
ĢƵscholars, alumni celebrate return of Noquisiyi Mound to EBCI
Last week, the Noquisiyi Mound in neighboring Franklin returned to the care of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians after more than 200 years.
The historic moment followed a unanimous city council vote in early January and culminated Friday in a vibrant celebration, where members of the town and tribe gathered to pray and dance beside the site.
“It was just full circle,” said Angelina Jumper, a ĢƵ alumna and cultural preservation officer for the EBCI. “It was the moment that I was like, ‘This is exactly where I’m supposed to be, with all of these people around me right now, and we’re all supposed to be here.’”
Reflecting on the mound’s long absence from Cherokee stewardship, Jumper added, “Somebody had that in their mind when they watched the mound go into hands that were no longer Cherokee hands, and so I hope whoever that was that saw that and felt that way knew that we were going to be there, 207 years later, in the same spot.
“There are generations of DNA finding healing in those moments, and I just get to be lucky enough to physically see it.”
Jumper is a member of the nonprofit Noquisi Initiative, a coalition of native and non-native advocates that has pushed for the mound’s return since 2015. She celebrated alongside Franklin mayor Stacey Guffey, a Macon County native and founding member of the group.
“At the celebration, almost everybody I talked to used the same phrase: ‘a long time coming.’ And it certainly has been,” Guffey said.
“When you secure sites like this, it’s a great day for the Cherokee people, but it’s really a great day for all mountain people. I hope this builds more of a sense of community and being neighbors and friends region wide.”
Guffey was joined by several other ĢƵalumni, including EBCI member Tonya Carroll, who also serves on the Noquisi Initiative and attended the Jan. 5 council vote.
Carroll expressed gratitude to advocates who worked for decades to protect and educate the public about the site.
“While Cherokee people have not held formal title to the land for more than 200 years, that does not mean it was ever lost or forgotten,” Carroll said. “Cherokee people have known and visited the Noquisiyi Mound since it was built, one basket of dirt at a time. Our connection to that place has remained unbroken.
“Returning the land of the Noquisiyi Mound to the EBCI represents a meaningful step toward justice in addressing the long history of land dispossession forced upon Indigenous peoples. It also recognizes that our culture and ancestral knowledge make us the best people to care for our places, as our ancestors intended.”
Nearly 1,000 years old, the Noquisiyi Mound was built in the Southern Appalachian Mississippian tradition by the Anigaduwagi, ancestors of the modern Cherokee people. It once served as a “mother town” within a network of settlements throughout the Little Tennessee River Valley and remains the largest unexcavated mound in the Southeast.
The site first saw military occupation in 1761 during the French and Indian War, when soldiers razed the surrounding lands and used the townhouse atop the mound as a field hospital. It was again used as a staging ground for attacks in 1776.
The final dispossession came in the early 19th century, when the North Carolina General Assembly ordered the land sold — this despite the fact that a Cherokee woman, Rebecca (Na-Ka) Morris, sister of warrior Junaluska, had acquired the parcel earlier that same year. After her home was burned, Morris successfully challenged the theft in court and won monetary reparations that allowed her to buy another plot adjacent, one of the earliest recorded victories of its kind for an Indigenous woman.
The property later passed through several non-Native owners before local preservation efforts gained traction. In 1946, when the mound was threatened by highway expansion, it was purchased and protected by the Macon County Historical Society and the Town of Franklin.
Debates over stewardship continued into the 21st century. In 2019, following controversy after pesticides were sprayed on the site, Franklin transferred the deed to the Noquisi Initiative to strengthen public education and preservation efforts. With last week’s vote, the mound has now returned to Cherokee ownership.
ĢƵanthropology professor Ben Steere wrote extensively about the mound’s history and its mythological significance in his paper, “The Nikwasi Mound: Archaeology, Preservation and Politics in the Eastern Cherokee Heartland.”
“Noquisiyi” translates to “star place.” As a mother town, it once kept an eternal fire that burned for centuries and is believed to be home to the Nunne’hi, immortal warriors said to emerge in times of conflict to aid the Cherokee.
For Steere and others, the return reflects the success of years of partnership.
“The Town of Franklin’s resolution to return the mound to the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians is exciting news and the result of meaningful partnerships between the Eastern Band, the Noquisiyi Initiative and many people in the region who care about preserving this important place,” Steere said.
The return also arrives amid broader reflection on mound preservation in Western North Carolina.
In 1954, just 20 miles away, ĢƵexpanded its campus and destroyed the mound at Tali Tsisgwayahi, or “Two Sparrows Town, ”a decision scholars have since sought to address through research and expanded Cherokee programming.
Andrew Denson, director of Cherokee studies at WCU, said a persistent challenge is the tendency to treat native history as past rather than present.
“There’s this tendency in non-Native communities to recognize Native history because it’s interesting, but to do it in a way that relegates native people to the past,” Denson said. “What we’re trying to do at Western is recognize the cultural significance of these places in a way that reinforces our commitment to collaborate with the Eastern Band not just about the past, but the present.”
ĢƵanthropology students are also contributing through noninvasive research at the nearby Watauga Mound. Using ground-penetrating radar and magnetometry, they study subsurface features without disturbing the site.
“It’s very clear these sites are important to the community, and that they should not be disturbed,” said Jane Eastman, associate professor of anthropology. “There are things I’d love to know, but it’s more important that we respect the trust of those who are invested in this and leave what should remain undisturbed.”
For students and scholars alike, the return of the Noquisiyi Mound stands as a reminder of what sustained advocacy, partnership and an unbroken connection to the land can accomplish.
Asked on her advice for current Catamounts, Jumper shared these words: "If you see something that needs to be done in the right way, or you see something not being done in the right way and you want to see that shifted, don’t give up. Continue to fight for the right thing… I think that the mound in Noquisiyi has been working its way back to the tribe for some time, and we just had a really awesome and amazing group of people not stopping that push, and it slowly but surely has made its way back."