-Caveat Lector-

Holocaust of Giants: The Great Smithsonian Cover-up

http://greatserpentmound.org/articles/giants3.html

Noted Native American author and professor of law emeritus, Vine Deloria,
writes in a personal communication:

It's probably better that so few of the ruins and remains were tied in with the
Smithsonian because they give good reason to believe the ending of the Indiana
Jones movie�a great warehouse where the real secrets of earth history are
buried.

Modern day archaeology and anthropology have nearly sealed the door on our
imaginations, broadly interpreting the North American past as devoid of
anything unusual in the way of great cultures characterized by a people of
unusual demeanor. The great interloper of ancient burial grounds, the
nineteenth century Smithsonian Institution, created a one-way portal, through
which uncounted bones have been spirited. This door and the contents of its
vault are virtually sealed off to any but government officials. Among these
bones may lay answers not even sought by these officials concerning the deep
past.

The first hint we had about the possible existence of an actual race of tall,
strong, and intellectually sophisticated people, was in researching old
township and county records. Many of these were quoting from old diaries and
letters that were combined, for posterity, in the 1800s from diaries going back
to the 1700s. Says Vine in this understanding:

Some of these old county and regional history books contain real gems because
the people were not subjected to a rigid indoctrination about evolution and
were astonished about what they found and honestly reported it.


The title pages of the early county and pioneer history books often included
phrases like "CAREFULLY WRITTEN AND COMPILED" and "LEST WE FORGET."


Some time before archaeology came to subscribe the general public to its view
of prehistory�generations prior to Darwin's troublesome theory�the pioneers
thought that some of the earthworks were as ancient as could be concurrent with
human habitation in America. Some among the early settlers exercised their pens
assured that the earthworks were not built by the direct ancestry of the native
people living in the historical period, but rather were constructed in a more
remote era encompassing a different social order. They compared the "Mound
Builders," with the "Indians," clearly discerning the former as belonging to an
earlier time�possessing a different fate or destiny from the latter.

Evidence for the occupation of this region before the appearance of the red man
and the white race is to be found in almost every part of the county, as well
as through the northwest generally. In removing the gravel bluffs, which are
numerous and deep, for the construction and repair of roads, and in excavating
cellars, hundreds of human skeletons, some of them of giant form, have been
found. A citizen of Marion County estimates that there were about as many human
skeletons in the knolls of Marion County as there are white inhabitants at
present! The History of Marion County, Ohio (complied from past accounts,
published in 1883)

Mastodonic remains are occasionally unearthed, and, from time to time,
discoveries of the remains of Indian settlements are indicated by the
appearance of gigantic skeletons, with the high cheek bones, powerful jaws and
massive frames peculiar of the red man, who left these as the only record with
which to form a clew to the history of past ages. The History of Brown County,
Ohio (complied from past accounts, published in 1883)


Group of Mounds in Brown County, Ohio.


She said also that three skeletons were found at the mouth of the Paw Paw Creek
many years later, while Nim (Nimrod) Satterfield was justice of the peace. Jim
Dean and some men were digging for a bridge foundation and found these bones at
the lower end of the old buffalo wallow. She thought it was Dr. Kidwell, of
Fairmont, who examined them and said they were very old, perhaps thousands of
years old. She said that when the skeletons were exposed to the weather for a
few days, their bones turned black and began to crumble, that Squire
Satterfield had them buried in the Joliffe graveyard (Rivesville). All these
skeletons, she said, were measured, and found to be about eight feet long. Now
and Long Ago-A History of the Marion County Area by Glen Lough (1969) (This
citation on West Virginia courtesy Dave Cain.)

Another of many examples, this one, collected by James Mooney (1861-1921),
tells of the visit of very tall people from the west:

James Wafford, of the western Cherokee, who was born in Georgia in 1806, says
that his grandmother, who must have been born about the middle of the last
century, told him that she had heard from the old people that long before her
time a party of giants had once come to visit the Cherokee. They were nearly
twice as tall as common men, and had their eyes set slanting in their heads, so
that the Cherokee called them Tsunil� kalu�, "the Slant-eyed people," because
they looked like the giant hunter Tsul� kalu�. They said that these giants
lived far away in the direction in which the sun goes down. The Cherokee
received them as friends, and they stayed some time, and then returned to their
home in the west...

