::Native.Strength::

March 29, 2010

Honoring a tribe’s history with art

Filed under: News Blog — GreyMalkin @ 2:22 pm

http://seattletimes .nwsource. com/html/ localnews/ 2011454536_ locarver27m. html?syndication =rss

Working in a Port Orchard studio, George David  carves the first of three panels depicting the life of Princess  Angeline, Chief Seattle's daughter. When finished, the three panels will  celebrate the 100th anniversary of Chief Seattle Days in Suquamish,  Kitsap County.

Working in a Port Orchard studio, George David carves the first of three panels depicting the life of Princess Angeline, Chief Seattle’s daughter. When finished, the three panels will celebrate the 100th anniversary of Chief Seattle Days in Suquamish, Kitsap County.

geline, Chief Seattle’s eldest daughter, will be honored with a three-panel carving by artist George David, who was commissioned to create a work for the 100th anniversary of Chief Seattle Days in Suquamish, Kitsap County.

Three red cedar panels, which will depict her life, will be placed in a dedication in Angeline Park the third weekend of August.

David, who has been carving and painting in a Port Orchard studio, is working on the first of the 3-foot-by-7- foot panels that will show Angeline with her shawl sheltering a child and baskets she’s made. The other two panels will show her digging for clams and then in a spirit canoe ascending to the heavens.

The idea for a work to be placed in the park originated with the Suquamish Garden Club. Funding for the project has been provided by the garden club, the Suquamish Tribe and members of the community.

David’s vision for the panels came after researching Angeline’s life story. Princess Angeline lived from about 1820 until 1896.

Everyone’s gotta start somewhere; a beader’s trip down Memory Lane

Filed under: News Blog — GreyMalkin @ 2:22 pm

Do you spend time reading beaders’ blogs? I admit that it’s one of my guilty pleasures. There are some fantastic beading blogs out in cyberspace. The level of talent ranges from experienced bead artists to fresh, new beadwork made by people who are just coming into this craft. Beading blogs give me insight into other artists’ creative processes. I especially enjoy seeing pictures of studios and reading beaders’ comments about keeping materials organized. Blogs that I find most delightful are written by new beaders ‚Äî you know, the newly infected. They post pics of bracelets they’ve just finished with details about seed bead colors. I love reading about the feeling of accomplishment and glee that new beaders experience. They feed everyone’s enthusiasm!

Over the holidays, one of my oldest and bestest friends, Sherry C. , sent me an e-mail and a photo of a pair of beaded earrings that I had made for her long ago. I’m telling you, it was so long ago that I had forgotten making them. It truly touched my heart that after all these years, Sherry still has these earrings. I took a few moments and looked closely at those earrings. They reeled me back in as I thought about their simplicity. Searching for a lesson in these simple earrings, I concluded that in beading (or any other craft), we all start somewhere.

Lessons learned from an old pair of earringsIn my bead stash, I have a couple of small, plastic containers that contain bits and remnants of old bead work and beads from the ’70s. When I was a child, my momma owned a small craft store in the little Arizona town where I grew up. I still have some seed beads from that store, along with old bead work. As I pulled our these tangled bits and pieces, I realized that the beaders of 2010 have an embarrassment of riches.

Beaders have access to the finest beads made Looking at the beads that were available 30 years ago, well, the quality was … awful. Seed beads sold in craft stores usually came from Taiwan and were cheaply made with finishes that rubbed off and faded. Culling through beads to remove all the poorly shaped ones could become a past time in itself. If I wanted to find quality seed beads, I had to travel to the San Carlos Apache Tribe reservation trading post. The tribal store sold beautiful Czech charlottes on hanks, but only in a few colors. I could not even dream of the colors that we now have. Just think about the abundance of beads sold by Beyond Beadery!

Technology gives beaders incredible threads and beading cableMy old bead work was stitched with heavy, white nylon thread. Using beeswax to coat the thread was absolutely necessary because the thread shredded horribly on the sharp, irregular seed beads.

Here’s a true story: Beaders used waxed dental floss for thread when nylon thread wasn’t available. The up side to this is that the bead work had a fresh minty scent!

Beaders have so many learning resourcesThe picture for this blog shows a peyote pendant that I made decades ago. I had learned peyote stitch and was just figuring out how to increase and decrease. Back then, there weren’t any beading magazines or books; you just had to figure out what you were doing on your own. Think about the vast amount of information about beading that we have available now. No wonder beading is so popular!

