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American History Campus
Current Classes & Activities
North Carolina's First Colonists:
12,000 Years Before Roanoke
Four hundred years ago the English Roanoke colonists met numerous native
inhabitants along the coast of what would become the state of North Carolina.
Even
earlier, during the 1540s, Spanish explorers under the leadership of Hernando
de Soto "discovered" several Indian groups occupying the interior regions
of the Carolinas. Today we know that the coastal Indians were part of a
larger group occupying the entire mid-Atlantic coastal area, identifiable
by a shared language and culture called Algonkian. The Native Americans
whom de Soto met included Siouan, Iroquoian and Muskogean speakers, whose
descendants are now recognized as the historic tribes of the Catawba, Cherokee
and Creek Indians. Within a very short period of time--some 50 years--after
those first contacts, the early European explorers of North Carolina had
met, interacted with, and begun the process of significant cultural displacement
of all the major native groups in the state.
What can we learn about those Indian groups from accounts of the earliest
European explorers? Surviving chronicles from de Soto and the Roanoke colonists
include many details of the land and its potential or imagined wealth. But
with the notable exceptions of the John White paintings and Thomas Hariot's
writings, we possess surprisingly little knowledge about the early historic
Indians who lived in our state. Tantalizing bits of information can be gleaned
from the early series of exploration accounts, but when the actual diversity
and complexities of "Indian" culture are considered, we must conclude that
their description by explorers was incidental to those for geography, searches
for treasure, or daily hardships of the first European explorers.
The later colonial period of North Carolina history likewise exhibits an
unfortunate lack of interest on the part of white Americans for details
of Indian life. Although colonial government records included brief descriptions
of military expeditions and political affairs involving Indian populations,
detailed pictures of Indian culture elude modern researchers. Despite crucial
involvement of the Carolina Indians in colonial economic ventures, as suppliers
of skins for the enormously profitable deerskin trade, as military allies
or, too frequently, as slaves, most knowledge we do have comes from unofficial
sources. Only the observations of a few men like John Lederer, William Bartram
and John Lawson give us even an incomplete view of declining Indian cultures,
one roughly comparable to the purposely detailed accounts of White and Hariot.
Indeed, it would not be inaccurate to say that the writings of Lawson and
Hariot, supplemented by White's paintings, constitute the best history of
American Indians in North Carolina until the nineteenth century, by which
time much of Indians' culture was gone forever. Population estimates, locations
and accurate names for various tribal groups, and clear descriptions of
Indian political and social life unfortunately cannot be gained from historical
documents alone.
And what about the ancestors of those historic period Indians? Where did
they come from, and how do we know anything at all about their cultures?
None of the native cultures in North Carolina had any sort of written language.
They relied instead on oral traditions for their origins, myths and histories.
Most of our knowledge of North Carolina's prehistoric inhabitants comes
from the scant early historical accounts and, especially, the types of information
that can be gained through archaeology.
Archaeology is the discipline which provides extensive time depth to studies
of change in human societies, population distributions, and cultural adaptations
in response to long-term environmental changes. Archaeology is the science
(some would say an art) which provides us with answers to questions about
the very first "colonists" in North Carolina. In the most general sense,
archaeology is the study of human societies for which no or few written
records exist, through the careful recovery and analysis of the material
remains--the "artifacts"--of these extinct cultures. Archaeology is a branch
of anthropology, which involves other types of humanistic and scientific
studies of human cultures.
Archaeology is also a discipline with its own set of capabilities and limitations.
Trained in methods of excavation, analysis and report writing, archaeologists
devote considerable time to adapting the skills of many other disciplines
to their own advantage. Application of scholarly techniques from zoology,
chemistry, physics, botany, mathematics and computer studies enables archaeologists
to explore the immense complexity of environments and cultures which surrounded
our ancestors.
Archaeologists trace the chronicle of Native Americans to at least 12,000
years ago. The earliest aboriginal groups reached North Carolina not long
after people first crossed into the New World from Siberia during the final
stages of the last Ice Age, or Pleistocene era. The distinctive fluted projectile
points used by the earliest Indian groups show remarkable similarities across
the American continents. The distributions of such artifacts suggest rapid
population growth and movement of the initial colonizing bands of people
through Canada and the Great Plains, and into the eastern woodlands of which
North Carolina is a part.
PaleoIndians, as archaeologists call those first people, were well adapted,
technologically and socially, to climates, vegetation and animal populations
very different from those of today. The late Pleistocene era saw wetter,
cooler weather conditions as a general rule for areas like the Eastern Seaboard,
which was some distance from the southern reaches of the glacial ice. Now-extinct
elephants (mastodons and mammoths), wild horses, ground sloths, camels and
giant bison roamed the forests and grasslands of our area. Animals not extinct,
but now absent from the Southeast, included moose, caribou, elk and porcupine.