This kind of recorded tradition did not start with Mooney, rather beginning
early in American history. During the Colonial and post-Colonial era, the
information seekers were keen on gathering as much knowledge of the forgotten
past as feasible through native sources. Some of it was woven into romantic
tales including verse, but the main of it went into records, which, like the
accumulation of earth and debris over ancient village sites, became buried in
the musty stacks of old libraries�considered to have no real "substance" in the
emerging field of the white man's science.

Of the very early history of the region which now embraces Lake County but
little can be written. The Mound Builders had occupied it and passed away,
leaving no written language and but little even as tradition... These mounds
were quite numerous... Excavations...have revealed the crumbling bones of a
mighty race. Samuel Miller, who has resided in the county since 1835, is
authority for the statement that one skeleton which he assisted in unearthing
was a trifle more than eight feet in length, the skull being correspondingly
large, while many other skeletons measured at least seven feet... Historical
Encyclopedia of Illinois and History of Lake County Edited by Newton Bateman,
LL.D. and Paul Selby, A.M. (1902)

>From the outset of North American archaeology, no federally sponsored concern
has researched and collected evidence specifically emphasizing the existence of
unusually tall Native Americans in prehistoric, and even in historic times.
There are reasons for this oversight, though in hindsight it has placed limits
on our overview of prehistory. Because there were only occasional people of
large stature born among the light-skinned, European races, numbers of giants
were far from anticipated in America. Scientists in Europe, in case-by-case
studies, declared their giants to have been victims of pituitary disorder.
Another reason was that when the private citizenry in the U.S. unearthed the
bones of very tall and strongly constructed people, and when these
disinterments were recorded, rarely was any comparison made with sites of
similar contents. It was still a sort of wilderness in many rural areas right
until the middle 1800s. In this, each discovery was sort of "unique"�only to
end up in the stacks of old township libraries to be complied later as
curiosities�if they survived at all. The following account originated around
the year 1800:

There were mounds situated in the eastern part of the village of Conneaut and
an extensive burying-ground near the Presbyterian church, which appear to have
had no connection with the burying-places of the Indians. Among the human bones
found in the mounds were some belonging to men of gigantic structure. Some of
the skulls were of sufficient capacity to admit the head of an ordinary man,
and jaw bones that might have been fitted on over the face with equal facility;
the other bones were proportionately large. The burying-ground referred to
contained about four acres, and with the exception of a slight angle in
conformity with the natural contour of the ground was in the form of an oblong
square. It appeared to have been accurately surveyed into lots running from
north to south, and exhibited all the order and propriety of arrangement deemed
necessary to constitute Christian burial... Historical Collections of Ohio in
Two Volumes by Henry Howe, LL.D. (1888)

Although not regarded by the government as reliable, the oral traditions of the
native people in the eastern U.S. aver of the existence of possibly two races
of giants, one supplanting the other by violent means. Here we have the first
inkling of some very remote prehistory preserved, through the tradition of the
Chippewa, Sandusky, and Tawa tribes, (members of the Algonquin language group),
the existence of giant, bearded men.

In this connection I would say that Mr. Jonathan Brooks, now living in town,
stated to me, that his father, Benjamin Brooks, who lived with the Indians
fourteen years, and was well-acquainted with their language and traditions,
told him and others that it was a tradition of the Indians that the first tribe
occupying this whole country, was a black-bearded race, very large in size, and
subsequently a red bearded race or tribe came and killed or drove off all the
black beards, as they called them. The Firelands Pioneer (1858)

Offsetting the carefully recorded diaries of the rural folk, there were popular
writers who creatively developed the more contemporary histories and folk
legends, leaving to cursory treatment the deeper accounts of North American
antiquities. These authors, while having captured the essence of the public
perception of the noble native tradition, were not reconciled to the antique
body of legend. The pens of James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851) and Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882) relate virtually nothing of the tall ones.
Native Americans, as we know, were discouraged from writing, although some,
such as David Cusick, circumvented the bias using Christian names. Fortunately,
early missionary concerns gathered oral tradition from the tribal elders
concerning men of giant stature.

