The Catawba, also known as Issa, Essa or Iswä but most commonly Iswa (Catawba: Ye Iswąˀ 'people of the river'),[3] are a federally recognized tribe of Native Americans, known as the Catawba Indian Nation.[4] Their current lands are in South Carolina, on the Catawba River, near the city of Rock Hill. Their territory once extended into North Carolina, as well, and they still have legal claim to some parcels of land in that state. They were once considered one of the most powerful Southeastern tribes in the Carolina Piedmont, as well as one of the most powerful tribes in the South as a whole, with other, smaller tribes merging into the Catawba as their post-contact numbers dwindled due to the effects of colonization on the region.

Catawba
Catawba: Ye Iswąˀ
Pre-contact distribution of the Catawba
Total population
2010: 3,370[1]
Regions with significant populations
 United States (North Carolina, South Carolina)
Languages
English, formerly Catawba
Religion
Traditional Indigenous (private), Christianity (incl. syncretistic forms), Mormon
Related ethnic groups
Lumbee, Waccamaw, Eno, Shakori, and other Siouan peoples
Catawba Reservation
Location in South Carolina
Location in South Carolina
TribeCatawba Nation
CountryUnited States
StateSouth Carolina
CountyYork
HeadquartersRock Hill
Government
 • ChiefWilliam Harris
 • Assistant ChiefJason Harris
 • SecretaryRoderick Beck
Population
 (2010)[1]
 • Total
3,370
Websitecatawba.com

The Catawba were among the East Coast tribes who made selective alliances with some of the early European colonists, when these colonists agreed to help them in their ongoing conflicts with other tribes. These were primarily the tribes of different language families: the Iroquois, who ranged south from the Great Lakes area and New York; the Algonquian Shawnee and Lenape (Delaware); and the Iroquoian Cherokee, who fought for control over the large Ohio Valley (including what is in present-day West Virginia).[5] During the American Revolutionary War the Catawba supported the American colonists against the British. Decimated by colonial smallpox epidemics, warfare and cultural disruption, the Catawba declined markedly in number in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Some Catawba continued to live in their homelands in South Carolina, while others joined the Choctaw or Cherokee, at least temporarily.

Terminated as a tribe by the federal government in 1959, the Catawba Indian Nation had to reorganize to reassert their sovereignty and treaty rights. In 1973 they established their tribal enrollment and began the process of regaining federal recognition. In 1993 they regained federal recognition and won a $50 million Indian land claims settlement by the federal government and state of South Carolina. The state of South Carolina also recognized the tribe in 1993. Their headquarters are at Rock Hill, South Carolina.

As of 2006, the population of the Catawba Nation has increased to about 2,600, most in South Carolina.[citation needed]

The Catawba language, part of the Siouan family (Catawban branch), is being revived.[6]

Name

edit

The Catawba have also been known as Esaw, or Issa (Catawba iswä, "river"), named after their territory along the principal waterway of the region. Historically, Iswa, today the river is commonly known as the Catawba River from its headwaters in North Carolina and into South Carolina before continuing as the Wateree River in Fairfield county, South Carolina. The nations of the Iroquois frequently referred to the Catawba under the general term Totiri, or Toderichroone, also known as Tutelo.[citation needed]

History

edit

People have lived in the area since the Paleoindian period (~10,000 B.C.). Pottery along the Catawba river corridor have been found that date to the Woodland period. The Catawba were the people who inhabited the area when Europeans first began to settle.[7]

 
A c. 1724 annotated copy of a deerskin Catawba map of the tribes between Charleston (left) and Virginia (right) following the displacements of a century of disease and enslavement and the 1715–17 Yamasee War. The Catawba are labelled as "Nasaw".

In the late 19th century, the ethnographer Henry Rowe Schoolcraft theorized that the Catawba had lived in Canada until driven out by the Iroquois (supposedly with French help) and that they had migrated to Kentucky and to Botetourt County, Virginia. He asserted that by 1660 they had migrated south to the Catawba River, competing in this territory with the Cherokee, a Southern Iroquoian language–speaking tribe who were based west of the French Broad River in southwestern North Carolina, southeastern Tennessee, northwestern South Carolina, and northeastern Georgia.[8]

