Central Coastal Plain
There were two distinct and unrelated groups known as Waccamaw - the Siouan-speaking Waccamaw of North Carolina and the non-Siouan Waccamaw of South Carolina. The Siouan Waccamaw were hunters and farmers, living along the Cape Fear, Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers. They no doubt fished with bows or spears from dugout canoes or used nets of native hemp to trawl for large numbers of fish. Deer and small game would supplement the diet of maize, squash and beans.
Yes there were tribes of Native Americans living in North Carolina. The tribes included Cherokee, Coharie, Lumbee, Haliwa-Saponi, Sappony, Meherrin, Occaneechi Band of Sapponi Nation, and Waccamaw-Siouan.
Waccamaw River Swamp.
The address of the Lake Waccamaw Depot Museum Inc is: Po Box 386, Lake Waccamaw, NC 28450-0386
The Sioux Indians actually came to North America from the continent of Asia about 30,000 years ago. There is no one "Sioux" tribe. There are many Native American tribes whose commonality is the Siouan language. Tribes which spoke the Siouan language ranged from Saskatchewan in Canada, through the Dakotas, Minnesota, Iowa, and even in Mississippi, North and South Carolina, and Virginia.
the Indians
Some of the Native American tribes that may have lived in South Carolina were the Cherokees, Muskhogean, Iroquoian, Siouan and Sumter Band of Cheraw. A census in 1849 shows that the Catawba Indians resided in both South and North Carolina.
Theres no Algonquin Indians that live in NC!!!
Oklahoma and North Carolina.
Well One Of Them Is The Cherokee.
how long ago did Native Americans got in North Carolina.
James Hart Merrell has written: 'The Indians' new world' -- subject(s): Indians of North America, Social conditions, History, Catawba Indians, South Carolina, North Carolina