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Sites in Calhoun
New Echota State Historic Site.
Built as prescribed by the Cherokee National Council, New Echota
became the capitol of the Cherokee Nation. Near the geographical
center of the Cherokee lands remaining after the Treaty of 1819,
New Echota symbolized the progress of the Cherokees towards "civilization"
as mandated by George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and the federal
government. Here, with enthusiasm and idealism matching that of
the young but growing United States, the Cherokees planned and built
a model city that included a Council House, Supreme Court Building,
newspaper office, houses, farmsteads, taverns, missionaries, a traditional
ball ground, and plans for a college. These plans were located on
the site of New Town, where the Cherokee council had been meeting
since 1819.
Contact: New Echota State Historic Site 1211 Chatsworth
Highway NE, Calhoun, GA 30701
Phone 706 624-1321 www.gastateparks.org
Chief Vann House State Historic Site
Designed by an architect and constructed by brick masons, Moravians,
Cherokees, and African-American slaves, the Vann House still stands
as a landmark of Cherokee architecture. Finished in 1805, the three-story
brick mansion with white pillars in the front and back incorporates
Cherokee colors and details along with the federal and American
Georgian styles of the period. In the wide hallway, a "floating
staircase" remains the oldest cantilevered construction in
Georgia. Hand-carved Cherokee rose designs decorate the staircase
and appear throughout the house. A large fireplace stretches to
the 12 foot high ceiling, restored to its original paint colors
(found under nineteen layers of paint): sky blue, light forest green,
red clay, and sunny yellow. Most of the house materials were made
on the plantation: bricks formed from local clay, nails and hinges
forged in the blacksmith shops, and boards cut at one of Vann's
sawmills.
Contact: Chief Vann House State Historic Site, 82 Georgia
Highway 225 North Chatsworth GA 30705
Phone 706 695-2598
Sites near New Echota
Chieftains' Museum-the Major Ridge Home
In 1835 Major Ridge and his son John, Elias Boudinot, and seventeen
others, designated as representatives of the tribe, signed the Treaty
of New Echota, believing it the best course for their people, even
though the majority of the Cherokee people opposed Removal. As he
made his mark, the Ridge said, "I have signed my death warrant."
(He and his son John had participated in creating the law requiring
capital punishment for any Cherokee who sold tribal land.) Major
Ridge, John Ridge and their extended families, along with a party
of nearly 500 Cherokees, left for Indian Territory in 1837 and established
homes, stores, and a school there. Major Ridge was ambushed and
fatally shot while riding horseback near the Arkansas state line
the same day that his son John and Elias Boudinot were executed
for their part in the Treaty of New Echota, on June 22, 1839.
The Ridge house has been restored and now operates as the Chieftains
Museum, a non-profit organization. Exhibits tell the story of the
Ridge family and extend through the Civil War. Artifacts unearthed
in the area also are on display, and archaeology continues on the
grounds.
Contact: Chieftains' Museum 501 Riverside Rd., Rome GA 30162
Phone:(706)291-9494 Hours: Tues. - Sat., 10-4 Small admission
charge.
Etowah Indian Mounds State Historic Site
Built a thousand years ago or more, these mounds were the center
of a palisaded town where three thousand or more American Indians
lived from 1000AD-1500 AD. Often they are called "The Moundbuilders"
and "The Mississippian Indians" but these terms more accurately
refer to architectural traditions and to a specific time period,
respectively, than to people. The people who built and lived at
these mounds were the ancestors of the Cherokee, the Creek, and
other tribes who spoke their languages and practiced their unique
traditions from more than a thousand years ago through the present
day. In addition to being the focal point of a town, the Etowah
Mounds supported the temples where priests practiced the ceremonies
that made this an important religious center of its time, visited
by many people from the surrounding region.
A museum displays artifacts excavated from the site and provides
information and interpretation of the site. A self-guided trail
takes you around the three largest mounds, the village, plaza, borrow
pit (which provided some of the dirt for mound construction), and
fish weir. The park occasionally schedules programs by Cherokee
storytellers and craftspeople.
Contact: Etowah Indian Mounds State Historic Site 813 Indian
Mounds Rd., S.E. Cartersville GA 30120 Phone: 770 387-3747. Closed Monday except legal holidays. Closed Tuesday when open Monday.
