Home > Gwinnett > Rick Badie / My Opinion > Archives > 2006 > October > 05 > Entry

Indian festival founder proud of his heritage

Leotis Eddy has a buckskin dress and a pair of high-top moccasins. They’re gifts from her late husband, Paul Eddy. He died on Aug. 29 at the age of 61. Lung cancer.

Long before he died, he gave Leotis Eddy the gifts. She’s never worn them, though. She has them on display in the home they shared in Winder.

It’s not because she’s unappreciative or disdains his Sioux heritage. Her reason is simple, really.

“I’m not Indian,” she told me.

“A lot of people want to be Indian. I don’t try to be. I am proud to be me. That’s what Paul always said: ‘Whatever culture, whatever race — be proud of what you are.’ “

Paul Eddy was disturbed by the misconceptions and negative depictions of Native American Indians. You’ve seen the Westerns. Hollywood cinema fed us tall tales with white actors playing the role of the natives.

Eddy, owner of a land surveying business, took the portrayals to heart.

“He thought the American Indian was the most maligned of all cultures,” Leotis Eddy told me. “He said he wanted to put something on in Gwinnett, something educational.”

Years ago, Eddy was interviewed by AJC Gwinnett News. This is what he had to say:

“We have to take care of the misconceptions and then commence with the true teachings,” he said, noting that people think “the stereotypical American Indian runs around with feathers and jumps up and down to the beat of the drum.”

So in 1992, the Eddys launched the American Indian Festival. It’s a two-day event held every May and October at the Gwinnett County Fairgrounds. From the get-go, this was Paul Eddy’s baby.

He booked authentic American Indian dancers to take part in competitions. He checked the wares of artists. You didn’t have to be a Native American to be a vendor, but the work had to be quality.

“He didn’t want the junk,” Leotis Eddy said. “He was very particular, and had such a love for this.”

Because of that love, Leotis Eddy and Ryan, the couple’s 33-year-old son, plan to continue the festival. It’s not for the money. It costs between $25,000 and $30,000 to host each festival. The Eddys dip into their own pockets to cover costs unmet through gate receipts and vendors’ fees.

“The first festival, we lost $14,000,” Eddy said. “Each year we’ve come down in the amount of money we lose. If we had done this for the money, I would have to say we would have stopped after the first time.”

The educational component of the festival takes place on Fridays, the day before it opens to the public. School kids on pre-scheduled field trips turn out for lessons on the original settlers. About 1,000 students are expected this year.

For Eddy, the October festival will be particularly spiritual. A memorial service is set for 7:30 p.m. Friday on the fairgrounds. Friends will be asked to say a few words about her husband, the man who nicknamed her “Toadie.” The man who started it all.

And more than likely, would like to see it continue.

The American Indian Festival will be held under the covered rodeo arena of the Gwinnett County Fairgrounds from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $7 for those 13 and older; $4 for 5- to 12-year-olds. Kids younger than 4 get in free.

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Comments

By Pam

October 5, 2006 08:25 AM | Link to this

I enjoy this festival each year and will be there with my three kids. My kids love everything about this festival.

By baby girl

October 5, 2006 09:52 AM | Link to this

The Native Americans are the most maligned in America. If you go into actual history books, they are not the savages portrayed in motion pictures and TV. In Georgia history books, they are intelligent, some very affluent. Spanish people may have taught scalping to Native Americans. My great grandmother was Native American. I always thought my grandfather was ashamed of her because we did not know of her heritage until his last years. After researching, I found that if you were in the state of Georgia and Native American, you could be hung at the time she lived. My great grandfather, her husband, was disowned, and being a teacher, he taught his kids at home.