But even the most informative or entertaining accounts could not instill enough
respect for the native people to put an end to the further destruction of the
sacred sites. The attitude of the white race in general toward the red race was
an abomination, totally lacking in mercy and compassion. Many of the Native
American skulls were compared with European skulls, but selectively so as to
depict the current native populace as being of inferior intelligence. Almost
without resistance, the black seeds of racial bias were forming in the
uncorrupted soil of prehistoric interpretation. Take for example the words of
an important government official and popular writer, Henry Schoolcraft (1793-
1864):

The Indian has a low, bushy brow, beneath which a dull, sleepy, half-closed eye
seems to mark the ferocious passions that are dormant within. The acute angles
of the eyes seldom present the obliquity so common in the Malays and the
Mongolians. The color of the eye is almost uniformly a tint between black and
grey; but even in young persons it seldom has the brightness, or expresses the
vivacity, so common in the more civilized races. Bureau of Indian Affairs
(1852)

Schoolcraft, who himself married a half-Indian woman, was apparently
predisposed to labeling the native people in general as inferior. This kind of
ridiculous prejudice underscored the tone for the unbridled continuation of the
earthwork debacle. The result of this is accurately reflected in how
archaeology was organized more than one hundred years ago, and may be summed up
in the policy of Joseph Henry, first secretary of the Smithsonian Institution.
Says Henry in 1846: "The collection of data should precede theorizing..."
Unfortunately, the collection of data seemed to have no end, and any subsequent
theorizing was (and is) in a state of transience. The Smithsonian, playing a
sort of leading role in the massive undertaking attempting to cast light on the
inscrutable prehistory of the United States, inadvertently collected far too
many relics to ever analyze in a comprehensive sense. Estimates of the number
of moundworks in Ohio alone�at the end of the Colonial period�topped ten
thousand. Today, less than one-twentieth of these exist, and, moreover, they
exist in a reconstructed form. No quarter of special status was given to any
earthwork, no matter how sacred or strategic to tribal lands. It was a
holocaust of an unprecedented nature, for it undermined the very morale of the
native people who understood the peace of their ancestors to be ruined.

Differing only in the professionalism somewhat absent from the previous seventy
years of ghoulish quests, Henry's mandate dictated emphasis on the creation of
an inclusive system of excavation, recording, and description. Any analysis
that followed had to be based upon this criterion. But competent analysis of
anomalies rarely (if ever) came from the Smithsonian and other institutions
formally engaged in the practice of exhumation. Given this understanding, it is
no wonder that the Smithsonian is believed by knowledgeable people to be
actively stymieing research that would produce a more enlightened view of
American prehistory.

There is, however, some compensation for this oversight in that the
Smithsonian, like the Peabody, and the Carnegie shortly thereafter, faithfully
upheld Henry's mandate to detail, as was feasible, their mound "explorations."
However, the present-day inaccessibility of the bones and objects these people
removed for future study is a reflection and symptom of the proposed
"oversight." One thing that pleased us in this research effort was the fact
that there were many skeletons of gigantic frame discovered and reported by the
Smithsonian, boosting the validity and value of the old township diaries, as
well as the native legends. Some of these are presented below.

A Brief History of the Museum

The Smithsonian Institution, easily the world's largest museum complex, began
from the generous gift of James Smithson, an English scientist, in 1829.
Believed born a bastard (especially in the eyes of his later detractors),
Smithson was a "diligent young student," receiving a Master of Arts from
Pembroke College, Oxford, in 1786. He became a distinguished scientist. The
gentle man passed away in 1829, bequeathing his fortune to nephew James Henry
Hungerford with the stipulation that if this man died without an heir, the
remainder of the fortune would go to the United States. It seems he felt that
the United States was the future of Britain. Perhaps Smithson saw the "New
World" as fertile, worthy, intellectual territory.

Hungerford died in 1835. Although there was some controversy in the interim,
the finding of the Smithsonian, based upon the more than a half million-dollar
gift, took place officially in 1846. His legacy to the American people was, in
his own words, "for the increase and diffusion of knowledge." Since that time,
the museum's collections have increased considerably, with problems in the
cataloging and location of stored finds developing due to changing standards of
administrations over the last 150 years. Analogous to the Vatican with its
antique cache of confiscated, problematic treasures, the booty of the Holy See
may pale in comparison to the Smithsonian's boatload of diffuse evidence. Pity
of it is that Smithson's request has gone into a different mode of
interpretation. Instead of diffusing knowledge, it has unwittingly become
confused with the problem of sprawling storage.

