Sacred Sites: Angel Mounds
by Selena Fox
A visit to Angel Mounds State Historic Site is a journey through
time and across cultures. It is located along the Ohio River in
southwestern Indiana near Evansville. Named for the farming family
that owned the land for more than a hundred years, Angel Mounds
is one of the best preserved prehistoric Native American village
sites in the United States.
Within the 103-acre Angel Mounds village are eleven
earthen mounds, including those used for ceremonies, burials, and
homes for leaders. The prominent Temple Mound, which was excavated
and then rebuilt, was an important ritual site and a place of storage
of sacred images, ceremonial objects, and the bones of chiefs. It
is thought that a sacred fire once was kept burning on the Temple
Mound in honor of the Sun God. Another important ceremonial area
at Angel Mounds was a large plaza, which also was used for games
and other social activities. Evidence
of two circular buildings have been found at the site and are thought
to be sweatlodges or council houses. The Angel Mounds site includes
mound alignments with the Summer Solstice sunrise.
Between one and three thousand Native Americans lived
in the Angel Mound village from 1100 to 1450 CE. At its zenith,
around 1300 CE, this was the largest community in what is now known
as Indiana. The people who built and lived at Angel Mounds were
part of a culture known today as Mississippian. The Mississippians
were a platform mound building people. Their culture emerged in
the Mississippi River Valley around 800 CE and extended into eastern
and southeastern parts of the United States. The Mississippian culture
existed for nearly a thousand years. In some places, it lasted into
the 1700's. Other Mississippian sites that have been preserved include
Cahokia (Illinois), Aztalan (Wisconsin), Wickliffe Mounds (Kentucky),
and Chucalissa (Tennessee).
The
Mississippians of Angel Mounds had their village there for more
than three hundred years. The people are thought to have gathered
wild foods, hunted, fished, and cultivated corn, beans, squash,
sunflowers, gourds, bamboo cane, and tobacco. It is not known why
the Angel Mound Mississippians began leaving in the early 1400's.
By 1450, they had abandoned their village and are thought to have
moved downstream to the mouth of the Wabash River. Their culture
had changed. Although they built several large villages, they no
longer built or used mounds.
In the 1600's, the Native American peoples who had
been living in what is today southern Indiana left, and other Native
American tribes arrived. The Miami, Wea, and Piankashaw claimed
the region as part of their hunting grounds. Later Shawnee and Delaware
peoples moved into this area for a time. In the early 1800's, European
and European-American settlers arrived. The Angel Mounds site became
the home of Mathias Angel and his family in the 1830's. It was owned
and farmed by succeeding generations of the Angel family until 1938.
Some excavation of the mounds began in the late 1800's. More excavations
took place in the 1930's. Indiana University has been doing archaeological
research there since 1945, and in 1965 was granted sole excavation
rights.
In
1938, the Indiana Historical Society bought the 480 acre Angel family
property with funds donated by Eli Lilly, and in 1947, ownership
was transferred to the State of Indiana. Later, Elda Clayton Herts
donated another 20 acres that included an early Woodland Indian
mound. Today, the Angel Mounds site is managed and interpreted by
the Division of State Museums and Historic Sites of the Indiana
Department of Natural Resources. More than 100,000 people visit
the site yearly.
Angel Mounds includes the village area, a Nature preserve,
an interpretive center museum, and a gift shop. Some of the buildings
that existed in the village have been reconstructed as they are
thought to have appeared in 1300 CE. The mounds that were damaged
when the site was farmed have been restored. The museum displays
artifacts found during excavations at the site, including a statue
of a kneeling man carved from a single piece of yellow fluorite,
which was found buried and facing east atop the Temple Mound.
Angel Mounds State Historic Site is open to the public,
from mid-March through mid-December. Hours of operation are 9 am
5 pm Tuesday through Saturday and 1 5 pm on Sundays.
It is closed on Mondays. Admission is free. Donations to support
this site are welcome and are tax deductible. Self-guided walking
tour maps and brochures are available in the museum.
A
variety of events are held at Angel Mounds throughout the year,
including the popular Native American Days festival and pow wow
in late September. Contact the site for more information about this
and other events.
For more information, contact: Angel Mounds State
Historic Site, 8215 Pollack Avenue, Evansville, Indiana 47715 USA;
telephone: (812) 853-3956; fax: (812) 479-5783; email: curator@angelmounds.org;
website: www.anglemounds.org.
References
Angel Mounds State Historic Site brochures, including: "Interpretive
Tour," "Friends of Angel Mounds," and "Volunteer
Program."
Black, Dr. Glenn A. "Angel Mounds, a Report." www.floridahistory.com/indiana2.html.
Jones, Marjorie Melvin & Labudde, Besse Freeman (2000). "The
Inquiring Visitor's Guide to Angel Mounds State Historic Site."
Third edition. Evansville, Indiana: Mission Press. Available at
the Angel Mounds gift shop.
Selena Fox has been visiting, photographing, studying, and
teaching about sacred mounds for more than thirty years. She is
part Cherokee, a Native American tribe which claims descent from
the ancient mound builders of North America. As part of her priestess
work, Selena has helped organize and guide two sacred mound building
projects at Wisteria land in southeastern Ohio as part of the yearly
Pagan Spirit Gathering she directs (www.circlesanctuary.org/psg).
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