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New Echota

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 The monument on New Echota Historic Site honored the Cherokees who died on the Trail of Tears.
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The monument on New Echota Historic Site honored the Cherokees who died on the Trail of Tears.

New Echota is, a state park and historic site in the State of Georgia, USA, part of a much larger area that was once the Cherokee Hunting Grounds. By the start of the 19th century (1800) the game had been depleted and the hunting grounds had moved further west. There is archeological evidence that earlier villages had occupied the site before the Cherokee occupation of New Echota in 1819. At the confluence of the Coosawattee and Conasauga Rivers (where they form the Oostanaula River) and Town Creek, the city had three good water sources. Water was not only necessary for survival, it played a key role in the Cherokee ceremonies.

While the names of the earlier villages have been lost to time, the name New Echota is commonly ascribed the meaning "New Town," which is the name given the area by settlers. In fact, the area around the state park is still known as "Newtown" or "New Town." Chota was the name of two Cherokee villages, one in White County, Georgia, on the northern end of the Chattahoochee River, the other in Tennessee, near Fort Loudon. The area was also known as "The Fork" and "Fork Ferry" by the settlers and Gansagi by the Cherokee (this is possibly the name of the earlier Cherokee village).

Cherokee Phoenix
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Cherokee Phoenix

By 1823 the Cherokee Nation was meeting in New Echota. Its central location and easy access made the city an excellent choice for the capital. On November 12, 1825, New Echota was officially designated capital of the Cherokee Nation. At that time the tribal council also commenced a building program that included construction of a two-story Council House, a Supreme Court, and later the office (Printer Shop) of the Cherokee Phoenix where Elias Boudinot wrote and a white printer laid out the first Native American newspaper by Sequoyah. Private homes, stores, ferry and mission station are in the outlying area of New Echota. The town was quiet most of the year, but council meetings provide the opportunity for great social gatherings. During these meetings, several hundred Cherokees fill the town, arriving by foot, on horseback or in stylish carriages.

In 1832 Georgia's Sixth Land Lottery had given away the Cherokee land to settlers. There was one small problem: the Cherokee Nation had never ceded the land to the state. Over the next 6 years the brutal Georgia Guard would enforce their own brand of vigilante justice to the Cherokee. By 1834 New Echota was becoming a ghost town, and the council meetings were moved to Red Clay, Cherokee Nation (now Tennessee). In May 1835, a small group (300-500 Cherokee known as Ridgeites or the Treaty Party) signed the Treaty of New Echota in the home of Elias Boudinot including Major Ridge, John Ridge, and Andrew Ross, brother of John Ross. 

In 1838 the U.S. Army, under the command of Winfield Scott, began the forced removal of the Cherokee from the state of Georgia. A Cherokee removal fort was located here, known as Fort Winfield Scott or Fort New Echota. The fort held Cherokee prisoners from Gordon County, Georgia and Pickens County, Georgia, and as the prisoners began their exodus to Rattlesnake Springs, Cherokee Nation (4 miles south of Charleston, Tennessee), the Cherokee from counties south and east of the area also were housed here.

Council House, Supreme House, and Print Shop, three of the reconstructed buildings in New Echota, were originally owned by Cherokee.
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Council House, Supreme House, and Print Shop, three of the reconstructed buildings in New Echota, were originally owned by Cherokee.

New Echota Historic Site

After the Cherokee left, the capital remained abandoned for more than 100 years but New Echota disappeared. Some of the houses continued to be used including most notably the house of Samuel Worcester, The Messenger, a missionary who brought Christianity to the Cherokee as Gordon County citizens called homes and farms. When the citizens deeded the land to the state for preservation the Worcester house, largest remaining structure, had been vacant for two years and the wear of the elements in that brief time was apparent to the state of Georgia.
In March 1954, Georgia Historical Commission archeologist named Lewis Larsen and five men were sent to oversee the work of excavating New Echota. Larsen and five men started to work slowly as they discovered the evidence that proved New Echota was not only the Cherokee occupation but also was one of eariler Indian cultures. They asked National Park Service archeologist named Joe Caldwell and more two workers to join them on next two months as they continued searching for more evidences. So far they discovered Spanish coin dated 1802, crockery, household wares, bootery remains, small lead, and other 1700 pieces. They identified 600 pieces as Cherokee characters used them. In addition to the standard finds, Larsen and Caldwell astonished the world by discovering much of the type used to print the Cherokee Phoenix plus remains of many of the buildings. 