Powell and Thomas

Grave a, a stone sepulcher, 2� feet wide, 8 feet long, and 2 feet deep, was
formed by placing steatite slabs on edge at the sides and ends, and others
across the top. The bottom consisted simply of earth hardened by fire. It
contained the remains of a single skeleton, lying on its back, with the head
east. The frame was heavy and about seven feet long. The head rested on a thin
copper plate ornamented with impressed figures... 12th Annual Report of the
Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1890-1891
(published in 1894) (Cyrus Thomas' investigations of Etowah)


Plat of the Etowah Group, Bartow County, Georgia. Grave A (found in the largest
mound of the group) contained a seven-foot skeleton having a heavy frame.


In 1882, after some thirty-six years of growth and sound management,
Smithsonian executive John Wesley Powell (of Grand Canyon exploration fame 1869-
1872), hired Cyrus Thomas. Powell wanted this man to head up the fieldwork for
the Smithsonian's newly created Bureau of Ethnology, specifically the Eastern
Mound Division. Thomas was a minister and an entomologist whose broadened
interests included archaeology. He was, inotherwords, a bible-advocating,
insect-adept archaeologist who believed in the mystery of a lost race at the
time of his being recruited. Powell, who was much in sympathy with the plight
of Native Americans, having lived among them for a length of time, believed
that there was no lost or mysterious race of mound builders. He desired to
credit the downtrodden native people with the worthy and gentle arts associated
with the ancient mound building societies. Subsequently, and in light of other
politic considerations marking the era, Powell sought to enact these personal
convictions through the instrumentality of Thomas. In spite of his personal
beliefs, Thomas was not outspokenly resistant to accepting the position.
Besides, Congress was allocating solid funding for this proposed ramble through
the ancient landscape.

There was apparently an important decision made at this time concerning the
facilitation of an enveloping theory�so necessary to create order where chaos
loomed. Before discharging a book, one logically creates an outline to guide
one's thoughts. This was to become a hierarchical arrangement that would decide
the angle of vision for the categorizing of the finds that would be made. On
one hand, the belief that others discovered North America before Columbus (such
as Phoenician, Egyptian, Hebraic, Greek, Roman, Celt, Scandinavian, or even
Asian mariners) was explored. On the other hand, the idea of the continent
having been isolated from outside influences was put on the table. It was
perhaps because of Powell's deference to the native kinship that the latter
idea�i.e., screening out any extra-continental visitors�was adopted. Needless
to say, this was an extraordinary assumption, and one that has affected
decision-making right until the present day. On the positive side it viably
linked the living factions of the Native American people with the more ancient
mound building folk, and shortly thereafter was responsible for the faintly
successful preservation of what remained of the mound builder's legacy. From
this it may be understood how aspects of Powell's work, such as analysis of the
social order of the mound builders, was not a priority.

Powell's decision regarding isolation was in reality a two-edged sword. While
it was a meaningful step that fostered a meager though important harmonic
between the federal government and the native people, it was regrettably based
upon a false notion. An example of its contradiction is found right in the 12th
Annual Report itself. Again and again Thomas and his operatives came up with
anomalous evidence directly questioning Powell's sweeping suppositions.

Cave burials occur in this district in the following counties: In Grayson,
Hart, Edmonson, Barren, Warren, and Fayette counties; Kentucky; Smith, White,
Warren, Giles, Marion, and Fentress counties, Tennessee, and Bartow county,
Georgia. These localities lie mostly in a belt extending in a north and south
direction through the center of the district. In most of these caves, both in
Kentucky and Tennessee, the bodies appear to have been laid on the floor of the
cave, sometimes in beds of ashes, sometimes on a pavement of flat stones. There
are, however, some instances in which the bodies have been found incased in
stone slabs, and afterwards imbedded in clay or ashes. In Smith and Warren
counties, Tennessee, and in Warren and Fayette counties, Kentucky, the flesh of
the bodies was preserved and the hair was yellow and of fine texture. In some
cases the bodies were enveloped in several thicknesses of coarse cloth with an
outer wrapping of deer skin. Some of the bodies were wrapped in a kind of cloth
made of bark fiber, into which feathers were woven in such a manner as to form
a smooth surface. In two cases the bodies, placed in a sitting or squatting
posture, were incased in baskets. In one of the caves in Smith county the body
of a female is said to have been found, having about the waist a silver girdle,
with marks resembling letters. 12th Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to
the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1890-1891 (published in 1894)
(explorations in the Tennessee District)