Side Trips
Fort Mountain State Park
East of Chatsworth, the road ascends in winding curves, climbing
up the southern end of the Appalachians to the top of Cohutta Mountain
. There, just below the ridge of the mountain, a stone wall of mysterious
origin stretches 855 feet from east to west. Every thirty feet along
the wall, round stone enclosures about six feet across protrude
on the southern side. From this wall, one has an unobstructed view
of sunrises and sunsets across the piedmont to the south.
From the upper parking lot of Fort Mountain State Park, one hundred
and ninety stone steps and short terraces (constructed in the twentieth
century) lead up to one end of the wall and a round enclosure. A
further climb up to the tower enables visitors to see a longer stretch
of the wall, especially in winter when the trees are bare. (Located
in the Chattahoochee Forest near the Cohutta Wilderness Area, the
wall is protected not only by U.S. Forest Service regulations but
also by the Antiquities Act of 1906. Do not remove rocks from the
wall. Please leave this site as you find it, as with all sites on
the Cherokee Heritage Trails.)
Contact: Fort Mountain State Park 181 Fort Mountain Rd.
Chatsworth GA, 30705
Phone: 706 695-2621 park
Phone: 706 517-8555 stables
Scenic
Drive - Central Georgia
Dahlonega Gold Museum State Historic Site
The Dahlonega Gold Museum tells the story of the gold rush, the
founding of the towns of Auraria and Dahlonega, and the Georgia
land lottery that gave away Cherokee territory. Located in the old
Lumpkin County courthouse in the town square, the museum displays
include artifacts, gold coins, gold nuggets, and mining tools along
with a video on the first gold rush in America. Nearby, one of the
North Georgia College buildings stands on the site of the former
U.S. Mint, which was burned during the Civil War. Visitors can shop
for gold nuggets and jewelry in stores around the square, or learn
to pan for gold at several locations just out of town. Gold from
Dahlonega covers the dome of the Georgia state house in Atlanta.
The southern Appalachians have their rugged ending near Dahlonega.
Mount Yonah, (or "bear" in Cherokee) can be seen on the horizon
if one approaches Dahlonega from the east. North of town, the Appalachian
Trail has its southern terminus in the Chattahoochee National Forest
near Amicalola Falls. From here, the AT covers some of the most
rugged terrain in its entire length before crossing into North Carolina
near Franklin.
Contact: Dahlonega Gold Museum State Historic Site, #1 Public
Square, Dahlonega Georgia.
Phone: 706 864-2257 dggold@alltel.net
The Nacoochee Mound
The Nacoochee Mound, at the headwaters of the Chattahoochee River,
marks the village site of Itsati, or Echota, located on Sautee Creek,
on the Unicoi Trail. (The name of Sautee Creek reflects the Kituhwa
dialect pronunciation of the village name It sa ti.) This village
differs from and should not be confused with Old Echota on the Tennessee
River in the Overhill Towns, or with New Echota in north Georgia.
The town of Nacoochee, or Nagutsi, stood farther south, at the junction
of Sautee Creek and Soquee River .
Contact: The Hardman family, the Trust for Public Land,
and the state of Georgia are negotiating the ownership of the mound.
Their goal is to make it part of the Georgia State Parks system,
with an interpretive center to be created in the old farmhouse.
Unicoi State Park
Unicoi State Park, located on State Rd. 75 not far from the Nacoochee
Mound, stands on the original Unicoi Trail, the trading path that
connected Cherokee Overhill towns and Lower towns, reaching to Augusta,
Georgia. At the park, some interpretive materials discuss the trail.
The Unicoi Trail reaches this point in Georgia after turning south
from the vicinity of Hayesville, N.C.
Unicoi State Park has more than a thousand acres of woods, streams,
and mountains for hiking, biking, fishing, swimming, boating, and
picnicking. A double waterfall, Anna Ruby Falls, is located near
the entrance to the park. A lodge includes a restaurant, gift shop,
and conference facilities, and the staff offers programs on natural
history.
Contact: Unicoi State Park P.O. Box 997 Helen GA 30545
Phone: 706 878 3982 (park office) 706 878- 3983. For rates call 1 800-864-7275.
Blood Mountain and Walasi-Yi Center
Another route north from Dahlonega along Rt. 19 and 129 leads to
DeSoto Falls, the Walasi-Yi Center and its trail to Blood Mountain,
and Vogel State Park, finally connecting with Blairsville and with
Rt. 64 west of Murphy in North Carolina. About fourteen miles north
of Dahlonega, the DeSoto Falls recreation area includes five waterfalls
on a three-mile stretch of the DeSoto Trail. From here the road
rises to cross Neel's Gap, named for the engineer who brought the
road through here in the 1930's.
