Arts & Entertainment

Etowah Games Day 2019 Set For July In Bartow

Etowah games teaches that some of the games we play today are based on games from more than 1,000 years ago.

Etowah games teaches that some of the games we play today are based on games from more than 1,000 years ago.
Etowah games teaches that some of the games we play today are based on games from more than 1,000 years ago. (Etowah Indian Mounds State Historic Site)

BARTOW COUNTY, GA -- The Etowah Games Day 2019 is scheduled for Saturday, July 6, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., at the Etowah Indian Mounds State Historic Site, 813 Indian Mounds Rd. S.E.
Cartersville.

There is a $4-6 admission fee for the event. Some of the games we play today are based on games from more than 1,000 years ago. Kids and adults are invited to learn ancient versions of Yahtzee, ladder ball, stick ball, lawn darts and more at this historic site. Learn to make a bull roar, play double-ball, and join other games of skill.

For more information, call 770-387-3747 or visit http://gastateparks.org/EtowahIndianMounds.

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Home to several thousand Native Americans from 1000 A.D. to 1550 A.D., this 54-acre site protects six earthen mounds, a plaza, village site, borrow pits and defensive ditch. Etowah Mounds is the most intact Mississippian Culture site in the Southeast. Artifacts in the museum show how natives of this political and religious center decorated themselves with shell beads, paint, complicated hairdos, feathers and copper ear ornaments. Hand-carved stone effigies weighing 125 pounds still bear some original pigments. Objects made of wood, seashells and stone are also displayed.
Visitors can follow a nature trail along the Etowah River where they can view a v-shaped fish trap used for catching fish. The trail also highlights how early civilizations used native trees for food and medicine.
While only nine percent of this site has been excavated, examination at Mound C and surrounding artifacts revealed much about the people who lived here. They were a society rich in ritual. Towering over the community, the 63-foot earthen knoll was likely used as a platform for the home of the priest-chief. In another mound, nobility were buried in elaborate costumes accompanied by items they would need in their after-lives.


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