However, early 20th-century anthropologist James Mooney later dismissed most elements of Schoolcraft's account as "absurd, the invention and surmise of the would-be historian who records the tradition." He pointed out that, aside from the French never having been known to help the Iroquois, the Catawba had been recorded by 1567 by the Spanish expedition under Juan Pardo as being in the same area of the Catawba River as was known to be their later territory. Mooney accepted the tradition that, following a protracted struggle, the Catawba and Cherokee had settled on the Broad River their mutual boundary.[8]

The Catawba also had armed confrontations with several northern tribes, particularly the Haudenosaunee Seneca nation, and the Algonquian-speaking Lenape, with whom they competed for hunting resources and territory. The Catawba chased Lenape raiding parties back to the north in the 1720s and 1730s, going across the Potomac River. At one point, a party of Catawba is said to have followed a party of Lenape who attacked them, and to have overtaken them near Leesburg, Virginia. There they fought a pitched battle.[9]

Similar encounters in these longstanding conflicts were reported to have occurred at present-day Franklin, West Virginia (1725),[10] Hanging Rocks and the mouth of the Potomac South Branch in West Virginia, and near the mouths of Antietam Creek (1736) and Conococheague Creek in Maryland.[11] Mooney asserted that the name of Catawba Creek in Botetourt came from an encounter in these battles with the northern tribes, not from the Catawba having lived there.[8]

In 1721 the colonial governments of Virginia and New York held a council at Albany, New York, attended by delegates from the Six Nations (Haudenosaunee) and the Catawba. The colonists asked for peace between the Confederacy and the Catawba. The Six Nations reserved the land west of the Blue Ridge mountains for themselves, including the Indian Road or Great Warriors' Path (later called the Great Wagon Road) through the Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia backcountry. This path was frequently traveled and was used until 1744 by Seneca war parties to pass through the Shenandoah Valley to raid in the South.[citation needed]

In 1738, a smallpox epidemic broke out in South Carolina. Endemic for centuries among Europeans, the infectious disease had been carried by them to North America, where it caused many deaths. The Catawba and other tribes, such as the Sissipahaw, suffered high mortality in these epidemics. In 1759, a smallpox epidemic killed nearly half the Catawba.[citation needed]

In 1744 the Treaty of Lancaster, made at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, renewed the Covenant Chain between the Iroquois and the colonists. The governments had not been able to prevent settlers going into Iroquois territory, but the governor of Virginia offered the tribe payment for their land claim. The peace was probably final for the Iroquois, who had established the Ohio Valley as their preferred hunting ground by right of conquest and pushed other tribes out of it.

Tribes located to the west continued warfare against the Catawba, who were so reduced that they could raise little resistance. In 1763, a small party of Algonquian Shawnee killed the noted Catawba chief, King Hagler, near his own village.[12]

In 1763, the colonial government of South Carolina confirmed a reservation for the Catawba of 225 square miles (580 km2; 144,000 acres), on both sides of the Catawba River, within the present York and Lancaster counties. When British troops approached during the American Revolutionary War in 1780, the Catawba withdrew temporarily into Virginia. They returned after the Battle of Guilford Court House, and settled in two villages on the reservation. These were known as Newton, the principal village, and Turkey Head, on the opposite side of the Catawba/Wateree River.[citation needed]

19th century

edit

In 1826, the Catawba leased nearly half their reservation to whites for a few thousand dollars of annuity; their dwindling number of members (as few as 110 by an 1896 estimate)[13] depended on this money for survival.

In 1840, by the Treaty of Nation Ford with South Carolina, the Catawba sold to the state all but one square mile (2.6 km2) of their 144,000 acres (225 sq mi; 580 km2) reserved by the English Crown. They resided on the remaining square mile after the treaty. The treaty was invalid ab initio because the state did not have the right to make it, which was reserved for the federal government, and never gained Senate ratification. and did not get federal approval.[14] About the same time, a number of the Catawba, dissatisfied with their condition among the whites, removed to join the remaining eastern Cherokee, who were based in far Western North Carolina. But, finding their position among their former enemies equally unpleasant, all but one or two soon returned to South Carolina. The last survivor of the westward migration, an elderly Catawba woman, died among the Cherokee in 1889. A few Cherokee intermarried with the Catawba in the region.

At a later period some Catawba removed to the Choctaw Nation in Indian Territory and settled near present-day Scullyville, Oklahoma. They assimilated with the Choctaw and did not retain separate tribal identity.

