Contains miscellaneous meeting minutes, briefing packets, correspondence, and other pertinent information for the NATHPO dated 1999-2003.
Dr. Wenonah G. HaireContains academic articles and illustrations/photographs of various Native American quilt works, moccasins, and other artifacts/crafts.
Dr. Wenonah G. HaireCorrespondence between the Catawba Nation and the South Carolina General Assembly containing materials pertinent to the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, including research papers, archaeological magazine articles, and a book entitled Frontiers in the Soil: The Archaeology of Georgia by Roy S. Dickens, Jr. and James L McKinley.
Dr. Wenonah G. HaireContains a number of newsletters and brochures, also includes a housing plan for a reservation residence and a long academic paper by Christopher Chad Canty (including a personal statement) and an excavation report draft for the Spratt’s Mill Bottom site in Fort Mill from 1993.
Dr. Wenonah G. HaireClippings and copies of articles dated Newspaper clippings, copies, and various brochures. September 22 1993, March 18 1994, April 1994, October 1-2 1994, November 1994, December 1994, & [n.d.].
Dr. Wenonah G. HaireContains a newspaper clipping about attempts to revive the Catawba language in the tribal education system, as well as at small liberal arts colleges throughout the state.
Dr. Wenonah G. HaireContains a clipping from the 2/21/1996 Cherokee One Feather newspaper concerning the use of the Catawba language in schools, and a New York Times obituary from 1/14/1996 about the death of Red Thunder Cloud, a Catawba national and advocate for the continued use of the language.
Dr. Wenonah G. HaireChapters 4 (incomplete) - 12 (pp. 44-173) of a long report on Catawba pottery and on peace pipe construction.
Dr. Wenonah G. HaireContains a petition to the CIN Executive Committee about jurisdictional authority between tribal county police and Fish and Wildlife officers.
Dr. Wenonah G. HaireContains a series of photographs and negatives of members of the tribe, tribal craftsmanship, and some candids of the after-school program from the mid-1990s.
Dr. Wenonah G. Haire