On March 13, 1957, following the news of Larsen and Caldwell's archeological finds, the state of Georgia authorized that the town of New Echota be reconstructed, as a Georgia State Park. They rebuilt some buildings of the village of New Echota as the Council House; the laws of the Cherokee Nation were enacted, the Supreme Court; the laws of the nation were enforced, the Printer Shop; a home of the Cherokee Phoenix; Common Cherokee Cabin; a home of the average Cherokee family, and Middle-Class Cherokee Home & Outbuildings; known as Middle Class Cherokee Farmland is a home of middle class Cherokee family. Vann's Tavern, owned by Chief Vann was "original" with modern nails and replacing woods but it is not New Echota Vann Tavern. It was relocated from Forsyth County, Georgia (Chief Vann owned 14 taverns across the state of Georgia). Original New Echota Vann Tavern was destroyed. site of former Elias Boudinot house is where the house was stood once but destroyed by a fire. The site is one that is not recontructed but served as a memorial to Boudinot. Worcester house was restored back to 19th century time. Other sites are not opened to a public, they are on now private properties. Across from New Echota, there were two farmhouse sites that owned by white men who married to Cherokee women are now part of Gordon County golf course.

In 1962, New Echota Historical Park was opened to public as a replica of the original office of the Cherokee Phoenix was a highlight of the tour. Inside that office were 600 pieces of type containing the lasting legacy of the first American Indian newspaper. They have reproduction of 19th century printing machine that tourists can have "reissue" Cherokee Phoneix newspapers to home. Later some type was moved to the museum and research facility that is built in front of New Echota. The three-quarter mile walk can be expanded by walking the Newtown Trail, a 1.2 mile interpreted trail that takes tourists to Town Creek (inside the center of New Echota), where the majority of Cherokee camped when the Council was in session.

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Georgia state parks
Amicalola Falls | Black Rock Mt. | Bobby Brown | Cloudland Canyon | Crooked River | Elijah Clark | F.D.R. | Florence Marina | Fort Mountain | Fort Yargo | General Coffee | G.L. Smith | G.T. Bagby | Ga. Veterans | Gordonia-Alatamaha | Hamburg | Hard Labor Creek | Hart | High Falls | Indian Springs | J.H. Floyd | John Tanner | L.S. Walker | Little Ocmulgee | Magnolia Springs | Mistletoe | Moccasin Creek | Panola Mt. | Providence Canyon | Red Top Mt. | R. Bingham | R.B. Russell | Seminole | Skidaway Island | Sprewell Bluff | S.C. Foster | Sweetwater Creek | Tallulah Gorge | Tugaloo | Unicoi | V. Bryant | Vogel | Watson Mill Bridge
Privately-run: Stone Mountain Park | Lake Lanier Islands | Jekyll Island | Centennial Olympic Park
Other natural areas
Okefenokee Swamp | Radium Springs | Sapelo Island | Smithgall Woods
Georgia historic parks
A.H. Stephens | Fort McAllister | Kolomoki Mounds
Georgia historic sites
Chief Vann House | Dahlonega Gold Museum | Etowah Indian Mounds | Fort King George | Fort Morris | Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation | Jarrell Plantation | Jefferson Davis Memorial | Lapham-Patterson House | Little White House | New Echota | Picketts Mill Battlefield | Robert Toombs House | Travelers Rest | Wormsloe
[Georgia State Parks and Historic Sites]

 


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