Armed with a self-created doctrine powered by ample funding, and with a little
help later from the one-way door to the Smithsonian's inaccessible catacombs,
the years that followed saw Powell and his underling nearly succeed in the
obliteration of the last notions of the legendary, mysterious, and antique
class of mound building people, and for that matter, any people that didn't fit
into the mold of his theory. Did Powell intentionally overlook some of the
archaeology so as to focus on his own special agenda?

Powell and his associates at the Bureau were quite certain that people had
arrived in the Americas only sometime after the first Egyptian dynasty�less
than 4500 years ago! They also believed that the Mississippi Valley was
sufficiently isolated from the Ohio Valley to warrant the simultaneous
flourishing of quite distinct cultures over a long period. Since carbon dating
was not yet discovered, Thomas used stratigraphic (after Lyell) analysis and,
following the rest of the mandate, included detailed record keeping and
documentation whenever appropriate. His findings were broadly accepted, and are
still referenced.

Underneath the layer of shells the earth was very dark and appeared to be mixed
with vegetable mold to the depth of 1 foot. At the bottom of this, resting on
the original surface of the ground, was a very large skeleton lying
horizontally at full length. Although very soft, the bones were sufficiently
distinct to allow of careful measurement before attempting to remove them. The
length from the base of the skull to the bones of the toes was found to be 7
feet 3 inches. It is probable, therefore, that this individual when living was
fully 7� feet high. At the head lay some small pieces of mica and a green
substance, probably the oxide of copper, though no ornament or article of
copper was discovered. 12th Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the
Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1890-1891 (published in 1894)
(explorations in Roane County, Tennessee)

But Thomas' time was limited because of the large territory he was to explore.
Under such working conditions, anomalies were put aside for future research�to
be, as it has turned out, forgotten. Thomas was forced to rely on the accounts
of operatives in many cases. Evidently, some of these people discerned between
"Indian" burials and the burials of the Mound Builders, perhaps challenging the
patience of Powell.

No. 5, the largest of the group was carefully examined. Two feet below the
surface, near the apex, was a skeleton, doubtless an intrusive Indian burial...
Near the original surface, 10 or 12 feet from the center, on the lower side,
lying at full length on its back, was one of the largest skeletons discovered
by the Bureau agents, the length as proved by actual measurement being between
7 and 8 feet. It was clearly traceable, but crumbled to pieces immediately
after removal from the hard earth in which it was encased.... 12th Annual
Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian
Institution 1890-1891 (published in 1894) (mounds at Dunleith, Illinois)


Mound Group, Dunleith, Illinois. "Near the original surface, 10 or 12 feet from
the center, on the lower side, lying at full length on its back, was one of the
largest skeletons discovered by the Bureau agents, the length as proved by
actual measurement being between 7 and 8 feet."


Regarding the problem of "intrusive" Indian burials, what kind of a time gap
were these men looking at between the original burials and the later ones? As
his agents uncovered the physical evidence for powerful men of towering
stature, Thomas held the position that any and all skeletal remains represented
the direct ancestry of the present day people. Was it not plausible to consider
an extended "family" or hierarchical group of very tall folk who served with
the people? Were they selective enough in their sexual associations to appear,
overall, as a race with its own peculiarities and even physical
characteristics? The findings that didn't fit in to the guideline established
by his superior were summarily recorded and forgotten by Thomas�a legacy we
have inherited today.