Stores filled with Swarovski crystal beads — only in my dreams! In my last blog, I talked about going to New York City and visiting the sparkling K. Gottfried store. Seeing all that Swarovski has to offer in beads is mind blowing. I would have never been able to fathom such creations when I was a young beader. In those days, I would frequent thrift stores and buy old costume jewelry. By taking apart broken costume jewelry, I was able to reclaim some crystal beads. I would have never imagined buying the strands of Swarovski double AB finish beads that I own today!

Besides thinking all of the beading resources and materials that we have available now ‚Äî imagine the Internet, I mean, really! ‚Äî this type of reflection feeds my soul. A “journey” into my own beading history takes me back to Arizona, my childhood and family there; the sights, scents, and sounds of the desert; and all the people I met and know. It’s the perfect place to “go” when sitting down with a needle, thread, and beautiful 21st century beads.

One thing is for certain, I’ve got to make Sherry another pair of earrings!

Rest area offers dose of history

Filed under: News Blog — GreyMalkin @ 2:15 pm

Tribes, Nespelem team up on tribute to Chief Joseph

The new Chief Joseph Rest Area on state Route 155 at Nespelem on the Colville Reservation will be dedicated at noon April 2. It was built by the town of Nespelem and the Colville Confederated Tribes with a state Department of Transportation grant and more than $112,000 in donated cash and services. The next nearest rest stop is more than 60 miles away, at Creston on state Route 2.

Anyone who ventures away from Interstate 90 in central and eastern Washington knows rest areas are as rare as a $3 bill and a lot more useful.

But the Colville Confederated Tribes and the Town of Nespelem have done something about that.

The tribal government and the town of Nespelem will dedicate a new half-million- dollar Chief Joseph Rest Area on April 2. The facility is on state Route 155 at Nespelem, where the renowned Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce is buried.

The next nearest roadside rest area is 56 miles away on U.S. Highway 2, about 13 miles west of Davenport.

The Chief Joseph Rest Area has been nominated for a state Department of Transportation Award of Excellence.

“It’s very unique, and they did a wonderful job on the monument,” said Paul Mahre, the Wenatchee region local programs engineer who nominated the project. “It’s just really appealing to the eye.”

Tribal planner Virgil Marchand said local residents raised $112,000 for the Nespelem rest stop when a $377,000 state Department of Transportation grant proved inadequate. By the time the grant money was received in 2008, high fuel prices had driven up the cost of construction materials.

Marchand said tribal officials, who administered the grant on behalf of the town, used local resources to cover paving, curbing, an interpretive sign and boulder monuments for each of the Colville Reservation’ s 12 tribes.

The tribal Telecommunications Program donated a security system, and Marchand made the steel sculptures.

The Chief Joseph Rest Area will be owned and operated by the town of Nespelem, which is about 2¬Ω miles mile north of the tribal headquarters.

A free public luncheon will follow Friday’s dedication ceremony at noon.

First-ever Navajo Nation vice president dies

Filed under: News Blog — GreyMalkin @ 2:14 pm

http://www.azcentra l.com/news/ articles/ 2010/03/26/ 20100326marshall -plummer- dies-navajo- nation.html

A Sept. 9, 2009, photo shows  Marshall Plummer at a groundbreaking ceremony for the Navajo Heritage  Center in Farmington, N.M.

A Sept. 9, 2009, photo shows Marshall Plummer at a groundbreaking ceremony for the Navajo Heritage Center in Farmington, N.M.

FLAGSTAFF – Marshall Plummer, the first-ever vice president of the Navajo Nation, has died. He was 62.

A statement from Plummer’s family says he died Thursday night at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale after recently being diagnosed with end-stage lung disease. He had been hospitalized there for four weeks.

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Plummer and Peterson Zah were voted into office in the first election held for president and vice president under the tribe’s three-branch government. They took office in 1991 and served a four-year term.

Plummer was a Vietnam War veteran, who had served on the Tribal Council and most recently was employed as the government relations manager at the Four Corners Power Plant in Fruitland, N.M.

Tribal President Joe Shirley Jr. has ordered flags flown at half staff on the Navajo reservation through April 3 in honor of Plummer.

