﻿TENNESSEE, 199 



Inclosiires 9 miles south of the Missouri River, uear Clark's Creek. 

 Mound on Grand River inclosed by a wall. 



Mentioned by A. Barraudt, Sm. Rep., 1870, pp. 406, 407. 



TENNESSEE. 



Bedford County. 



Tlie "Stone Fort" in the two most northern of the three forks of 

 Duck River. Two large mounds in vicinity. 



Haywood Nat. and Ab.Hist. Tenu. (1823), pp. 169-172. Also mentioned in Anc. 

 Mod., p. 32. 

 Terraced mound or earthen platform. 



Mentioned in Anc. Mon., p. 175, as in "Bradford County" (probably a mis- 

 print for Bedford County). ' 



Bledsoe County. 



Mound li miles south of Pikeville, on the farm of McReynolds. 

 Mound 7 miles northeast of Pikeville, on farm of Martin Farmer. 

 Mound 4 miles northeast of Pikeville, on farm of C. B. Hart. 

 Mound on tlie farm of David Claighigh, a quarter of a mile northeast 

 of Pikeville. 

 Mound 7 miles north of Pikeville, on the land of F. J. Hutchinson. 



Reported by Dr. E. Palmer. 



Mounds and Indian graves in Sequatchie Valley. Images taken 

 therefrom. Incidental mention. 



Featberstonhaugh Excur. through slave States (1844), p. 52. 



Blount County. 



Cemetery on the southeast bank of Ellejoy Creek, just below old Fort 

 McTeer and about 7 miles east of Mary ville. 

 Reported by J. W. Enimert. 



Three stone graves 3 miles from Chilhowee post-oflQce, on the top of 

 Chilhowee Mountain. 



Reported by J. W. Emmert. Identical with the "several rock graves or tombs 

 near" two mounds (below) in Chilhowee Valley, mentioned by Dunning, 

 Sm. Rep., 1870, pp. 376-380, and description partly quoted by Prof. Cyrus 

 Thomas, Burial Mounds of the Northern Section (1888), pp. 78, 79. 



Large mound (about 18 feet high), on Six-mile Creek, about 1 mile 

 from Montvale Sx^rings. Unexplored. 



Reported by J. W. Emmert. 



Mound on east bank of Little Tennessee River, just above Mill Creek 

 and 4 miles above Abram's Creek. 



Explored and described by J. W. Emmert in Report. 



Two mounds on the north side of the Little Tennessee River, just below 

 the mouth of Chilhowee Creek. 



Explored and described by J. W. Emmert in Report. Prob.ibly identical with 

 the "large mound in Chilhowee Valley on the banks of the Little Tennes- 

 see." Opened and briefly described by Annie E. Law, Sm. Rep., 1874, 

 p. 375. Identical also with the " two mounds in Chilhowee Valley on the 

 left bank of Little Tennessee " (going up), mentioned by Dunning Sm. Rep. 

 (1870), pp. 370-380, and referred to by Cyrus Thomas in Burial Mounds of 

 the Northern Section (1888), pp. 78-79. 



