My young son and I got up early Saturday morning and drove
down to Dauphin Island for the Battle of Mobile Bay Commemorative Day at Fort
Gaines. After exploring the old fort, listening to living history demonstrators
and watching Civil War reenactors fire off a cannon in memory of those who died
during that famous Civil War battle 153 years ago, we set off for home. On our way
off the island, we took a short detour down Iberville Drive to check out something
that I’ve wanted to see for several years, Dauphin Island’s Indian Shell Mound
Park.
This park features a network of walking trails that take
visitors in and around large Indian mounds located near the shores of Dauphin
Island Bay. According to an historical marker near the entrance to the park,
Indians, centuries before Europeans arrived, fished in the bay and visited the
site of these ancient mounds for hundreds of years. Archaeologists later
determined that these massive mounds contain many layers of oyster shells,
charcoal, fishbones and broken pieces of pottery. Archaeologists believe that
these layers were created by repeated visits to the same location by Indians
over the course of many centuries.
On our way home, I began to think about Indian mounds
elsewhere in Alabama. As most people know, the most famous Indian mounds in
Alabama are located in the Hale County town of Moundville, which, as the crow
flies, isn’t that far from Camden, a distance of roughly 80 miles. Of course,
it should come as no surprise that more than a few Indian mounds can also be
found within the boundaries of Wilcox County.
Later, at home, I turned to an old book called “Alabama
Encyclopedia, Vol. I: Book of Facts,” which was published in 1965 by the
American Southern Publishing Co. in Northport. According to that book, there is
a group of three Indian mounds four miles south of Furman and there’s another
mound about three-fourths of a mile southwest of Webb’s Landing on the Alabama
River. That book goes on to say that there is an “extensive mound” at Burford’s
Crossing, about a half-mile south of Holly Ferry on the Alabama River.
Another Wilcox County mound can be found about three miles
north of the mouth of Pine Barren Creek, on the south side, about 100 feet from
the bank. This mound is four feet high and 100 feet in diameter, according to
the “Alabama Encyclopedia.” In addition, a group of four mounds can be found
near Matthews Landing on the Alabama River.
Historical researchers believe that Indian mounds served a
wide variety of purposes. Dwellings and temples were sometimes built on top of
them and at other times they were used for ceremonies like funerals and ritual
dances. Others were used as burial sites and others had a more practical
purpose, like the shell mounds at Dauphin Island.
In the end, there are likely many more Indian mounds out
there in the wilds of Wilcox County, especially near the Alabama River and
along major creeks. If anyone in the reading audience knows of a Wilcox County
Indian mound not mentioned above, please let me know. Also, if you know more
about the Wilcox County mounds mentioned in “Alabama Encyclopedia,” I’d like to
hear from you. I suspect that many readers would be surprised to learn that
they live a short drive from important, local Indian sites that are almost in
their backyards.
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