Mississippian culture (a regional variation of theMississippian culture).[2] The latter people built a characteristicplatform mound at this site, and evidence of related villages were found both east and west of the mound. A professional archeological excavation revealed a total of 75 human burials, with artifacts that support dating of the site.

The late 19th-century gazebo was installed on top of the mound in 1890 by a European-American owner of the land. After the mound was excavated, former governorLamartine Griffin Hardman had a reconstruction of it built on his property south ofHelen, Georgia.[citation needed]

George Gustav Heye, sponsor of the original excavation in 1915, claimed that the historicCherokee had inhabited the site,[3] which was within their homelands. A 1955 historical marker on the site refers to such habitation. But, James B. Langford of The Coosawattee Foundation says that the excavation necessary to confirm such a claim has not been performed.[4]

A 1734 land grant between Great Britain and the Cherokee lists Nacoochee (Cherokee:ᎾᎫᏥ,romanized: Nagutsi) as a town of Cherokee territory but does not describe its exact location.[5]

The archeological site is part of theSautee Valley Historic District. It was added to theNational Register of Historic Places on August 20, 1986 as reference number 86002742.[1]

Site description

[edit]
Mississippianstone box grave, showing arranged position of human remains

In the 1870s, the mound site was owned by Captain John H. Nichols, who reported plowing upstone box graves to the west of the mound. (These are now known to be typical artifacts of the Mississippian culture.) Charles C. Jones described the mound as being 16 feet (4.9 m) in height, in his 1873 report on Native American sites in Georgia. In 1890 Captain Nichols removed the top 2 feet (0.61 m) of the mound and built a gazebo on its new summit, a feature that became noted locally.

The mound was formally excavated in 1915 by a team of archaeologists headed byFrederick Webb Hodge andGeorge H. Pepper and sponsored by theHeye Foundation, theMuseum of the American Indian in New York, and theBureau of American Ethnology (now part of theSmithsonian Institution).[6] This is considered one of the earliest scientific archeological excavations in the state.[4]

The Museum of the American Indian and Heye Foundation published the book by Heye, Hodge and Pepper about the excavation,The Nacoochee Mound in Georgia (1918), which included photographs.[3] The excavation showed two intervals of mound construction. It uncovered 75 human burials, including 56 adults, seven adolescents, and four children. Eight other bodies were too degraded for their ages to be determined.[6]

The burials were layered, dating from different time periods. About a third of the individuals were buried with artifacts indicative of social status, including hammeredcopper and stonecelts,conch shell beads and cups, and elaborateMississippian culture pottery.[7] Some later burials included glass beads and sheetbrass ornaments, indicating that these were intrusive burials from the 17th-century contact period withEuropeans.[4]

A clay effigy of a human head unearthed by the Heye Foundation expedition
Georgia State Historical Marker, dated 1955

Test excavations at the site in 2004 by theUniversity of Georgia Archaeology Field School resulted in evidence that, combined with current knowledge and theory, enabled refinement of dating related to inhabitants of the site. Some 87 postholes were made around the village site, the first excavation at the village. It was first occupied during the EarlyMiddle WoodlandCartersville Phase.

The village was revealed to have been most intensively occupied during theMississippian period, from 1350 to 1600 CE during theLamar phase, when the platform mound is believed to have been constructed. It is a characteristic construction of the period, associated with ceremonial and ritual uses. In addition, pottery sherds characteristic of theEtowah Indian Mounds site inCartersville, Georgia were found at the site and are evidence that the two sites were occupied during the same time period. A small village area was located in the field to the east of the mound. A much larger village area in the field to the west of the mound was found to have been occupied primarily during the later period.[6]

Archaeological evidence suggests that Nacoochee Mound site, and a nearby mound site called theEastwood Site (9Wh2), served as local administrative centers for associated villages in the late 15th century and early 16th centuries.[6] The village was not fully excavated.

James B. Langford suggests that it may have been occupied later than the period above. Nacoochee and Chota were noted asCherokee towns in this valley by the Colonel George Chicken expedition of 1715-1716 to the interior following theYamasee War. These towns were later shown on maps of the area. This site may have been one of the villages. Both Nacoochee and Chota towns were abandoned by the Cherokee after the mid-eighteenth century.[4][6]

A bronze state historical marker at the site, dated 1955, says that, according to legend, it is the "ancient Cherokee town ofGauxule, visited byHernando de Soto in 1540".[8] While there was speculation about De Soto's path, later 20th-century scholars do not believe the early translations of his chronicles were accurate. Since then scholars have pieced together De Soto's route based on the use of topographic and geographic data, as well as the chronicles. Some parts are still disputed.[9]

The original Nacoochee Mound was partially excavated. Former Georgia governorLamartine Griffin Hardman had a reconstruction of this mound built at his estate in the Nacoochee Valley inWhite County, two miles south ofHelen. It still stands.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"National Register of Historic Places".Archived from the original on 2012-08-03. Retrieved2012-04-09.
  2. ^"Southeastern Prehistory:Mississippian and Late Prehistoric Period".National Park Service. Retrieved2012-04-10.
  3. ^abHeye, George G.; Hodge, Frederick W.; Pepper, George H. (1918).The Nacoochee Mound in Georgia. New York: Museum of the American Indian/Heye Foundation. Retrieved2007-05-27.
  4. ^abcdLangford, James B. Jr. (2002-08-08)."Nacoochee Mound".The New Georgia Encyclopedia. The Georgia Humanities Council and theUniversity of Georgia Press. Retrieved2012-04-10.
  5. ^Webber, Mabel L. (October 1918)."An Indian Land Grant in 1734".The South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine.19 (4):157–161.JSTOR 27569468.
  6. ^abcdeMark Williams (2004)."Nacoochee Revisited: The 2004 Project"(PDF). University of Georgia, Lamar Institute. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2010-06-12.
  7. ^Rodning, Christopher B. (2014). "Cherokee Towns and Calumet Ceremonialism in Eastern North America".American Antiquity.79 (3):425–443.doi:10.7183/0002-7316.79.3.425.S2CID 163189952.
  8. ^Johnson, J. G. (1925). "The Spaniards in Northern Georgia during the sixteenth century".Georgia Historical Quarterly.9 (2):159–168.JSTOR 40575817.
  9. ^Milanich, Jerald T.; Hudson, Charles (1993).Hernando de Soto and the Indians of Florida. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. pp. 8–9.ISBN 0-8130-1170-1.

Further reading

[edit]
  • George G. Heye, F. W. Hodge, and George H. Pepper,The Nacoochee Mound in Georgia (New York: Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, 1918). Available scanned full text online at Internet Archive (https://archive.org/details/nacoocheemoundin00heyeiala)
  • Robert Wauchope,Archaeological Survey of Northern Georgia with a Test of Some Cultural Hypotheses (Salt Lake City: Society for American Archaeology, 1966).

External links

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