Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves Arkansas Narratives, Part 1
SLAVE NARRATIVES A Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves TYPEWRITTEN RECORDS PREPARED BY THE FEDERAL WRITERS' PROJECT, 1936-1938 ASSEMBLED BY THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PROJECT WORK PROJECTS ADMINISTRATION FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA SPONSORED BY THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Illustrated with Photographs WASHINGTON 1941
skeletons there were a few flint implements and minute
fragments of vessels of clay.
A large mound near the chambered mounds was also opened, but
in this no chambers were found. Neither had the bodies been
burnt. This mound proved remarkably rich in large flint
implements, and also contained well-made pottery and a
peculiar "gorget" of red stone. The connection of the people
who placed the ashes of their dead in the stone chambers
with those who buried their dead in the earth mounds is, of
course, yet to be determined.
It is quite possible, indeed probable, that these chambers were used for
secondary burials, the bodies having first been cremated.
In the volume of the proceedings already quoted, the same investigator
gives an account of other chambered mounds which are, like the
preceding, very interesting, the more so as adults only were inhumed
therein, children having been buried beneath the dwelling-floors:
Mr. F.W. Putnam occupied the rest of the evening with an
account of his explorations of the ancient mounds and burial
places in the Cumberland Valley, Tennessee.
The excavations had been carried on by himself, assisted by
Mr. Edwin Curtiss, for over two years, for the benefit of
SLAVE NARRATIVES A Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves TYPEWRITTEN RECORDS PREPARED BY THE FEDERAL WRITERS' PROJECT, 1936-1938 ASSEMBLED BY THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PROJECT WORK PROJECTS ADMINISTRATION FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA SPONSORED BY THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Illustrated with Photographs WASHINGTON 1941