Reclaiming
their land
Cherokee Indians buy undisturbed Indian mound in Cowee
by Jon Ostendorff
COWEE — The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians on Monday officially
reclaimed one of the few undisturbed American Indians mounds remaining
in Western North Carolina.
“This property is not just about a mound,” Principal
Chief Michell Hicks said. “It is about a way of life.”
The tribe worked with the Land Trust for the Little Tennessee to
buy the 71-acre tract in the Cowee community north of Franklin.
The
mound, which has never been excavated, was owned by generations
of the Hall family before transferring to the late James Porter
through his wife, Katherine, said Paul Carlson, executive director
of The Land Trust.
The tribe has no plans to develop the property. It will be managed
under a conservation easement. The site will one day offer interpretive
signs, environmental education programs and a park.
Cowee
was the economic hub of the tribe because of its riverside location
and proximity to white settlements.
Until
the late 1770s, around 800 Cherokee lived there.
The
mound was owned by generations of the Hall family before transferring
to the late James Porter through his wife, Katherine, said Paul
Carlson, executive director of The Land Trust.
Lloyd
Porter, James Porter’s nephew, said Monday that seeing the
mound and the surrounding land back in the tribe’s control
was “an honor.”
Dolores
Porter said her husband’s aunt and uncle always wanted the
mound protected.
“We feel like we are honoring their wishes,” she said.
Tom
Belt, a Cherokee language instructor at Western Carolina University,
was one of the speakers during Monday’s ceremony. The program
also featured traditional dancing by the Warriors of AniKituhwa.
Belt,
who is a member of the Cherokee Nation, said he grew up in Oklahoma
hearing stories about the people who stayed back east after the
Removal.
As
the story goes, he said, the Creator wanted the Eastern Cherokee
to stay behind to make sure the tribe’s homeland remained
protected. He said returning the mound to its people fulfills that
prophecy.
“We
are not just reclaiming property,” he said. “We are,
in fact, rebuilding the tribe.”
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