Massachusetts tribes aim to take the wind out of a wind farm

Filed under: News Blog — GreyMalkin @ 2:13 pm

Wampanoag Indians, citing cultural grounds, mount a spirited fight against America’s first planned offshore wind turbine development.

Reporting from Oak Bluffs, Mass. – The Wampanoag Indians of southeastern Massachusetts welcomed the Pilgrims when they arrived on the Mayflower nearly 400 years ago. But now they’re trying to stop another newcomer — wind turbines.

Citing customs and religious practices recorded since the earliest contact with Europeans, two local tribes have blocked, at least for now, America’s first planned offshore wind farm and the Obama administration’ s efforts to promote renewable sources of energy.

At issue is a private developer’s plan to erect 130 wind turbine generators on a sandy shoal in the middle of Nantucket Sound, the scenic channel between Cape Cod and the resort islands of Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket.

Federal approval for Cape Wind, as the project is known, finally appeared on the horizon last fall after nine years of political battles, court challenges and regulatory reviews.

But then the indigenous tribes won an unexpected victory. On Jan. 4, the National Park Service ruled in favor of the Wampanoags that Nantucket Sound is eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places as a “traditional cultural property,” and thus is worthy of preservation.

The park service said the 440-foot-high towers would interfere with Wampanoag spiritual ceremonies, including greeting the sunrise with unobstructed views of the water.

The ruling also said excavations for the towers could disturb presumed Indian burial grounds that began to disappear under rising seas about 6,000 years ago. The shoal is now 30 feet beneath the waves.

The tribes, the Mashpee Wampanoag of Cape Cod and the Aquinnah Wampanoag of Martha’s Vineyard, “emphasize that they believe that their people traversed, lived on and buried their dead, and otherwise used the land . . . before the land was submerged,” the park service said.

Mark Rodgers, spokesman for Cape Wind Associates, the developer, said seabed borings and other underwater tests on Horseshoe Shoal, where the towers would rise, found vegetative matter and “the head of a bug,” but “no evidence of human artifacts.”

“We think that addresses the issue of it being a burial ground for their ancestors,” he said. “It’s not a game changer.”

The park service ruling kicked the final decision to Ken Salazar, the U.S. secretary of the interior. After watching the sunrise from a cold beach with several Mashpee Wampanoags, and riding a Coast Guard cutter across the shoal, Salazar said he would decide by the end of April whether to allow Cape Wind to proceed.

“He can decide up or down,” said Frank Quimby, Salazar’s spokesman. “The only position he’s taken is, nine years and counting is a ridiculous amount of time to wait for a decision. It shouldn’t be strung out indefinitely. ”

The Wampanoags and other opponents are expected to mount a spirited defense. “We’re going to fight this all the way,” said Buddy Vanderhoop, a Wampanoag from Aquinnah and skipper of a charter fishing boat called the Tomahawk. “This is sacred ground for us.”

Not every tribal member agrees. The two tribes claim about 2,400 enrolled members, although only a few hundred live in the area, and even fewer are active in tribal ceremonies.

Jeffrey Madison, a former member of the Wampanoag tribal council in Aquinnah and lawyer for a firm that represents Cape Wind, called the sunrise ritual a “fabricated cosmology” that was unknown to his father and grandfather, both former medicine men.

“I am stating to you with complete honesty and knowledge that I never participated in, witnessed, or even heard of a sacred spot on the horizon that is relevant to any Aquinnah Wampanoag culture, history or ceremony,” Madison wrote to Salazar during the public comments period.

President Obama has championed development of wind energy to help counter global warming, and the case has become a critical test of his administration’ s priorities.

The president, who vacationed last summer on Martha’s Vineyard, has not publicly taken sides in the dispute.

Supporters of Cape Wind, including most national environmental groups, said the project would help supply clean electricity and lead the way for proposed wind farms off the coasts of New York, New Jersey, Delaware and other states.

Opponents argued that the turbines would hurt fishing, endanger aircraft, lead to higher utility rates and cripple tourism.

Five miles offshore, the huge towers and churning blades would line the horizon from many beaches and towns.

“You name the problem, this project has it,” complained Audra Parker, president of the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound, the main opposition group.

She and other critics have urged Cape Wind to move the wind farm to a deeper, more exposed site off Tuckernuck Island, about 10 miles away in the open Atlantic.

“It means throwing a decade away,” countered Rodgers, the Cape Wind spokesman. “If someone else wants to step forward and look at development of a wind farm out there, that’s great. They’ve got a lot of work ahead of them.”

