Official site of the Eastern Cherokee, Southern Iroquois & United Tribes of South Carolina, Inc

 

ECSIUT

Cherokees
of S.C.

Cherokee General Information and History

Folkways
And
Artist

Volunteer Opportunities

Human Rights and Current Issues

Tuscarora Village Design Project

Historic Preservation

Educational
programs

Future Projects

Cherokee
Marketplace Expanded Store

Membership, Genealogy, and Tracing Ancestry

South
Carolina
Tribes

Media Coverage Links

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Historic preservation conference 2001








 Projects and Activities:

10 years of Native American Film Festivals

 

ATTENTION:

ECSIUT is in desperate need of donations.

We are a 501 (c) private tax-exempt, nonprofit organization
dedicated to the preservation and perpetuation of South Carolina Native American history, culture and heritage
.

Without your help we cannot succeed.

Any amount that you can donate will help us continue service. Please click the cart logo to make your donation.

 

 South Carolina Tribes and Native Groups

Statewide Conference on November 18th 2005

Native American State Recognition News

updates 6/5/2005

 

Please visit our Human Rights and Current Issues

Page for UPDATES

 

In Honor of Vine Deloria Jr.

 



Native American Writers Workshop
The anthology is complete!


The Cherokees of SouthCarolina

Present-day Oconee County, South Carolina was the home to Native American peoples since as early as 300 A.D.

In approximately 1100, the Etowah Indians occupied the region. From 1350-1600 the Muskogeans inhabited and the Cherokees arrived around 1500.

From 1600 to 1800's the Cherokees occupied the extreme northwest portion of South Carolina and during the early colonial times dominated much of the "midlands" and the "upcountry." The Cherokee Path was the leading path out of Charleston going to Columbia. "The Cherokee Path" led to all of the Cherokee territories. It ran from Charles Towne to the colonial settlement of Ninety Six, then to Fort Prince George and the Cherokee village of Keowee. From Keowee, the principal town of the Cherokee Lower settlements, it crossed the mountains into the Middle settlements of North Carolina, then crossed the Unaka Mountains into the valley of the Little Tennessee River and the Overhill settlements. A branch of the "Cherokee Path" even led to the Valley Towns, located in the area of present-day Georgia.



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South Carolina Indians Today 


NATIONAL Native American Indian Organizational LINKS:

National Congress of American Indians

American Indian Movement

Office of American Indian Trust

Senate Committee on Indian Affairs

First Nations Development Institute

National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development

Department of Labor, Native American and Indian Programs (Welfare to Work, TANF)

Department of Defense and Native American Programs

National Indian Policy Center (George Washington University)

Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program

Council of Energy Resource Tribes

Native American Rights Fund

National Indian Telecommunications Institute

Native American Cultural and Educational Authority

INTERNATIONAL LINKS:

International Indian Treaty Council

Center for World Indigenous Studies

International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs

UN Documents on Indigenous Peoples

Inuit Circumpolar Conference

Economic Development and Cultural Change

 

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