THE GRAVE OF A NATION
NANTICOKE INDIANS
In 1717 a large tract of
land in Sussex County was set aside as a Nanticoke Indian
Reservation. It started from the main highway between Laurel and
Seaford, went westward three
miles and extended from the
Laurel River toward Seaford where it joined another five hundred
acres across the river to the site where Laurel now stands. We now
call this Broad Creek Hundred.
By the year 1748, the
Indians felt they had been crowded so persistently by the white man
that at a Grand Council of
The Nanticoke they planned a general exodus. For many weeks the
Indians were busy gathering their buried dead and brought then to
the very southwest corner of the
reservation for final burial
of the remains of the common people. The bones of chiefs were
selected separately and were carried north with the caravan.
This southwest corner
became a large sand hill, a monument to a vanquished race.
Indian Hill is the mound of
this common grave of a nation. Many of the Indians now up north
evidently were not satisfied
to leave their ancestors in the dust of Delaware and for years
Nanticoke braves could be seen on trips down the peninsula to dig up
bones to carry back to new homes.
Many bones remaining in the
mound for years have been dug up by the farmers and artifact
collectors, were found neatly laid in order surrounded by arrow
heads, stone implements and
ornaments.
This grave mound and its
bones gave proof to stories of the Nanticoke that they were a race of
giants and supermen as all
of the uncovered skeletons were above average size, very few less
than six
feet and one which was well
over seven feet.
Source: Wilmington News
Journal, Wednesday October 1, 1930, Historic Spots of Delaware,
by Sewell P. Moore.
Abstract; Sunday, September 3, 2017 by Harrison H.
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