An old Indian mound has been opened on the farm of Harrison Robinson, four
miles East of Jackson, Ohio, and two skeletons of extraordinary size and a
great quantity of trinkets have been removed. Some years ago a party of relic
hunters, supposed to have been sent out in the interest of the Archeological
society visited the Robinson farm, and after a few days search removed a great
collection of stone hatchets, beads and bracelets, which were packed and
shipped to an Eastern institute, and until this recent accidental discovery it
was supposed that everything had been removed by the relic hunters. It is
thought by many that more relics are to be found and preparations are being
made for a through investigation. The Adair County News January 5, 1897
(Kentucky)

What has become of all the evidence? Again and again, only a single long
skeleton or two was found among those of normal size. The understanding of
tall, ruling chiefs and their wives was not developed at all, as is evident in
these examples.

The other, situated on the point of a commanding bluff, was also conical in
form, 50 feet in diameter and about 8 feet high. The outer layer consisted in
sandy soil, 2 feet thick, filled with slightly decayed skeletons, probably
Indians of intrusive burials. The earth of the main portion of this mound was a
very fine yellowish sand which shoveled like ashes and was everywhere, to a
depth of 2 to 4 feet, as full of human skeletons as could be stowed away in it,
even to two and three tiers. Among these were a number of bones not together as
skeletons, but mingled in confusion and probably from scaffolds or other
localities. Excepting one, which was rather more than 7 feet long, these
skeletons appeared to be of medium size and many of them much decayed... 12th
Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian
Institution 1890-1891 (published in 1894) (Pike County, Illinois)

No. 11 is now 35 by 40 feet at the base and 4 feet high. In the center, 3 feet
below the surface, was a vault 8 feet long and 3 feet wide. In the bottom of
this, among the decayed fragments of bark wrappings, lay a skeleton fully seven
feet long, extended at full length on the back, head west. Lying in a circle
above the hips were fifty-two perforated shell disks about an inch in diameter
and one-eighth of an inch thick. 12th Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology
to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1890-1891 (published in 1894)
(Kanawha County, West Virginia)


Spring Hill Inclosure, Kanawha County, West Virginia. In the bottom of Mound 11
(upper left) was found a skeleton "fully seven feet long."


Largest in the collective series of mounds, the Great Smith Mound yielded at
least two large skeletons, but at different levels of its deconstruction by
Thomas' agents. It was 35 feet in height and 175 feet in diameter, and was
constructed in at least two stages, according to the report. The larger of the
two skeletons represented a man conceivably approaching eight feet in height
when living.

At a depth of 14 feet, a rather large human skeleton was found, which was in a
partially upright position with the back against a hard clay wall...All the
bones were badly decayed, except those of the left wrist, which had been
preserved by two heavy copper bracelets... Nineteen feet from the top the
bottom of this debris was reached, where, in the remains of a bark coffin, a
skeleton measuring 7� feet in length and 19 inches across the shoulders, was
discovered. It lay on the bottom of the vault stretched horizontally on the
back, head east, arms by the sides... Each wrist was encircled by six heavy
copper bracelets...Upon the breast was a copper gorget...length, 3� inches;
greatest width 3� inches... 12th Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to
the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1890-1891 (published in 1894)
(Kanawha County, West Virginia)


A Section of the Great Smith Mound, Kanawha County, West Virginia. This cone-
shaped mound rose 35 feet high and measured 175 feet in diameter at its base.
The interior of the mound contained a vault made of timber measuring 12 feet by
13 feet. It was positioned within the mound 20 feet above surface level.


The pressure of the time schedule doubtless made it inconvenient to seriously
consider the possibility of an ancient lineage of leaders taking the form of
very tall people. The fact of gigantic stature never settled in as a clue to a
greater mystery, and the evidences of very tall, ruggedly built men
vanished�and often enough into the Smithsonian's temporary charnel house of pre-
Columbian miscellany.

Three feet above...the skeleton of a large, strongly built man lay extended at
full length with the face up, the head toward the east...The skull was obtained
almost entire. Under it were thirteen water-worn quartz pebbles. The femur
measured 18� inches... 12th Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the
Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1890-1891 (published in 1894) (Union
County, Mississippi)


Group of mounds in Union County, Mississippi.


A femur (thigh bone) exceeding eighteen inches would indicate a man of above
average height, perhaps approaching seven feet. Femurs exceeding twenty inches
have been found however.

Though hindsight is said to be 20/20, Thomas' methodology was little better
than a government-sanctioned dissolution of the sacred burial places. He
dismantled the sanctuaries and charnel houses with the fervor of a man whose
first priority was to impress his employer. From Florida to Nebraska�including
twenty-three states and Canada's Manitoba region�over the next seven years he
and his agents worked like men possessed of a deadline.