 
Catawba at The Corn Exposition 1913, Rock Hill, South Carolina

The Catawba fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War. Nineteen men enlisted with the Confederate Army and saw combat across Virginia.[15]

Historical culture and estimated populations

edit

The Catawba are historically sedentary agriculturists, who have also fished and hunted for game. Their customs have been, and are, similar to neighboring Native Americans in the Piedmont region. Traditional game has included deer, crops grown have included corn, and the women in particular are noted makers of pottery and baskets, arts which they still preserve. They are believed to have the oldest surviving tradition of pottery East of the Mississippi, and possibly the oldest (or one of the oldest) on the American continent.[5]

Early Spanish explorers of the mid-16th century estimated the population of the Catawba as between 15,000 and 25,000 people. When the English first settled South Carolina about 1682, they estimated the Catawba at about 1,500 warriors, or about 4,600 people in total. Their decline was attributed to the mortality of infectious diseases. The English named the Catawba River and Catawba County after this indigenous people. By 1728, the Catawba had been reduced to about 400 warriors, or about 1400 persons in total. In 1738, they suffered from a smallpox epidemic, which also affected nearby tribes and the whites. In 1743, even after incorporating several small tribes, the Catawba numbered fewer than 400 warriors. In 1759, they again suffered from smallpox, and in 1761, had some 300 warriors, or about 1,000 people. By 1775 they had only 400 people in total; in 1780, they had 490; and, in 1784, only 250 were reported.[citation needed]

During the nineteenth century, their numbers continued to decline, to 450 in 1822, and a total of 110 people in 1826. As of 2006, their population had increased to about 2600.[citation needed]

Religion and culture

edit
 
The Catawba women are well known in the Carolinas for their pottery.

The customs and beliefs of the early Catawba were documented by the anthropologist Frank Speck in the twentieth century. In the Carolinas, the Catawba became well known for their pottery, which historically was made primarily by the women. Since the late 20th century, some men also make pottery.[16]

In approximately 1883, tribal members were contacted by missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Numerous Catawba were converted to the church. Some left the Southeast to resettle with clusters of Mormons in Utah, Colorado, and neighboring western states.[17]

The Catawba on their reserve in South Carolina hold a yearly celebration called Yap Ye Iswa, which roughly translates to "Day of the People," or Day of the River People. Held at the Catawba Cultural Center, proceeds are used to fund the activities of the center.

20th century to present

edit
 
A Catawba family in 1908 South Carolina.

The Catawba were electing their chief prior to the start of the 20th century. In 1909 the Catawba sent a petition to the United States government seeking to be given United States citizenship.[18]

During President Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration, the federal government worked to improve conditions for Native Americans. Under the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, tribes were encouraged to renew their governments to exercise more self-determination. The Catawba were not at that time a recognized Native American tribe as they had lost their land and did not have a reservation. In 1929 Samuel Taylor Blue, chief of the Catawba, had begun the process to gain federal recognition.

The Catawba were federally recognized as a Native American tribe in 1941, and they created a written constitution in 1944. Also in 1944 South Carolina granted the Catawba and other Native American residents of the state citizenship, but did not grant them the franchise, or right to vote. Like African Americans since the turn of the 20th century, the Native Americans were largely excluded from the franchise by discriminatory rules and practices associated with voter registration. They were prevented from voting until the late 1960s, after the federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed. It provided for federal oversight and enforcement of people's constitutional right to vote.

In the 1950s, the federal government began to press what is known as the Indian termination policy, based on its perception that some tribes were assimilated enough not to need a special relationship with the government. It terminated the government of the Catawba in 1959. This cut off federal benefits, and communal property was allocated to individual households. The people became subject to state law. The Catawba decided that they preferred to be organized as a tribal community. Beginning in 1973, they applied to have their government federally recognized. Gilbert Blue served as their chief until 2007. They adopted a constitution in 1975 that was modeled on their 1944 version.

In addition, for decades the Catawba pursued various land claims against the government for the losses due to the illegal treaty made by South Carolina in 1840 and the failure of the federal government to protect their interests. This culminated in South Carolina v. Catawba Indian Tribe, Inc., where the United States Supreme Court ruled that the tribe's land claims were subject to a statute of limitations which had not yet run out. In response, the Catawba prepared to file 60,000 lawsuits against individual landowners in York County to regain ownership of their land.[19] On October 27, 1993, the U.S. Congress enacted the Catawba Indian Tribe of South Carolina Land Claims Settlement Act of 1993 (Settlement Act), which reversed the "termination", recognized the Catawba Indian Nation and, together with the state of South Carolina, settled the land claims for $50 million, to be applied toward economic development for the Nation.[20]

On July 21, 2007, the Catawba held their first elections in more than 30 years. Of the five members of the former government, only two were reelected.[21]

In the 2010 census, 3,370 people identified as having Catawba ancestry.