PaleoIndians preyed on these animals, using their meat, skins and other
parts for food, clothing, tools and other needs. They also devoted considerable
time to gathering wild plant foods and likely fished and gathered shellfish
in coastal and riverine environments.
Native groups who followed the PaleoIndians are called Archaic cultures
by archaeologists. Those people occupied eastern North America during a
long time period from about 9000 to 2000 B.C., and were the direct descendants
of the PaleoIndians. Archaic Indians improved techniques of fishing, gathering
and hunting for post-glacial (Holocene) environments, which differed from
the Pleistocene. Forest types in the Southeast gradually became more like
those of today, as weather patterns changed and the vast glacial ice sheets
retreated from the margins of North America.
Archaeologists see Archaic cultures as very successful adaptations to the
new forest communities and animal populations of those times. Archaic people
made a wide variety of stone, wood, basketry and other tools, that reflect
the varied subsistence patterns of generalized fishing, gathering and hunting
of the many different species of plants and animals that shared their post-glacial
environments. Archaic people possessed great knowledge of their environments
and the potential food and raw material sources that surrounded them. Their
camps and villages occur as archaeological sites throughout North Carolina,
on high mountain ridges, along river banks, and across the Piedmont hills..
Archaic people did lack three things, however, that most people associate
with prehistoric Indians. These cultural elements are: bows and arrows,
pottery and plant agriculture. In fact, the acceptance of these elements
into North Carolina's Archaic cultures marks the transition to the next
cultural stage called Woodland.
No overnight change from a pre-ceramic, non-agricultural Archaic stage to
Woodland times is recognizable in the archaeological record. Instead, there
was very gradual and piecemeal adoption of these new traits into local groups'
cultural patterns. For example, there probably were several "beginnings"
of pottery manufacture by North Carolina Indians. Agriculture likewise underwent
a long period of acceptance. Woodland Indians continued to follow most of
the subsistence practices of their Archaic forebears, hunting, fishing,
and gathering during periods of seasonal abundance of deer, turkeys, shad
and acorns. Labor was committed to tasks of clearing fields, planting and
harvesting crops like sunflowers, squash, gourds, beans and maize only when
it was certain that those efforts could assure surpluses needed for winter
and early spring months when natural food sources were sparse.
Bow and arrow equipment was also an innovation of the Woodland stage, although
the ultimate origin of that hunting technology is unknown. Small triangular
and stemmed
projectile points, suitable in terms of size and weight for attachment to
arrow shafts, are recovered for the first time on Woodland period sites.
Prior to then, the hafted stone tools of Archaic and PaleoIndians were used
for spears, knives and dart points (used with spear throwers, or atlatls).
Use of bows and arrows probably led to shifts in hunting patterns among
Woodland Indians, since the primary game animals like white tail deer could
now be harvested efficiently by single, stalking hunters.
Despite the introduction of these new elements into prehistoric Indian lifeways,
much remained the same. Woodland Indians continued patterns of seasonal
exploitation of many game and plant resources. Archaeological sites from
the period, which began some time around 2000 B.C., are found on all portions
of the landscape, although there was a tendency to settle in larger, semi-permanent
villages along stream valleys, where soils were suitable for Woodland farming
practices utilizing hoes and digging sticks.
The house patterns, defensive walls (or palisades), and substantial storage
facilities at some sites also demonstrate that Woodland Indians were more
committed to settled village life than their Archaic predecessors. Distributions
of ceramic (pottery) styles and other artifacts suggest to archaeologists
that Woodland Indians began to recognize territorial boundaries. The more
obvious boundaries may reflect early language groups of the Siouan, Iroquoian
and Algonkian Indians later met by the Europeans. Intangible cultural elements
cannot be recovered from archaeological deposits at any site, of course,
so related questions about tribal affiliations, language or religious practices
will remain unanswered forever.
Woodland cultures dominated most of North Carolina well into the historic
period. Most Indian groups met by early European explorers followed Woodland
economic and settlement patterns, occupying small villages and growing crops
of maize, tobacco, beans and squash, while still devoting considerable effort
to obtaining natural foods like deer, turkey, nuts and fish. A few cultural
elements, however, suggest that some Indians had adopted religious and political
ideas from a fourth major prehistoric tradition, called Mississippian. Archaeologists
recognize certain patterns of artifacts, settlement plans and economics
that distinguish Mississippian Indian culture from earlier or perhaps contemporary
Woodland occupations.
