Ossahatchee Indian Festival & Pow Wow

Anyone With Proper Regalia
is Welcome To Dance.

Ossahatchee Indian Festival & Pow Wow
Held on the Harris Co Soccer Field, GA Hwy 116E, Hamilton, GA

Always the third weekend in October

October 17, 18, & 19, 2008

About the Tipi
For more information visit the web site just for and about tipi's visit www.tipis-tepees-teepees.com 

Long before the Sioux, Cheyenne, and other Plains tribes came to the grasslands, the tipi had been developed by the Indians of the northern forests. They used a pole frame to create the conical shape and then covered the skeleton with birchbark, caribou hides, or other materials.

Tipi's at OssahatcheeThe Plaines Indians adapted this basic structure to their own environment and their own pattern of living. An adjustment in the framework was made to accommodate the strong winds of the region, and buffalo hides, sewn together, became the usual covering.

08_06a (1).jpg (69659 bytes)The tipi was an ideal dwelling for the Plains people. Like the buffalo they hunted, these Indians were constantly on the move. Their dwellings, therefore, had to be readily transportable. A tipi presented no problems. To move it, the ends of two of the tipi supporting poles were lashed to a horse. The other ends dragged along the ground, thus forming a roughly triangular frame, a travois, on which the buffalo covering and the family’s other possessions were tied.

At the new campsite several long poles were bound together near their tops. The poles were then stood up and slanted outward from this center tie to form the outline of a cone. Other poles were leaned against this framework to strengthen it, and a buffalo-hide covering, usually of 8 to 20 skins, was draped over the skeleton. The covering was joined near the top with wooden lodge pins, as shown below. An opening was left at the very top as a smoke hole, the entrance, with closable flaps, was at the lower part of this seam.

Kerry Prouty & CheetahIn hot weather, when cooling breezes were wanted, the flaps were left open and the lower part of the tipi covering was rolled up, permitting the air to circulate freely. In winter an additional skin lining was added to the tipi covering, thus providing insulation. The fire that burned in the center of the floor kept the tipi warm as well as furnishing heat for cooking.

As shown in the illustration below, a typical tipi was crowded with hide bedding, a rug for the baby, willow-rod backrests, cradleboard, a suspended cooking bag, a supply of fuel, parfleches containing food, medicine, and other necessities, and similar household gear.

On the insulating ling of the tipi were hung sacred objects, weapons, shield, and other items. This lining was often painted with brilliantly colored designs that recalled past events in the lives of those who inhabited the tipi.

The Plains Indians had deep appreciation for the tipi. Secure, mobile, and comfortable, it was looked upon by these nomadic hunters as "a good mother" who sheltered and protected her children.

The information and picture above on this page were obtained from:
America's Fascination Indian Heritage
Copyright 1978 The Reader's Digest Association, Inc.

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Ossahatchee Foundation, Inc.
PO Box 3, Hamilton, GA 31811
For Information Call: (706) 628-7653
EMAIL: powwow@ossahatchee.org