Contact: Walasi-Yi Center, US 129 Rt. 1 Box 1240 Blairsville, GA 30512
Phone: 706 745-6095
Scenic Drive
Warwoman Dell
In northeast Georgia, the trail from Clayton leads to Warwoman
Dell, to Tallulah Falls, to Travelers Rest, and to the Tugaloo village
site at Tugaloo State Park. Coming from the west into Clayton on
Rt. 76, one intersects Rt. 441, a four-lane highway. These roads
approximate the old trails, and the Cherokees called the Clayton
area "The Dividings" because of the intersection of trails here.
From Clayton one can also travel north on Rt. 441 to connect with
Macon County and the Middle Towns area along the Little Tennessee
Rivers, whose headwaters rise a few miles north of Clayton.
This scenic drive through northeast Georgia bridges the area between
the old Middle and Lower Cherokee towns. Warwoman Dell is located
on an old trading path and on Warwoman Creek, a tributary of the
Chattooga River. This English name was used as early as 1775, but
the story of its origin is unknown. Cherokee women were free to
participate in war, and some did, although "warwoman" is not a Cherokee
word. The Cherokee did have "Beloved Women" who were acclaimed for
their service to the tribe, and who made decisions of life and death
over prisoners. The Warwoman Dell Recreation Area includes a nature
trail and picnic tables. The Bartram Trail passes through the dell,
leading to Becky Branch Falls and several other waterfalls.
Contact: Warwoman Dell - Chattahoochee and Oconee National Forests, Gainesville GA
Phone: 706 536-0541
Tallulah Gorge State Park
About twelve miles south of Clayton, Tallulah Falls thunders through
a gorge nearly one thousand feet deep and two miles long, home to
rare plants and diverse animal species. Known in Cherokee stories
as a gateway to other worlds and home of little people, Tallulah
Falls was called Ugv-yi, a word whose meaning is lost. Talulu was
the name of the ancient town on the river above the falls, and also
the name of a town in present-day Graham County, on Tallulah Creek
east of Robbinsville.
Georgia Department of Natural Resources and Georgia Power created
this three-thousand acre state park, which includes hiking trails,
climbing areas, a lake, a beach for swimming, campsites, tennis
courts, facilities for fishing and picnicking. The new Jane Hurt
Yarn Visitors Center offers an award-winning video, an exhibit area
on the Cherokee, an exhibit on the natural history and geology of
the gorge, a three-story-high natural history diorama, and gift-shop.
Contact: Tallulah Gorge State Park, P.O. Box 248 Tallulah Falls GA 30573
Phone 706-754-7970
Travelers Rest State Historic Site
Traveler's Rest State Historic Site is located on the old Unicoi
Trail. The Cherokee Nation made an agreement for the development
of this ancient trail into a modern turnpike in 1813, and the beginning
of those improvements in the east started near the entrance of Toccoa
Creek into the Tugaloo River (a tributary of the Savannah.) This
site was near the old Tugaloo village site, and also near Traveler's
Rest, which became a stagecoach inn on the new turnpike.
This area, along with upper South Carolina, was some of the first
land ceded by the Cherokees in the colonial period. This specific
area near Toccoa, where another village was located, passed out
of Cherokee ownership in 1738.
Contact: Travelers Rest State Historic Site, 8162 Riverdale
Road Toccoa GA 30577
Phone: 706 886-2256
Tugaloo State Park
Tugaloo, or Dugilu-yi was an important Cherokee town, part of the
Lower Towns, located at the junction of Tugaloo Creek and the Toccoa
River. This town site was inundated in 1962 by the creation of Lake
Hartwell, but is commemorated with a historic marker on the Georgia
side of the lake. Along with Kituhwa in the Middle Towns and Echota
in the Overhill Towns, Tugaloo was one of the towns important in
Cherokee religion and ceremony because priests kept the sacred fire
burning here.
Contact: Tugaloo State Park, 1763 Tugaloo State Rd. Lavonia
GA 30553
Phone:706-356-4362
Editorial Note: For an in-depth look at each one of the interpretive centers along the Cherokee Heritage Trails, including complete articles and quotes, detailed information on all the historical sites, amazing full color photography depicting the land and its people, stories from many of the Cherokee Elders and much more about the wonderful Cherokee culture, make the Cherokee Heritage Trails Guidebook a part of your personal library. Click here to find out more.
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