Nikwasi
Location | Modern day Franklin, North Carolina |
---|---|
Coordinates | 35°11′06″N 83°22′25″W / 35.18499°N 83.37360°W |
History | |
Abandoned | 1819 |
Cultures | South Appalachian Mississippian; Cherokee |
Events | 1727 Treaty of Nikwasi |
Architecture | |
Architectural styles | platform mound, c.1000 CE |
Nikwasi (Cherokee: Ꮑꮖꮟ, romanized: Nequasi or Nequasee) comes from the Cherokee word for "star", Ꮓꮘꮟ Noquisi (No-kwee-shee), and is the site of the Cherokee town which is first found in colonial records in the early 18th century, but is much older. The town covered about 100 acres (40 ha) on the floodplain of the Little Tennessee River. Franklin, North Carolina, was later developed by European Americans around this site.
Today, a platform mound, estimated to have been built about 1000 CE, is the only extant feature left of the Cherokee town. The mound site and a small area has been owned and preserved by Franklin since 1946. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 as "Nequasee."[2]
The federally recognized Eastern Band of Cherokee, which is based at Qualla Boundary, has been working to re-acquire its traditional lands and sacred mounds in this region. In 2019 the town of Franklin transferred the deed for Nikwasi mound to the Nikwasi Initiative, a non-profit set up by the EBCI, as part of this effort.
History
The town (also known spelled as Ꮔꭷꮟ Nucassee) was founded sometime before the mid-1500s, as it appears on a 1566 map.[3] It is first mentioned in 1718 in the records of the British colonies in America.
The town was a spiritual, cultural, and ceremonial center for the local Cherokee people,[4] who considered it one of the "Mother Towns of their homeland."[5] (Note: Kituwa, found on the Tuckaseegee River, is considered the first "Mother Town".) The Cherokee people kept the ever-burning sacred fire of Nikwasi located in the fire pit of their townhouse constructed on top of the mound. The fire had been kept burning since the beginning of their culture, and every townhouse had a fire pit for it.[4]
The Francis Varnod census, enumerated in 1721 as part of a survey of Cherokee towns for the Anglican Society for Propagation of the Gospel (SPG), found the native population of Nikwasi to be 162: 53 men, 50 women, and 59 children.[6]
Treaty of 1727
As was typical in the Cherokee heartland, the people built their townhouse or meeting hall on top of the central platform mound as their expression of public architecture, as it enabled the community to gather.[7] The people of Nikwasi likely met here with a colonial delegation who came from Charleston, South Carolina in 1727; Colonel John Herbert took part in a treaty council held in the town house on December 3, 1727.[8]
Following the Cherokee signing of the treaty with South Carolina, a self-appointed royal ambassador, Alexander Cuming, was hosted at the town from April 3 to 4, 1730.[9] During the negotiations with the Cherokee, Cuming had met with Uku (or "First Beloved Man") Moytoy (known also as Ama-edohi).[10] Cuming "appointed" Moytoy as "Emperor" of the Cherokee and secured a dubious pledge of allegiance of all the Cherokee peoples to King George II from him.[11] The treaty was generally honored until 1741.[10]
Further dealings with colonials
During the summer of 1761, the Nikwasi townhouse was used as a field hospital by members of a punitive English expedition against the Cherokee and other native American allies of France during the French and Indian War. James Grant led this force, which razed most of the town in their expedition.[12] The Cherokee rebuilt their town.[5]
By the time of the American Revolutionary War, the Cherokee had become allies of the British, hoping they would support the expulsion of settlers from Cherokee territory. During the Rutherford Light Horse expedition, rebel forces leveled the town on September 10, 1776.[13] Rutherford burned the town and its farmlands to the ground.[13] After an austere, harsh winter, the town sued for peace with the colonists the following Spring.[4][13] The Cherokee rebuilt again and continued life at Nikwasi.[5]
After the Revolutionary War, European-American migration west and settlement in Native American territories continued. In 1819 the federal government forced the Cherokee of this area to cede their lands and move into the Qualla Boundary. At that time Nikwasi mound and an associated 690 acres was first acquired by European Americans.[5] This Indian Removal effort gathered force in the 1830s after Congress passed legislation in 1830 to authorize it.[13][3]
The mound
The platform mound (now better maintained than in the 1963 photo) is conspicuous to the many drivers who pass by daily on US 441 Business in downtown Franklin.[3] The mound architecture has been well-preserved to the present, and the access ramp and flat summit continue to be easily differentiated.
A 2009 GPR survey revealed that the base of the mound is covered by one to two meters of combined alluvial deposits and manmade fill. As a result of these findings, it is clear that prior to the flooding and fill events, the mound enjoyed greater topographic prominence than currently, and was once a more impressive part of the cultural landscape than it is today. The mound appears to have been built by indigenous ancestors of the Cherokee in the South Appalachian Mississippian culture period, with construction estimated at the year 1000 CE.[3][11]
The mound was privately owned for more than a century by various European Americans, and in 1946 the town of Franklin raised money to buy and preserve it. Schoolchildren were among those who donated for this purpose.[14] The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI) has negotiated to acquire more control through the "Nikwasi Initiative," a non-profit organization.[14] They plan for the mound to be featured as part of the "Nikwasi-Cowee Corridor," an EBCI proposal to highlight Nikwasi mound and the nearby Cowee Mound and village site (a similar ancient platform mound located across the Little Tennessee River and north of Franklin).[14]
Archaeological and geophysical investigations
The mound site takes its name from the historic Cherokee town which had covered about 100 acres there; it was documented in the English colonial records in the early 18th century.[14] Based on the southeast orientation of the ramp and the results of a 2009 ground-penetrating radar survey, the summit of the mound is thought to have been the seat of the Cherokee communal townhouse for the town. Here the Cherokee leaders hosted British and American delegations through the years.[15][16][17]
A single 5′ x 5′ test shaft dug by University of North Carolina archaeologists in 1963 constitutes the entirety of formal excavation known to have been undertaken at Nikwasi. The mound's excellent state of preservation owes much to the fact that it was never opened by the Smithsonian during the 1880s, when its staff excavated some ancient mounds. In 1980, the mound was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP), in the transliterated spelling of "Nequasee."[14][3]
Preservation efforts
In 2012, Franklin sprayed herbicide on the mound to control the grass. The Eastern Band of the Cherokee regarded this as "desecration", and principal chief Michell Hicks asked for the site to be turned over to the Eastern Band, which the town refused to do.
