Contains edited interview segments with Faye Greiner, Elizabeth Harris, and Jeff Harris discussing the curret and historical relationships between the Catawba and the US Federal and State governments, recorded between September 2020 and March 2021. Runtime: 00:08:28.
Catawba Indian Nation Cultural Services DivisionDr. Davis discusses the history of Catawba settlements and revealed through archaeological evidence.
Catawba Cultural Services DivisionDr. Davis take a close look at late Catawba settlement sites near Nation Ford, South Carolina.
Catawba Cultural Services DivisionDr. Steve Davis discusses the changing worlds of the Catawba int he late 18th and early 19th centuries as revealed through archaeological discoveries.
Dr. R. P. Stephen Davis, Jr.Dr. Steve Davis discusses his archaeological discoveries that reveal some of the history of the ancestral Catawba tribes in North Carolina.
Dr. R. P. Stephen Davis, Jr.One black and white photograph of 9 unidentified Catawba posed behind a sign advertising a Catawba pottery shop.
Color photograph showing exterior view of a reconstructed Catawba bark house. This style of dwelling was traditional for Catawba before and for some time after European colonization. The structure is circular, constructed of a frame of longs and saplings covered with bark shingles, and thatched with grass.
Color photograph showing exterior view of a reconstructed Catawba bark house. This style of dwelling was traditional for Catawba before and for some time after European colonization. The structure is circular, constructed of a frame of longs and saplings covered with bark shingles, and thatched with grass.
Color photograph showing exterior view of a reconstructed Catawba bark house. This style of dwelling was traditional for Catawba before and for some time after European colonization. The structure is circular, constructed of a frame of longs and saplings covered with bark shingles, and thatched with grass.
Color photograph of the interior of a traditional Catawba bark house. This view shoes the support structure of trimmed branches and saplings, as well as the long bark shingles. Bark houses were arranged around a central fire pit, with an opening in the center of the thatched roof above to allow smoke to escape. Wooden benches were used for sitting and sleeping.