Alabama
city destroying ancient Indian mound for Sam's Club
8
April, 2013
City
leaders in Oxford, Ala. have approved the destruction of a
1,500-year-old Native American ceremonial mound and are using the
dirt as fill for a new Sam's Club, a retail warehouse store operated
by Wal-Mart.{C}A University of Alabama archaeology report
commissioned by the city found that the site was historically
significant as the largest of several ancient stone and earthen
mounds throughout the Choccolocco Valley. But Oxford Mayor Leon Smith
-- whose campaign has financial connections to firms involved in the
$2.6 million no-bid project -- insists the mound is not man-made and
was used only to "send smoke signals."
"The
City of Oxford and its archaeological advisers have completed a
review and evaluation of a stone mound that was identified near
Boiling Springs, Calhoun County, Alabama, and have concluded that the
mound is the result of natural phenomena and does not meet the
eligibility criteria for the Natural [sic] Register of Historic
Places," according to a news release Smith issued last week.
In
fact, the report does not conclude the mound is a result of "natural
phenomena" but says very clearly it is of "cultural
origin." And while the University's Office of Archaeological
Research does not believe the site qualifies for the National
Register of Historic Places, the Alabama Historical Commission
disagrees, noting that the structure meets at least three criteria
for inclusion: its "association with a broad pattern of
history," architecture "embodying distinctive
characteristics," and for the information it might yield to
scholars.
The
site is also significant to Native Americans. The Woodland and
Mississippian cultures that inhabited the Southeast and Midwest
before Europeans arrived constructed and used these mounds for
various rituals, which may have included funerals. There are concerns
that human remains may be present at the site, though none have been
found yet.
United
South and Eastern Tribes, a nonprofit coalition of 25 federally
recognized tribes from Maine to Texas, passed a resolution in 2007
calling for the preservation of such structures, which it calls
"prayer in stone." Native Americans have held protests
against the mound's demolition, and last week someone altered a sign
for the Leon Smith Parkway that runs past the development to read
"Indian Mound Pkwy."
A
local resident named Johnny Rollins told the Anniston Star how his
Native American grandmother taught him that when she died he could
"go to that mountain" to talk to her:
"It
seems like it's taking part of you away," he said of the
demolition. "I always felt I had ties to that there."
Since
the media began reporting on the site's demolition, city officials
have revised their story and are now claiming that dirt from the
mound is not being used as fill, despite earlier statements to the
contrary. But eyewitnesses say they have seen workers hauling dirt
from the mound to the Sam's Club development.
"I
mean really, I went there, saw the giant trucks deliver the earth
straight from the mound to the construction site, and I still can't
believe what they are doing," writes the seventh-generation
Alabamian behind the blog Deep Fried Kudzu. She shared the photo
above showing roads for construction vehicles now cut to the top of
the mound and has other photos and her story of visiting the site at
the website.
'More
prettier' than an Indian mound
Deepening
the development's controversy is how the contracting has been
handled. The force behind the project is Oxford's Commercial
Development Authority, a public board that uses taxpayer money to
lure businesses to the area. The CDA owns the land where the mound is
located.
Alabama
law exempts CDAs from bid requirements, which means contracts can go
to whomever the board chooses. A recent Anniston Star investigative
series about the CDA revealed among other things that the group has
awarded nearly $9 million in contracts since 1994 but has taken bids
for none of them.
The
newspaper also detailed the financial ties between the CDA, firms it
does business with, and Mayor Smith's political campaign.
For
example, the $2.6 million contract for preparing the Sam's Club site
went to Oxford-based Taylor Corp., with the money for that coming in
part from the sale of city property to Georgia-based developers
Abernathy and Timberlake. Taylor Corp. owner Tommy Taylor, who has
received thousands of dollars in city contracts for non-CDA work,
donated $1,000 to Smith in 2004 and $1,000 in 2008, while Abernathy
and Timberlake donated $1,000 to Smith's re-election campaign in
2004, the paper reports.
The
Anniston Star also found that the CDA paid engineering firm Goodwyn,
Mills and Cawood of Montgomery, Ala. $45,000 in engineering contracts
for the Sam's Club project, with part of that money paying for the
archaeological study. The firm contributed $500 to Smith in 2004.
An
Alabama Ethics Commission official said the relationships could
violate state law "depending on facts," but the mayor said
he's done nothing wrong.
Meanwhile,
the controversy over the damaged mound's fate rages on. After getting
an earful from alarmed preservationists, Alabama Gov. Bob Riley (R)
forwarded their concerns to the state Historical Commission -- but
said his office has no intention of getting involved. According to
the National Institute on Money in State Politics, Tommy Taylor
contributed $1,000 to Riley's 2006 gubernatorial campaign, while
Goodwyn, Mills and Cawood contributed $1,500.
For
now, it appears Oxford officials are pressing ahead with the project.
As Mayor Smith said in its defense, "What it's going to be is
more prettier than it is today."
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