Catawba Indian Nation Land Trust

edit

The Catawba Reservation (34°54′17″N 80°53′01″W / 34.90472°N 80.88361°W / 34.90472; -80.88361) is located in two disjointed sections in York County, South Carolina, east of Rock Hill. Covering a total of 1,012 acres (410 ha), it reported a 2010 census population of 841 inhabitants. It also has a congressionally established service area in North Carolina, covering Mecklenburg, Cabarrus, Gaston, Union, Cleveland, and Rutherford counties. The Catawba also own a 16.57-acre (6.71 ha) site in Kings Mountain, North Carolina, which they will develop for a gaming casino and mixed-use entertainment complex.[22]

Today the Catawba earn most of their revenue from Federal/State funds.

Gaming relations with South Carolina

edit

Under the terms of the 1993 Settlement Act, the Catawba waived its right to be governed by the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. Instead, the Catawba agreed to be governed by the terms of the Settlement Agreement and the State Act as pertains to games of chance; which at the time allowed for video poker and bingo. In 1996, the Catawba formed a joint venture partnership with D.T. Collier of SPM Resorts, Inc. of Myrtle Beach, to manage their bingo and casino operations. That partnership, New River Management and Development Company, LLC (of which the Catawba were the majority owner) operated the Catawba's bingo parlor in Rock Hill. In 1999, the South Carolina General Assembly passed a statewide ban on the possession and operation of video poker devices.

When in 2004 the Catawba entered into an exclusive management contract with SPM Resorts, Inc., to manage all new bingo facilities, some tribal members were critical. The new contract was signed by the former governing body immediately prior to new elections. In addition, the contract was never brought before the General Council (the full tribal membership) as required by their existing constitution.[23] After the state established the South Carolina Education Lottery in 2002, the tribe lost gambling revenue and decided to shut down the Rock Hill bingo operation. They sold the facility in 2007.[24]

In 2006, the bingo parlor, located at the former Rock Hill Mall on Cherry Road, was closed. The Catawba filed suit against the state of South Carolina for the right to operate video poker and similar "electronic play" devices on their reservation. They prevailed in the lower courts, but the state appealed the ruling to the South Carolina Supreme Court. The state Supreme Court overturned the lower court ruling. The tribe appealed that ruling to the United States Supreme Court, but in 2007 the court declined to hear the appeal, leaving the state supreme court in place.[25] In 2014, the Supreme Court of South Carolina ruled similarly against the tribe in regards of the state's Gambling Cruise Act.[26]

In 2014, the Catawba made a second attempt to operate a bingo parlor, opening one at what was formerly a BI-LO, on Cherry Road in Rock Hill. It closed in 2017, unable to turn a profit.[27]

Gaming relations with North Carolina

edit

On September 9, 2013, the Catawba announced plans to build a $600 million casino along Interstate 85 in Kings Mountain, North Carolina.[28] Cleveland County officials quickly endorsed the plans. But Governor Pat McCrory, over 100 North Carolina General Assembly members and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI) opposed it.[29]

The Catawba submitted the required acquisition application to the United States Department of the Interior (DOI) in August 2013, seeking to have the US place this property of 16.57-acre (6.71 ha) in trust, but their application was denied in March 2018.[30] In September, the Catawba submitted a new application under the discretionary process; they also pursued a Congressional route. Senate bill 790, introduced by South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham, with support of North Carolina senators Thom Tillis and Richard Burr, would have authorized the DOI to take the land into trust for gaming, but the bill died in committee.[31]

On March 13, 2020, the DOI announced its decision to approve the 2018 discretionary application and place the land in North Carolina in trust.[22] On March 17, the EBCI filed a federal suit challenging the DOI decision in the U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia. AS is customary, the suit names the DOI, the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs, Secretary David Bernhardt, and several other department officials. In addition, the Catawba filed a motion to intervene to join the defendants. The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma filed a motion to support the EBCI; both motions were approved.