Whatever happens, the issue has energized local Wampanoags and rekindled interest in their culture and history.

When Europeans first arrived, the Wampanoags comprised several dozen tribes and about 12,000 members who farmed, fished and hunted from coastal villages.

“We’re the ones who were there when the first Pilgrims arrived,” said tribal leader Cheryl Andrews-Maltais, tribal chairwoman in Aquinnah, referring to the bedraggled immigrants who came on the Mayflower in November 1620. “We met them on the shore. That was us.”

Andrews-Maltais sees an irony in her forebearers’ welcome to the Puritans and others who sailed to the New World to escape oppression.

“Here we are fighting for our religious freedom from the same people who came here to find religious freedom,” she said. “I’m just hoping we have the same rights they do.”

Response overturns Chumash expansion

Filed under: News Blog — GreyMalkin @ 2:10 pm

Two Santa Ynez Valley community groups have received a legal response in their case against the federal government challenging an effort by the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians to expand their reservation.

Preservation of Los Olivos (POLO) and Preservation of Santa Ynez (POSY) announced this week that they are pleased by the response related to a 2008 decision against the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) regarding a Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians application for a 6.9-acre property across Highway 246 from the tribe’s Santa Ynez casino.

In February, the groups filed a 56-page document arguing their standing to seek an appeal of the DOI’s fee-to-trust ruling and challenged the constitutional authority of the secretary of the interior ‚Äî using recent Supreme Court rulings ‚Äî to remove any land from state jurisdiction through the fee-to-trust process.

The groups also contended that the Chumash Indian tribe is not a tribal government.

The filing is significant in that it is one of the first times — if not the first time — that a citizens group has been able to argue the merits of its case to the Interior Board of Indian Appeals (IBIA), according to Kathy Cleary, POLO board president.

The fee-to-trust process removes land from local jurisdiction and places it under tribal authority. The sovereign tribal land then becomes exempt from local and state taxes and local planning and zoning laws

The brief includes documentation the groups believe prove the Chumash were not under federal jurisdiction in 1934, and based on a recent Supreme Court decision do not qualify to take any land into trust.

In February 2009, the Supreme Court limited the federal government’s power to take land into trust for the benefit of Indian tribes. The Justices, in a 6-3 vote, concluded the authority only applies to tribes that were under federal jurisdiction in 1934.

In its response this month, the DOI does not disqualify the POLO/POSY documentation of the tribe’s federal status, and seeks to have the case sent back, or remanded, to the DOI’S Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) for research to determine the federal jurisdictional status of the Chumash.

Separately, the Chumash have opposed the remand back to the BIA, according to POLO.

However, the groups have not decided on their next course of action — whether to agree with or oppose the request to send the case back to the BIA, Cleary said.

“We should know in the next couple of weeks what to do,” she said.

Tribal spokeswoman Frances Snyder had no comment.

Reid, Ensign introduce Elko land bill

Filed under: News Blog — GreyMalkin @ 2:06 pm

http://www.elkodail y.com/articles/ 2010/03/26/ news/local_ news/doc4bad48d2 aba1f478116567. txt

ELKO — U.S. Sens. Harry Reid and John Ensign on Thursday introduced a bill that would transfer 300 acres of federal land to Elko County for recreational use and 370 acres to the Te-Moak Tribe of Western Shoshone for expansion of the Elko Colony.

“This bill will provide critical opportunities for growth and economic development in northeastern Nevada,” said Reid, D-Nev. “The people of Elko County have put a lot of time and work into this proposal. I am proud to be working with them on initiatives that will bolster Elko’s economy.”

The bill calls for the land going to the county to be used for BMX, motocross, off-highway vehicle and stock car racing, and Elko County Manager Rob Stokes said the site is north of Interstate 80 west of Elko.

He said the county already has an application with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management for the 300 acres, but the bill would speed up the process.

“Local folks have wanted to do something for some period of time now,” he said.

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“This land is perfect for OHV use, including motocross and stock car racing. Elko County will certainly benefit from an expanded facility that attracts off-highway vehicle enthusiasts; giving a much needed boost to northeastern Nevada’s economy,” said Ensign, R-Nev.

Stokes said the county has worked closely with the staffs of both of the senators on the legislation for both projects and recently sent a letter thanking them for their efforts.