A large Indian mound near the town of Gastersville, [Gastonville?�Ed.] Pa., has
recently been opened and examined by a committee of scientists sent out from
the Smithsonian Institute. At some depth from the surface a kind of vault was
found in which was discovered the skeleton of a giant measuring seven feet two
inches. His hair was coarse and jet black, and hung to the waist, the brow
being ornamented with a copper crown. The skeleton was remarkably well
preserved...On the stones which covered the vault were carved inscriptions, and
these when deciphered, will doubtless lift the veil that now shrouds the
history of the race of people that at one time inhabited this part of the
American continent. The relics have been carefully packed and forwarded to the
Smithsonian Institute, and they are said to be the most interesting collection
ever found in the United States. American Antiquarian, 7:52, 1885

Could this special burial have been another kingly individual? In these
increasingly hasty intrusions into the native burial grounds' inherent
sanctity, the holocaust delivered its zenith under the officialdom action of
former Union Major Powell. This man who in his youth had lived among the
"Indians," somehow was insensitive to the sanctuary of their graveyards. But
others came later to do a fair share of damage as well, all in the name of
information gathering. The prehistory of eastern North America is not what we
have been asked to accept from the efforts Cyrus Thomas, nor from the
subsequent authorities who based so much of their work upon his, and the reason
is worth repeating�many or most of the oldest mounds and subterranean burial
acreages were promptly destroyed long before any focused "scientific" effort
came on the scene.

Apart from the disregard of the settlers' records, the other part of the
problem is the labyrinthine mausoleum that is the Smithsonian bone and artifact
collection. In sum, we today are deprived of the real knowledge of the more
ancient lineage. The early settlers observed that the giants of old may have
passed on their grand stature to the later native people, for there were
individuals among their later progression who were of a size and build that
goes beyond our current notions of Native American physicality.

The Telling of the Bones

It is difficult not to understand the probability of an elite lineage of tall
men and women who propagated their own genetic inheritance. These people lived,
worked, and bred together. Were their marriages arranged to ensure the
continuance of the grand stature in roles of leadership and protection? In his
classic Red Earth, White Lies, Vine says:

>From talking with elders of several tribes, my understanding is that the
Indians were and are describing people of more than average height. In fact,
some elders as a routine matter have reported that the Indians themselves were
much larger and taller.

The question has been raised asking whether there was giant stature among the
Native American people in earlier historic times. From Hardesty's History of
Monroe County, Ohio, we discovered this:

He further told me of the killing of a big Indian at Buckchitawa, about the
time of the settlement at Marietta. The Indians had a white prisoner whom they
forced to decoy boats to the shore. A small boat was descending the river
containing white people, when this prisoner was placed under the bank to tell
those in the boat that he had escaped captivity, and to come to the shore and
take him in. The Indians were concealed, but the big Indian stuck his head out
from behind a large tree, when it was pierced by a bullet from the gun of the
steersman of the boat. The Indians cried out Wetzel, Wetzel, and fled. This was
the last ever seen of the prisoner. The Indians returned next day and buried
the big Indian, who, he said, was twenty inches taller than he was, and he was
a tall man. When Chester Bishop was digging a cellar for Asahel Booth, at
Clarington, many years ago, he came across a skeleton, the bones of which were
removed carefully by Dr. Richard Kirkpatrick, and from his measurement the
height of the man when living would have been 8 feet and 5 inches. It is
probable that these were the bones of the big Indian of whom the Indian at
Jackson's told me.


The Mound at Marietta Drawn by Henry Howe in 1846. Howe stated this mound was
"of a magnitude and height which strike the beholder with astonishment." It's
base had a diameter of 115 feet; it's height reached up 30 feet. It was
surrounded by a ditch four feet deep and fifteen feet wide.