In May 2020, the EBCI filed an amended complaint in its federal lawsuit, saying that the DOI's approval of the trust land resulted from a scheme by casino developer Wallace Cheves. He was said to have persuaded the Catawba to lend their name to the scheme, and had a history of criminal and civil enforcement actions against him and his companies for illegal gambling. It said that the DOI disregarded early consultation with the EBCI and skipped an Environmental Impact Assessment. The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma also filed an amended complaint, seeking to protect cultural artifacts on their ancestral land where the casino is planned.[31][32][33][34]

On January 24, 2021, Governor Roy Cooper signed a revenue-sharing compact with the Catawba Nation, which allows for Class III gaming and wagering on sports and horse racing; the compact is similar to the one signed between the state and the EBCI.[35] On March 19, a letter from Darryl LaCounte, Acting Director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, notified the Catawba Nation and Governor Roy Cooper that the agency has signed off on the agreement; it stated that the pact complies with the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act and other provisions of federal law.[36] On April 16, the Catawba Nation received a victory in federal court, as U.S. District Judge James Boasberg found no basis for the Cherokees' claims in the lawsuit.[37] Catawba Two Kings Casino opened on July 1, 2021, with a temporary modular facility containing 500 slot machines in Kings Mountain.[38]

See also

edit

Footnotes

edit
  1. ^ a b "2010 Census CPH-T-6. American Indian and Alaska Native The United States and Puerto Rico: 2010" (PDF). census.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 9, 2014.
  2. ^ Elizabeth Harris. "Catawba Nation 2019 Election Results" (PDF). The Catawba Indian Nation Office of Tribal Government.
  3. ^ Brammer, John Paul (November 15, 2017). "Native American Two Spirit Fights to Keep Tribe's Language Alive". NBC.
  4. ^ "Catawba Indian Nation". www.catawbaindian.net. Retrieved September 19, 2020.
  5. ^ a b Sultzman, Lee. "Catawba History". Clay Hound: Native American Traditional Pottery. Retrieved March 14, 2009.
  6. ^ Sturtevant, William C. (August 1958). "Siouan Languages in the East". American Anthropologist. New Series. 60 (4): 738–743. doi:10.1525/aa.1958.60.4.02a00120. JSTOR 665680.
  7. ^ "Catawba River Eligibility Study for the South Carolina Scenic Rivers Program" (PDF). 2008.
  8. ^ a b c Mooney, James (1894). Siouan Tribes of the East. p. 69. hdl:10088/34575.
  9. ^ Williams, Harrison. Legends of Loudoun. pp. 63–64.
  10. ^ Morton, Frederic. The Story of Winchester in Virginia. p. 38.
  11. ^ Doddridge, Joseph (1850). A History of the Valley of Virginia. pp. 29–33.
  12. ^ Blumer, Thomas J.; Smith, Robert P.; Sanders, E. Fred (2007). Catawba Nation: Treasures in History. American Heritage. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1625844224.
  13. ^ Scaife, Hazel Lewis (1896). History and Condition of the Catawba Indians of South Carolina. Philadelphia: Office of Indian Rights Association. p. 10. Retrieved September 25, 2014.
  14. ^ McSloy, Steven Paul (1994). "Revisiting the 'Courts of the Conqueror': American Indian Claims Against the United States". American University Law Review. 44 (537): 549.
  15. ^ Hauptman, Laurence M. (1995). "Infantrymen in the Army of Northern Virginia, The Catawba". Between Two Fires: American Indians in the Civil War. The Free Press. pp. 87–102. ISBN 9780029141809.
  16. ^ Blumer, Thomas John (January 6, 2004). Paredes, J. Anthony (ed.). Catawba Indian Pottery: The Survival of a Folk Tradition. Contemporary American Indian Studies. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. ISBN 0-8173-1383-4.
  17. ^ Encyclopedia of Latter-day Saint History. p. 1165.
  18. ^ Blummer (2007). The Catawba Nation. Historians Press. p. 101.
  19. ^ Christie, John C. Jr. (2000). "The Continuing Saga of Indian Land Claims: The Catawba Indian Land Claim: A Giant Among Indian Land Claims". Am. Indian Culture & Res. J. 24 (173): 173–182. doi:10.17953/aicr.24.1.w55742852146u137.
  20. ^ McSloy, Steven Paul (1994). "Revisiting the 'Courts of the Conqueror': American Indian Claims Against the United States". American University Law Review. 44 (537): 552.
  21. ^ "New Catawba leader faces uphill climb"[permanent dead link], Indian Country, 13 Aug 2007
  22. ^ a b "Catawba Indian Nation - Indian Affairs" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior. March 12, 2020. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  23. ^ "Tribal members protest Catawba Bingo" Archived 2007-09-24 at the Wayback Machine, Indian Country, 6 Apr 2004
  24. ^ "The lottery at 5 years: Tribe says lottery killed its business" Archived 2007-12-19 at the Wayback Machine, The State, 18 Dec 2007
  25. ^ "U.S Supreme Court Order List — October 1, 2007" (PDF). Retrieved September 19, 2020.
  26. ^ "Catawba Indian Nation v. State of South Carolina and Mark Keel, in his official capacity as Chief of the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, Respondents". April 2, 2014. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  27. ^ Harris, Amanda (May 11, 2017). "Catawba Indian Nation closes bingo hall in Rock Hill". The Herald. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  28. ^ Elkins, Ken (September 9, 2013). "Catawbas push to open $600M casino in Kings Mountain". Charlotte Business Journal. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  29. ^ Elkins, Ken (September 17, 2013). "N.C. Gov. McCrory won't support Catawba casino in Kings Mountain". Charlotte Business Journal. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  30. ^ Holdman, Jessica (September 11, 2022). "How a SC Native American tribe came to operate an out-of-state casino". Post and Courier. Retrieved September 13, 2022.
  31. ^ a b Dillon, A.P. (March 18, 2020). "Proposed Catawba Indian casino in King's Mountain moves forward". North State Journal. Raleigh, NC. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  32. ^ Orlando, Joyce (May 27, 2020). "Tribes continue battle for proposed casino in Kings Mountain". The Shelby Star. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  33. ^ "Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians files amended complaint against U.S. Department of the Interior". Mountain Xpress. Asheville, NC. July 8, 2020. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  34. ^ Morrill, Jim (July 17, 2020). "Vegas coming to Charlotte area: Catawbas plan casino groundbreaking for Wednesday". The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  35. ^ "North Carolina, Catawba tribe, ink casino revenue agreement". Associated Press. Charlotte, NC. January 24, 2021. Retrieved March 26, 2021.
  36. ^ Marusak, Joe (March 25, 2021). "Feds clear the way for Catawba Indians' North Carolina casino. Here's the latest". The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved March 26, 2021.
  37. ^ Marusak, Joe (April 17, 2021). "Catawba Indians declared victor in NC casino court fight, clearing way for construction". The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  38. ^ "Temporary Catawba Casino Opens in North Carolina". U.S. News & World Report. July 1, 2021. Retrieved July 19, 2021.