Mississippian culture can be described neatly as an intensification of Woodland
practices of pottery-making, village life and agriculture. But much more
was involved in the distinction, especially in terms of political and religious
organization and associated militarism. Mississippian culture had few representatives
in prehistoric North Carolina. Exceptions are the so-called Pee Dee Indians,
who constructed and occupied the major regional center at Town Creek (Montgomery
County), and ancestral mountain Cherokee groups. Mississippian-type town
centers are more common to the south and west of North Carolina. Centers
typically included one or more flat-topped, earthen "temple" mounds, public
areas and buildings ("council houses") used for religious and political
assemblies. Wooden palisades, earthen moats or embattlements were placed
around many villages for defensive purposes.
Mississippian societies described by early French and Spanish explorers
were organized along strict lines of social hierarchies determined by heredity
or exploits in war. Military aggressiveness was an important part of Mississippian
culture, serving to gain and defend territories, group prestige and favored
trade and tribute networks. The surviving, and often flamboyant, artifact
inventories from Mississippian sites reflect needs for personal status identification
and perpetuation of favored lineages. Pottery vessels were made in new and
elaborate shapes, often as animal and human effigy forms; other artifacts
of exotic copper, shell, wood and feathers mirror the emblematic needs of
the noble classes to confirm their status. Far-reaching trade and tribute
networks were maintained at great expense to provide necessary items to
the ruling classes of Mississippian Indian groups throughout the Southeast
and Midwest.
The direct involvement of North Carolina Indians with those large, powerful
Mississippian groups is difficult for archaeologists to measure. Minor elements
of Mississippian culture may be found in various parts of our state, at
least in the forms of pottery designs or ornaments connected with religious
or political symbolism. Algonkian Indians met by the Roanoke colonists exhibited
some religious ties with Mississippian practices more common in the far
South. Cherokee religion and certain traits of pottery manufacture likewise
may hint at more "elaborate" parallels in Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and
elsewhere in the heart of Mississippian territory. Ancestral ties of language
or other cultural elements probably always linked North Carolina's Indians
more closely with northern and western traditions, however, and such associations
may have prevented the total acceptance of Mississippian cultural traits
so pervasive in other Southeastern regions.
Through the 18th and 19th centuries, Native Americans in the eastern and
central portions of North Carolina were largely displaced as the colony's
and state's frontiers were populated by Euro-American and African-American
colonists, farmers, slaves and townspeople. Some Indian "tribes" in the
coastal and piedmont regions voluntarily relocated in advance of colonial
frontier expansion. Painfully direct results of armed conflicts like the
Tuscarora and Yemassee Wars included forced removals of native populations
onto a few small reservations. More commonly, native populations were forced
to join allied tribes in Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York and elsewhere.
Native Americans who avoided direct involvement in such situations nevertheless
participated in larger systems of colonial politics, settlement and trade
that produced far-reaching disruptions of their traditional cultural patterns.
The historical effects of disease on native populations may never be precisely
defined, for instance, but the aggregate effects included major population
displacements, or splitting up and reconsolidation of populations (especially
across the Piedmont).
The fracturing of social ties, group identities, and loss of native languages
and other cultural elements during the 18th and 19th centuries persisted
into the 20th. Some of these problems have been addressed through Federal
and state government recognition of modern Indian tribes and communities,
which began, for a variety of legal and social purposes, in the early 19th
century and which continues today.
There are at present several modern Native American groups in North Carolina--direct
descendants of prehistoric and early historic ancestors recognized in archaeological
and historical records. Groups include: Indians of Person County; Haliwa-Saponi;
Coharie; Cumberland County Association of Indian People; Lumbee; Waccamaw-Siouan;
Guilford Native American Association; Metrolina Native American Association;
and, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. Some 70,000 Native Americans
now reside in North Carolina and are represented by those tribal governments
or corporate structures and through the North Carolina Commission of Indian
Affairs.
Archaeological information is imperfect; archaeologists are limited in what
they can explain by vagaries of preservation, modern destruction of sites,
and the simple fact that many cultural elements leave no direct traces in
the ground. But archaeology exists as the only science with the techniques,
theories and evaluative frameworks for providing any information on the
12,000 or more years of human occupation which occurred before the "discovery"
of the New World only 500 or so years ago. The inherent curiosity that we
possess about things that are old, mysterious or simply unfamiliar expands
quite naturally into a desire to truly understand how prehistoric North
Carolinians lived, adapted and thrived. Archaeology provides us the means
to achieve that goal.
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Reprinted with permission from The Ligature©, NC Division of Archives and
History (1986). Revised 15 March, 1996 |