“We reaffirm our support for the expansion of the Elko Colony here in the Elko area and look forward to the development of a motocross facility west of Elko that will provide additional outdoor recreational opportunities, ” Elko County Commission Chairman Charlie Myers wrote on March 23 to Reid, Ensign and U.S. Rep. Dean Heller, R-Nev.

The county would lease the land for use as a recreational track.

“There would be no charge,” he said.

The tribal land that BLM would put into trust for the tribe has the support of the tribe, the county and the City of Elko. The county commissioners and city council voted back in 2007 in favor of the Te-Moak expansion, with the provision that rights-of-way would remain.

The Western Shoshone would use the land for housing and cultural activities, as well as to meet additional needs. Tribal Chairman Bryan Cassadore wasn’t available at press time for comment.

According to earlier news reports, the Te-Moak land would be northeast of existing tribal land.

The announcement from the senators stated that the bill, called the Elko Motocross and Tribal Conveyance Act, includes a special provision to protect Elko’s rights-of-way across the lands that would be held in trust for the tribe.

Student art exhibition explores powwow

Filed under: News Blog — GreyMalkin @ 2:06 pm
 - Austin, a Grade 6 student from Gibsons Elementary School,  created this painting which will be on display at the Gibsons Public Art  Gallery as part of a student art show from now until April 22. - Photo  submitted

Photo submitted
Austin, a Grade 6 student from Gibsons Elementary School, created this painting which will be on display at the Gibsons Public Art Gallery as part of a student art show from now until April 22.
March 26,2010

http://www.coastrep orter.net/ article/20100326 /SECHELT0501/ 303269975/ -1/SECHELT/ student-art- exhibition- explores- powwow

Local elementary students have taken inspiration from First Nations painter George Littlechild and the theme of “powwow” to create paintings that will be displayed at the Gibsons Public Art Gallery from now until April 22.

“A lot of students have shown the drum, and at powwow the drum is treated like a human being, like a living being,” said Lisa Pugh, aboriginal education support teacher for School District 46 (SD46). “So [attendees] will see drums depicted. They will also see a lot of the various dancers in the regalia they wear.”

SD46′s aboriginal education department is hosting the art show, entitled Powwow Pictures, which will feature paintings by the Coast’s grades 4 and 7 students.

“It’s not a large space, but we basically cover it wall to wall,” Pugh said, explaining that the exhibition will take up half the gallery.

Pugh said these paintings are a “summative activity” for students, allowing them to draw together much of what they’ve been learning about the aboriginal tradition of powwow and the work of Littlechild.

“We have looked at the meanings behind the dances and the regalia worn,” Pugh said. “We have also explored how powwows are set up, the powwow trail and the meaning of the drum at powwow.”

In studying Littlechild’ s style, students read a short biography about the Plains Cree painter and visited his website to look at his unique paintings.

“We broke down his style into 10 major components and then used these aspects of his style, like thick black lines, appliqu√© and collage photographs to create our own powwow-themed paintings,” she said.

This is the second art show the department has hosted. The first featured student paintings inspired by the eastern woodlands style of Norval Morrisseau.

State official ‘satisfied’ with tribe’s progress

Filed under: News Blog — GreyMalkin @ 2:03 pm

But chairman of accountability panel says inquiry into welfare program to continue

http://www.mydesert .com/apps/ pbcs.dll/ article?AID= 20103260309

  • Margarita Maldonado of Mecca walks around the Desert Home Mobile Park, also known as “Duroville,” on the Torres-Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indian reservation on April 27, 2005. The neighborhood is a stark example of the poverty that is pervasive across much of Indian Country.

The director of the California Department of Social Services “is satisfied with the progress” of the Torres-Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indians in correcting financial accountability problems within its tribal welfare program.

But that declaration doesn’t stop an ongoing inquiry into the tribe’s program, a state Assembly committee chairman said.

State Social Services director John A. Wagner expressed his satisfaction with the progress of the Torres-Martinez Tribal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program in a March 18 letter to state Assemblyman Hector De La Torre, D-South Gate, chairman of the Assembly Committee on Accountability and Administrative Review.

The committee is reviewing findings of persistently poor audits and inadequate management of taxpayer funds within the Torres-Martinez program, highlighted in a January Desert Sun investigation.

“It’s one component,” De La Torre said of Wagner’s input. “Obviously you want to check with everybody who might be involved before you decide to move ahead or stop anything you might do.