And again this:

A large quantity of human bones was discovered in a fissure in the limestone
near the United States Coast Guard lighthouse. A crude tomb of black stone
slabs, of a formation not known on the island, was found many years ago beneath
the roots of a huge stump. Eight skeletons were found, one measuring over seven
feet in height. Sketches and Stories of the Lake Erie Islands by Theresa
Thorndale, Sandusky (1898)

Some of the settlers and their descendents may have seen clearly, but the
representatives of the Smithsonian and other sanctioned institutions, in spite
of good intentions, lacked the kind of thoroughness in their analyses that
included a broadened field of vision. We have felt heartily from the beginning
of this research that the Smithsonian is the recipient of mandates put into
place well over 100 years ago. It is virtually exempt from NAGPRA (Native
American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act), for the reason (say they) of
there being too much data to finish analyzing to prepare for repatriation.

Concealing evidence that conflicts with accepted theory is common scientific
skullduggery. For years the Smithsonian Institution has been accused of hiding
in storage vaults things it doesn't like. In 1968 two Neanderthal-like skulls
with low foreheads and large brows were found in Minnesota. As for dating,
University of Minnesota scientists said they were reluctant to destroy any of
the material, although carbon-14 testing only requires the burning of one gram
of bone. They were sent to the Smithsonian. Later Dr. Lawrence Angel, curator
of physical anthropology at the institution, said he had no record of the
skulls there, although he was sure they were not lost. We have a right to
wonder whether some professional scientists mightn't find a really early date
for the bones distressing. American Indian Myths and Mysteries Vincent H.
Gaddis (1977)

Why distressing? Because no true Neanderthal remains have ever been recognized
by any Federal authorities as originating on the North American continent, what
to say of the Americas in general. Is there yet today a conflict between
established theory and what has been physically discovered? Is the "ghost" of
Powell yet haunting the halls of the Museum?

So what is the policy of the Smithsonian? Does the institution intentionally
withhold information? Is the fact of a race of giant warriors and chieftains
threatening to the closed, internal doctrine of American archaeology? That
there was a race of men and women possessing an unusually tall and strong
physicality living over an extensive area North America has become a forgotten
fact.

There are other examples, and names like the Gungywamp Society of Connecticut,
Ed Conrad, and others have bizarre stories to relate about the ineptitude or
simple prejudice of the Smithsonian when dealing with their materials. In these
examples, there is growing appreciation for an actual cover-up.

Another grotesque twist is the Army Medical Museum's collection. According to
the ABC News special "Skeletons in the Closet," the United States government
acquired a real interest in Indian corpses. The Surgeon General, in post-Civil
War 1868, requested that the army collect the skulls, utensils, and weaponry of
Native Americans "as far as you are able to procure them." According to the
report, these were to be sent to Washington, D.C. as part of a program that
studied the effects of modern bullets and other weaponry on human bodies. The
collection of such remains, estimated at 4,000, was taken mostly from grave and
battle sites. What was left over became part of the Smithsonian collection
estimated at 18,000 individuals, and this by way of the Army Medical Museum.

The objects here collected which have not been given, or acquired by exchange,
have been purchased for the use of the museum by order of the surgeon-
general... There is a skeleton of a giant, who, in life, measured seven feet,
prepared by Auzoux and mounted by Blanch�ne's method, which, if I may use that
term, is really a beauty. It is as white and clean as new fallen snow, and the
brass joints and screws which keep it together are bright, and of the latest
style and finish... "The Army Medical Museum in Washington" by Louis Bagger
Appletons' Journal: A Magazine Of General Literature Volume 9, Issue 206 (1873)


Today however, bones are no longer as good a source of information as they once
were thought to be, and for several good reasons. Bone, while composed
dominantly of the metallic calcium, yet is made up of organic molecules.
Depending on moisture and temperature, it will decay, break down with time, and
return to the condition of the soil after a certain number of centuries. Bone
evidence has created over-emphasis on certain periods of prehistory, in this
region the so-called "Hopewell" and "Fort Ancient" (Mississippian) people.
Thus, a great proportion of the Archaic and early Adena bones discovered were
decomposed beyond preservation. Due to a lack of skeletons other more antique
periods have not received the same kind of recognition save from the better
scholars affecting the interested public's view of the ancient world.
Ironically, the holocaust of giants, while deadening our sense of the past, may
well serve as a lesson for the future.

Recommended Reading:

Red Earth, White Lies : Native Americans and the Myth of Scientific Fact by
Vine Deloria, Jr. (Fulcrum Pub; ISBN: 1555913881; 1997)

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