As noted above, the Eastern Band formed the Nikwasi Initiative, a non-profit designed to work on development and interpretation in the area related to historic Cherokee and ancient indigenous sites along the Little Tennessee River.
In 2017 the Eastern Band bought a building next to the mound, later studying whether to adapt it for use as a museum. In May 2019, the town of Franklin transferred the mound to the non-profit Nikwasi Initiative. The Tribal Council of the Eastern Band of the Cherokee voted in July 2019 to provide $300,000 to the Nikwasi Initiative.[18]
The Mainspring Conservation Trust acquired Watauga Mound and part of its historic town site in 2020, for conservation. It is located north of Franklin along the Little Tennessee River.[19] Mainspring is working with the EBCI and Nikwasi Initiative to preserve this property and have it be part of the Nikwasi-Cowee Corridor.
See also
- List of Mississippian sites
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Macon County, North Carolina
References
- ^ "National Register of Historic Places". Archived from the original on August 3, 2012. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
- ^ Nequasee – Franklin, NC, U.S. National Register of Historic Places
- ^ a b c d e Knoepp, Lillie (March 29, 2019). "Debunking Origins – Ancient Nikwasi Mound". Blue Ridge Public Radio.
- ^ a b c County, Macon. "Nikwasi Mound" (PDF). maconnchistorical.org. Macon County Historical Society. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
- ^ a b c d Holly, Nathaniel F. (July 2015). "Living Memorials to the Past – The Preservation of Nikwasi and the "Disappearance" of North Carolina's Cherokees". The North Carolina Historical Review. 92 (3): 312–337. JSTOR 44113272.
- ^ Varnod, Francis (1723–4). "A true and exact account of the number and names of all the towns belonging to the Cherrikee Nation,[sic] and the number of men, women and children inhabiting the same taken Anno 1721". London: United Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Steere, Benjamin A. (2015). "Revisiting Platform Mounds and Townhouses in the Cherokee Heartland: A Collaborative Approach" (PDF). Southeastern Archaeology. 34 (3): 196–219. doi:10.1179/2168472315Y.0000000001. S2CID 155444628. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
- ^ Herbert, John (1936). Journal of Colonel John Herbert, Commissioner Indian Affairs for the Province of South Carolina, October 17, 1727, to March 19, 1727/8. Alexander Samuel Salley, Jr. (ed.). Columbia: Printed for the Historical Commission of South Carolina by the State Co. pp. 12–14.
- ^ "Account of the Cherokee Indians, and of Sir Alexander Cuming's Journey Amongst Them". The Historical Register. 16: 11–12. 1731.
- ^ a b Conley, Robert J (2007). A Cherokee Encyclopedia. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press. pp. 16, 166–169. ISBN 978-0826339515.
- ^ a b Nikwasi; North Carolina Markers, ncmarkers.com; accessed April 2019
- ^ French, Christopher (1977). "Journal of an Expedition to South Carolina". Journal of Cherokee Studies. 2 (3). Duane H. King, E. Raymond Evans (eds.): 284.
- ^ a b c d The Rutherford Trace and the Destruction of Nikwasi; North Carolina DCR government website; accessed April 2019
- ^ a b c d e Nikwasi Initiative Wants Deed to Cherokee Mound; article 06 March 2019; Written by Stone, Jessi; "Smokey Mountain News online;" accessed April 2019
- ^ Note: A southeast-oriented doorway is the norm for excavated Cherokee townhouses.
- ^ Rodning, Christopher B. (2015). Center places and Cherokee towns: archaeological perspectives on Native American architecture and landscape in the Southern Appalachians. Tuscaloosa, Ala.: University of Alabama Press. p. 18.
- ^ Steere, Benjamin A. (2015). "Revisiting platform mounds and townhouses in the Cherokee heartland: a collaborative approach". Southeastern Archaeology. 34 (3): 206. doi:10.1179/2168472315Y.0000000001. S2CID 155444628.
- ^ Ellison, Quintin (July 29, 2019). "Cherokee invest in Nikwasi Mound's future, as preservation efforts pick up steam". The Sylva Herald. Retrieved August 8, 2019 – via Asheville Citizen-Times.
- ^ "Mainspring conserves Historic Cherokee Town". Cherokee One Feather. July 14, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2021.
Further reading
- Burt Kornegay, "Nikwasi: Sacred Fire," Wildlife in North Carolina (July 2000)
- Barbara McRae, Franklin's Ancient Mound: Myth and History (1993)
- William S. Powell, ed., Encyclopedia of North Carolina (2006)
- William S. Powell, North Carolina Gazetteer (1968)
External links
- "Nikwasi", Macon County Historical Society
- Cherokee Heritage Itinerary – Stop 10 Nikwasi Mound Archived March 6, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, North Carolina Folklife Institute
- Archaeological Survey, US 441-B, Franklin, Macon County, Tip No. U-621, The Digital Archeological Resource
- "Nequasee – Franklin, NC, U.S. National Register of Historic Places", Waymarking website