“We’re still kind of in the research phase We’re in the middle of what we’re doing; not the end.”

The Accountability Committee’s involvement came at the request of local Assembly members Brian Nestande, R-Palm Desert, and V. Manuel P√©rez, D-Coachella, who’s also a member of the committee.

In addition to Wagner, De La Torre has also made inquiries about the Torres-Martinez program to California State Auditor Elaine Howle, who has yet to respond, he said.

The Torres-Martinez program serves Native Americans in most of Riverside County and all of Los Angeles County.

The tribal welfare program’s required audits have outlined serious negative findings each year from 2002 through its most recent audit for 2008, with many of the same issues persisting for years despite tribal assurances that fixes were in place or on the way.

The Desert Sun’s analysis of the audits and other government documents revealed:

The federal government in 2005 found that the program potentially “misused” more than $6 million in taxpayer money in fiscal years 2002 and 2003.

Program officials were able to justify some of the spending, but agreed in 2007 to pay a penalty of more than $1.5 million as a result of misuse of welfare funds.

“As of December 2008 the tribe is not in compliance with the terms of the agreement,” the tribe’s auditor stated in September 2009.

Year after year, how much money the program has on hand, how much it has spent or whether spending followed federal laws and program rules often could not be verified because of its “inaccurate, ” “misstated” or incomplete financial records.

The Torres-Martinez program receives its annual federal award of more than $20 million, and state funding of between $13.6 million and $18.6 million per year, based on an estimated monthly caseload of 5,238 families.

Yet in 2007, six years into the Torres-Martinez program, it was serving fewer than 400 families per month — 7 percent of its initial projections. Today caseloads are still only about one-fourth of what was projected when its program was formulated.

Despite this, the Torres-Martinez program’s federal award has remained unchanged, and it continues to receive full funding from the state.

“These funds, particularly with the budget the way it is now, are in very, very short supply,” De La Torre said.

“You want to make sure you’re getting the most benefit for the most people that you can.”

Columba Quintero, executive director of the Torres-Martinez tribal welfare program, previously characterized many of the issues as problems of the past. She noted progress in recent audits.

“I hate the fact that yes, things have happened,” Quintero said. “But we’re working on it. And all I can say is, it takes time.”

Wagner noted in his letter that Social Services put the Torres-Martinez tribal welfare program “on probation” and suspended state general funds allocated to it until the state and federal governments were satisfied “all funds previously allocated were accounted for appropriately. ”

The state reinstated its funding of the tribal program in April 2006.

“There’s a corrective action plan at this point for the tribe, and the department (Social Services) believes they are making progress in correcting these deficiencies, ” De La Torre said.

But in its 2007 audit, auditors stated, “The TANF program is not in compliance with grant requirements A lack of proper record-keeping existed over the procurement of goods and services for the fiscal year.”

The program’s most recent audit, for fiscal year ending 2008, completed in September, included two serious, negative findings known as material weaknesses that persisted from two and three years earlier.

Rep. Mary Bono Mack has also raised questions with U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius regarding the Torres-Martinez tribal welfare program as a result of The Desert Sun’s investigation.

Bono Mack, a Republican from Palm Springs, has called for removal of the welfare program from the Torres-Martinez tribe’s administration, citing “a very blatant example of waste, fraud and abuse.”

March 25, 2010

Pinson Mounds National Historic Landmark in Tennessee

Filed under: Uncategorized — GreyMalkin @ 12:41 am
The complex of mounds and earthworks at Pinson covered over 400 acres.VR Image by Richard Thornton, Architect

The complex of mounds and earthworks at Pinson covered over 400 acres.VR Image by Richard Thornton, Architect

Why did Native Americans build so many mounds in this locale?

Pinson Mounds National Historic Landmark is located in Madison County, TN – in the southwestern section of the state. Between 0 AD – 500 AD, it functioned as an enormous 400 acre+ ceremonial complex. Unlike its contemporaries in Georgia, the Six Flags Village, Leake Mounds and Kolomoki Mounds, it did not have many permanent residents. Few remains of houses have been discovered. (See articles on Sweet Potato Village, Etalwa-hassee and Kolomoki.) The primary cultural level of Pinson Mounds has been determined by archaeologists to be the Middle Woodland Period.

