Friday, May 24, 2013

Mohawk Indian Burial Mounds

Mohawk Indian Burial Mounds


Mohawk Indian remains taken from a burial mound in New York

The Mohawks of New York made a large round hole in which the body was placed upright or upon its haunches, after which it was covered with timber, to support the earth which they lay over, and thereby kept the body from being pressed. They then raised the earth in a round hill (burial mound) over it. They always dressed the corpse in all its finery, and put wampum and other things into the grave with it; and the relations suffered not grass nor any wood to grow upon the grave, and frequently visited it and made lamentation.