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Catawba |
By 1728 they had 400 warriors and a population of about 1,400. They lost half of these to smallpox epidemic during 1738. A generation later (1759-60), smallpox again took half leaving a total of 400. The census of 1826 found only 110 Catawba. Presently, about 1,200 descendants are living in the vicinity of Rock Hill, SC. Total tribal membership lists 2,600. The Catawba are recognized as a tribe by the federal government and the State of South Carolina.
They
lived in villages of circular, bark-covered houses, and dedicated temple
structures were used for public gatherings and religious ceremonies. Agriculture,
for which men and women both shared responsibility, provided at least
two crops each year and was heavily supplemented by hunting and fishing.
The Iroquois called the Catawba "flatheads" because they, as
well as many of the other Siouan-speaking tribes of the area, practiced
forehead flattening of males infants.
Catawba
warriors had a fearsome reputation and an appearance to match: ponytail
hairstyle with a distinctive war paint pattern of one eye in a black circle,
the other in a white circle and remainder of the face painted black. Coupled
with their flattened foreheads, some of their enemies must have died from
sheer fright.
It is difficult to think of another Native American
group for which South Carolina tried to establish a reservation so they
could stay. By 1720 the Catawba had started to adopt many of the ways
of English colonists but were losing their own culture in the process.
For the most part, they remained very traditional about religion until
1883. Within a year Mormon missionaries were able to convert almost all
of them. Presently, most of the Catawba belong to the Church of Jesus
Christ of the Latter Day Saints.
In 1959 Catawba petitioned Congress to terminate their
tribal status, and tribal land holdings were distributed among the membership
during 1962. The final tribal role call of that year gave a population
of a little over 600. After termination, many Catawba emigrated to the
Choctaw in southeast Oklahoma. After a change of heart in 1973, the Catawba
tribal council was reorganized and recognized by the state of South Carolina.
During 1994, the Catawba regained federal recognition after a lengthy
court battle.
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