The archaeological zone consists of several clusters of mounds and earthworks built on a terrace along the South Fork of the Forked Deer River and riverine wetlands. The level flood plain of the river was highly suitable for agriculture, but as yet, no evidence of large scale agriculture has been identified. There are 30 known mounds, of which 17 have been proven by archaeologists to be pre-European. One mound was evidently started during the Early Woodland Period (900 BC – 0 AD.) There is also evidence of some habitations from that period. Concentrations of the debris from Woodland Period type artifact fabrication suggests that some areas of the Pinson Archaeological Zone were once used for workshops to make ceremonial or trade objects. Large, circular plazas suggest that ceremonies, which drew large numbers of pilgrims from the region, occurred at Pinson. Some artifacts that were definitely made in other parts of the Eastern United States have also been discovered at Pinson.

The mounds and earthworks were used for a variety of ceremonial purposes. Some mounds contain few or no human burials and had flat areas on top for ceremonies. Other mounds are conical or hemispherical, and contain several burials. Obviously, these were primarily burial mounds. Raised earth berms also define ceremonial plazas or enclose mounds. An area near Mound 11 was used during the Late Woodland-Early Mississippian Cultural Periods (750 AD-1100 AD) as the site of a village.

The most spectacular structure at Pinson is Saul’s Mound. It is now 67 feet high, making it the tallest known Woodland Period structure. It was originally a truncated, rectangular pyramid, but now has more of a conical shape. Visitors can climb up the steep steps of Saul’s Mound and stand on an observation platform, which has a magnificent view of the entire archaeological zone. The base of the mound is approximately 367 feet by 300 feet. The sides of the mound are aligned to the cardinal directions. Several smaller platform mounds are clustered around Saul’s Mound.

The eastern section of the Pinson Archaeological Zone contains several mounds, plus a semi-circular earth berm that is 1,201 feet in diameter. Today, this earth berm is about five feet in height, but 1500 years ago, it was probably much taller. Mound 29 is aligned with Saul’s Mound to the azimuth of the Equinox sunrise. Mound 12 is approximately aligned with Saul’s Mound to the azimuth of the Summer Solstice sunrise.

The western section of the Pinson Archaeological Zone contains a few mounds, plus an area that was probably used by temporary housing during the Middle Woodland Period. One of the Twin Mounds contained the burials of eight young women, who were wearing headdresses with copper adornments. These burials may be evidence of human sacrifice. It is known for a fact that the peoples of the Middle Mississippi Basin practiced human sacrifice. One of its most grisly forms was a sacrifice to Venus, the Morning Star. A young woman, of exceptional beauty, would be treated “as a princess” for a period of time. Then, on a day designated by astronomer-priests, she would be tied to a wood sapling framework. Archers would repeatedly shoot her with arrows at locations on her body that would not cause immediately fatal wounds. The longer she lived, and the more blood she poured; the more successful was considered the sacrifice. The Pawnee Indians also practiced this form of human sacrifice into the early 1800s.

It is not known what ethnic group or groups built these mounds. Too few artifacts and human remains have been discovered to give a definitive answer. The Chickasaws occupied the region during the 1700s, but they were not inclined to build large mounds at the time of European Contact. In contrast, there is cultural continuity between the contemporaneous Swift Creek Culture of the lower Southeastern United States, and the modern day Creek Indians. (See the article on the Swift Creek Culture.)

Pinson Mounds is maintained by the State of Tennessee as an archaeological park. It is, indeed, a park. Unlike many archaeological sites in the Eastern United State, suburbia has not crept up to its boundaries. The parks environs are pristine. A large museum has been constructed at the park in the form of a truncated platform mound. It blends in well to the landscape and does an excellent job of explaining what is known about the archaeology of the site at this time.

Archaeologists continue to work at Pinson, because it is a huge site and many questions have not been answered. It still not understood why Native Americans repeatedly journeyed to this particular spot and built so many earthworks. There is nothing particularly unique about its location or terrain.

If visiting Pinson Mounds State Archaeological Park, plan to spend at least half a day. The man-made structures are spread out over considerable distances. It will take at least two hours to see all the exhibits in the museum and the documentary movie. Pinson, though, is a wonderful place to have a picnic, if the weather is not too hot. It is well worth the trip, if vacationing in the vicinity of Jackson or Memphis, TN. Besides, that part of Tennessee probably makes the best barbecue in the world!

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