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Ocmulgee National Monument, Georgia

Ocmulgee Mounds, Georgia
View of the Earth Mound from the entrance to the site.
Photo © Valerie Renee.



The Ocmulgee National Monument in Macon, Georgia is a national park preserving an area that has been inhabited for over 11,000 years - "from the Ice Age to the Space Age." It centers around several burial mounds and an earth lodge built by the native Mississippian people around 900-950 AD.

History

The Macon Plateau has been inhabited by humans since the Ice Age (before 9,000 BC). A "Clovis" spear point left by these ancient peoples was discovered at Ocmulgee in the 1930s. By 8,000 BC people were hunting and gathering in the warmer post-Ice Age climage, and by 2,500 BC they were making pottery.


Mississippian clay artifact.
Photo by Mark and Michelle Wojtania.

The period from 1,000 BC to 900 AD has been labeled the Woodland Period. During this time, the people who lived here were decorating their pottery, building villages and making contacts with the Adena/Hopewell cultures farther north and the Weeden Island culture in Florida and South Georgia.

Ocmulgee
Painting depicting the Early Mississippian culture at Macon. Photo by Mark and Michelle Wojtania.

By 900 AD, the Mississipian culture had emerged on the banks of the Mississippi River. In the Early Mississippian Period (900-1150), the great ceremonial center of mounds and earth lodges was constructed on the Macon plateau. The Lesser Temple Mound and Greater Temple Mound date from this period.

In the Mature Mississippian Period (1150-1350), this town declined and the Lamar and Stubbs Mounds and Villages appeared downstream, exhibiting a combination of the old Woodland culture and Mississippian ideas.

The Lamar culture became even more widespread in the Late Mississippian Period (1350-1650). This was characterized by chiefdoms of small villages, each with a ceremonial center marked by one or two mounds. In the mid-1500s, the Spanish expedition of Hernando DeSoto arrives in the area, marking the beginning of the end of the Native American way of life in this area.

Ocmulgee National Monument, Georgia
Beginning of walking path to the mounds. Photo by Mark and Michelle Wojtania.

What to See

The Visitor's Center at Ocmulgee is designed in the curvy Art Moderne style. Inside is a two-room museum of artifacts discovered at the site and a small theater showing a 17-minute orientation video. Outside, the park has 5.5 miles of walking trails.


Entrance to the Earth Lodge. Photo by Mark and Michelle Wojtania.

The first sight in the main area of the park is the Earth Lodge, a reconstructed council chamber of the Mississippian people that incorporates and protects the original 1,000-year old floor. A circle of seats and the symbolic bird effigy bring to life this building that had both political and spiritual significance. This is the largest of eight earth lodges discovered on the Macon Plateau.

Great Temple Mound
The Great Temple Mound. © Valerie Renee

From the Visitor's Center, a path leads past an early English trading post to the Lesser Temple Mound and Great Temple Mound, constructed around 900-950 AD during the Early Mississippian Period. You can climb the Great Temple Mound for a fine view of the city of Macon and the Ocmulgee National Monument.

The mounds were originally topped with rectangular wooden structures, probably for ritual use, and a steep rampway descended from the summit to the plaza below. The purpose of the mounds is not known for certain, but their existence seems to indicate a class of priests and/or cheiftains who were greatly honored at their death.

The Lamar Mounds site includes the only known spiral mound in North America. Standing 20 feet tall, the mound was built and used from 1350 till the late 1500s. This mound is accessable during low water levels of the Ocmulgee River on a ranger-lead tour several times a year.

Location Map

Location map and satellite view of the Ocmulgee National Monument in Georgia. Using the buttons on the left, zoom in for a closer look or zoom out to get your bearings. Click and drag the map to move around.

Getting There

From I-75 in Macon take I-16 East to Exit 2. At the end of the ramp turn left on Highway 80. After .5 miles, turn right on Emery Highway (also Highway 80). Ocmulgee National Park is on the right.

Quick Facts

Names: Ocmulgee National Monument; Ocmulgee Old Fields; Ocmulgee Indian Mounds
Type of site: Native American mound
Dates: 900-950 AD
Size: 5.5 miles of walking trails
Address: 1207 Emery Highway, Macon, GA 31217
Website: http://www.nps.gov/ocmu/
E-mail: OCMU_superintendent@nps.gov
Hours: Daily 9-5. Closed December 25 and January 1.
Cost: Free

Sources

  1. Ocmulgee National Monument - National Parks Service
  2. Ocumulgee Indian Mounds - Roadside Georgia
  3. Ocmulgee Mounds - Lost Worlds Georgia

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