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The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The

The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

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Page 1: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Native People of

North Carolina:The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans,

The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Page 2: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Regions

There are 3 regions in our state:

Page 3: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Mountain Region,

Page 4: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Piedmont,

Page 5: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

And the Coastal Plain!

Page 6: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Each region in our state was thehome to different tribes of Native

Americans.

Page 7: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Cherokees were the largest Native

American group living in the Mountain

Region.Cherokee means

“Speakers of

another language”

Page 8: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Cherokees spoke a language in the Iroquoian language family.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AEXKjyqTw1o&feature=share&list=UUuqKGb4re9a5TssItxrTw6Q

“Osiyo” = hello

“Wado” = thank you

Page 9: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Cherokee society was divided into seven clans and was democratic.

Page 10: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Cherokee girls and women worked in the fields, prepared food, made baskets, and took care of the children.

Cherokee boys and men hunted and fished.

Page 11: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Cherokee villages held the Green Corn Ceremony to give thanks for a

good harvest.

Page 12: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Cherokees built large, sturdy, rectangular homes for shelter.

A hole in the roof let out smoke from the fire pit below.

Page 13: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Catawba's were the largest group of Native Americans living in the

Piedmont Region. There were between 5,000 and

6,000 members.“The People of the

River”

Page 14: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Catawba's spoke the Siouan language and the Catawba

language.“Hawoh” = thank you

Page 15: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Catawba government was democratic. All members of the

community would meet and discuss problems.

Page 16: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Catawba people hunted, gathered food, and farmed.

Page 17: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Catawba lived in small villages along the river. They made round

houses.

Page 18: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

One tradition was called “The Three

Sisters,” which was planting beans, corns,

and squash in the same mound of dirt.

Page 19: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Tribes in the Coastal Plain

Region included: Hatteras,

Roanokes, Croatoans, Secotans,

Pamlicos, and Tuscaroras.

Page 20: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The Coastal Plain Native Americans spoke the Algonquian

languages.

The Algonquian languages can still be heard in English today: chipmunk, raccoon, pecan, hickory, skunk, and succotash are all Algonquian words.

Page 21: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The government was democratic. The chief of the tribe would make

the final decisions.

Page 22: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

They hunted with bows and arrows.

They fished using weirs to trap fish.Shells were cut and made into strings of beads called wampum. Wampum was traded for other goods.

Page 23: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

A cultural tradition was making pottery. Clay was used, mixed with crushed shell bits to make bowls,

pipes, and arrowheads.

Page 24: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

Their villages were along the rivers and sounds. They built

longhouses made of wooden frames with

rounded roofs covered with bark or

grass.

Page 25: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

The following 3 slides are the student pages. Please print each of the three slides and give to the

students.They color code each piece of

information according to the slide color. Students should also add

illustrations. Finally, link the three pages together with yarn.

Page 26: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

People of the Mountain Region 

The Cherokees were the largest Native American group living in the Mountain region. 

The Cherokees spoke a language in the Iroquoian language family.

 Cherokee society was divided into seven clans.

 The Cherokee government was democratic.

 Cherokee girls and women worked in the fields, prepared food, made baskets, and took care of the

children. 

Cherokee boys and men hunted and fished. 

Cherokee villages held the Green Corn Ceremony to give thanks for a good harvest and to celebrate the New Year.

 Cherokees built large, sturdy, rectangular homes for shelter. They stretched bark and woven material over the framework. The walls were covered with a mixture of grass and clay and the roof with bark or

thatch which is dried grass. A hole in the roof let out smoke from the fire pit below.

 

Page 27: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

People of the Piedmont Region 

The Catawba’s were the largest group ofNative Americans living in the Piedmont region. There were between 5,000 and 6,000 members.

 They spoke the Siouan language.

 The Catawba government was democratic. All members of the community

would meet and discuss problems. A council made up of older members of the tribe would make final decisions.

 The Catawba people hunted, gathered food, and farmed.

 One tradition was called “he Three Sisters” which was planting beans, corn,

and squash in the same mound of dirt. The bean and squash vines would grow up the corn stalks.

 Catawba’s lived in small villages along rivers. There were 5 to 15 round houses made of wooden frames covered with tree bark surrounded by

palisades (fence) in each village.  

Page 28: The Native People of North Carolina: The Cherokee, The Catawba, The Hatteras, The Roanokes, The Croatoans, The Secotans, The Pamlicos, and The Tuscaroras

People of the Coastal Plain Region 

Tribes in this area were: Hatteras, Roanokes, Croatoans, Secotans, Pamlicos and Tuscaroras.

 They spoke the Algonquian languages.

 The government was democratic. All members of the community would meet and discuss problems. The chief of the tribe would make the final decisions.

They hunted with bows and arrows, fished, using weirs to trap fish, and farmed.

Corn was the main crop, but they planted pumpkins and beans. Women gathered clams and oysters along the shore. Shells were cut and made into

strings of beads called wampum. Wampum was traded for other goods such as clay and salt from other tribes in the Piedmont and Mountain regions.

 Their villages were along rivers and sounds. There were 10 to 30 long

rectangular houses called longhouses made of wooden frames with rounded

roofs covered with tree bark or grass.