See also

edit

Further reading

edit
  • Beck, Robin (2013). Chiefdoms, Collapse, and Coalescence in the Early American South. New York: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139135429. ISBN 978-1-139-13542-9.
  • Brown, Douglas S. (1983) [1966]. The Catawba Indians: People of the River. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 9780872491014.
  • Christie, John C. Jr. (2000). "The Catawba Indian Land Claim: A Giant among Indian Land Claims". American Indian Culture and Research Journal. 24 (1): 173–182. doi:10.17953/aicr.24.1.w55742852146u137.
  • Drye, Willie (November 14, 2005). "Excavated Village Unlocks Mystery of Tribe's Economy". National Geographic News. Archived from the original on November 24, 2005.
  • Hudson, Charles M. (1970). The Catawba Nation. University of Georgia Monograph. Vol. 18. ISBN 0820302554.
  • Merrell, J. H. (1989). The Indians' New World: Catawbas and Their Neighbors from European Contact Through the Era of Removal. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.
  • Speck, Frank G. (1939). "Catawba Religious Beliefs, Mortuary Customs, and Dances". Primitive Man. 12 (2): 21–57. doi:10.2307/3316471. JSTOR 3316471.
  • Speck, Frank G. (1934). Catawba Texts. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Speck, Frank G. (1913). "Some Catawba Texts and Folk-lore". Journal of American Folklore. 26 (102): 319–330. doi:10.2307/534395. JSTOR 534395.
edit

34°54′17″N 80°53′01″W / 34.90472°N 80.88361°W / 34.90472; -80.88361