By Proud Descendent

October 8, 2006 09:44 AM | Link to this

Muscogee (Creek) Nation MUSCOGEE (CREEK) HISTORY

The Muscogee (Creek) people are descendents of a remarkable culture that, before 1500 AD, spanned all the region known today as the Southeastern United States. Early ancestors of the Muscogee constructed magnificent earthen pyramids along the rivers of this region as part of their elaborate ceremonial complexes. The historic Muscogee later built expansive towns within these same broad river valleys in the present states of Alabama, Georgia, Florida and South Carolina. The Muscogee were not one tribe but a union of several. This union evolved into a confederacy that, in the Euro-American described “historic period,” was the most sophisticated political organization north of Mexico. Member tribes were called tribal towns. Within this political structure, each tribal town maintained political autonomy and distinct land holdings. The confederacy was dynamic in its capacity to expand. New tribal towns were born of “Mother towns” as populations increased. The confederation was also expanded by the addition of tribes conquered by towns of the confederacy, and, in time, by the incorporation of tribes and fragments of tribes devastated by the European imperial powers. Within this confederacy, the language and the culture of the founding tribal towns became dominant. Throughout the period of contact with Europeans, most of the Muscogee population was concentrated into two geographical areas. The English called the Muscogee peoples occupying the towns on the Coosa and the Tallapoosa rivers, Upper Creeks, and those to the southeast, on the Chattahoochee and Flint rivers, the Lower Creeks. The distinction was purely geographical. Due in part to their proximity to the English, the Lower towns were substantially effected by intermarriage and its consequent impact on their political and social order. The Upper towns remained less effected by European influences and continued to maintain distinctly traditional political and social institutions. In the early 19th century, the United States Indian policy focused on the removal of the Muscogee and the other Southeastern tribes to areas beyond the Mississippi River. In the removal treaty of 1832, Muscogee leadership exchanged the last of the cherished Muscogee ancestral homelands for new lands in Indian Territory (Oklahoma). Many of the Lower Muscogee (Creek) had settled in the new homeland after the treaty of Washington in 1827. But for the majority of Muscogee people the process of severing ties to a land they felt so much a part of proved impossible. The U.S. Army enforced the removal of more than 20,000 Muscogee(Creeks) to Indian Territory in 1836 and 37. In the new nation the Lower Muscogees located their farms and plantations on the Arkansas and Verdigris rivers. The Upper Muscogees re-established their ancient towns on the Canadian River and its northern branches. The tribal towns of both groups continued to send representatives to a National Council which met near High Springs. The Muscogee Nation as a whole began to experience a new prosperity. The American Civil War was disastrous for the Muscogee people. The first three battles of the war in Indian Territory occurred when Confederate forces attacked a large of neutral Muscogee (Creeks) led by Opothle Yahola. For the majority of the Muscogee people, desired neutrality proved impossible. Eventually Muscogee citizens fought on both the Union and Confederate sides. The reconstruction treaty of 1866 required the cession of 3.2 million acres — approximately half of the Muscogee domain. In 1867, the Muscogee people adopted a written constitution that provided for a Principal Chief and a Second Chief, a judicial branch and a bicameral legislature composed of a House of Kings and a House of Warriors. Representation in both houses of this Legislative assembly was determined by tribal town. This “constitutional” period lasted for the remainder of the 19th century. A new capital was established in 1867 on the Deep Fork of the Canadian at Okmulgee. In 1878 the Nation constructed a familiar native stone Council House which remains at the center of the modern city of Okmulgee. In the late 1800s the Dawes Commission began negotiating with the Muscogee Nation for the allotment of the national domain. In 1898, the United States Congress passed the Curtis Act which made the dismantling of the National governments of the Five Civilized Tribes and the allotment of collectively-held tribal domains inevitable. In 1890, the noted statesman Chitto Harjo helped lead organized opposition to the dissolution of Muscogee National government and allotment of collectively-held lands. In his efforts he epitomized the view of all Muscogee people that they possessed an inherent right to govern themselves. For individuals like Chitto Harjo it was unimaginable that the Nation could be dissolved by the action of a foreign government. This perception proved to be correct. The end of the Muscogee Nation as envisioned by its architects within the United States Congress did not occur. In the early 20th century, the process of allotment of the National domain to individual citizens was completed. However, the perceived dismantling of the Muscogee government was never fully executed. The Nation maintained a Principal Chief throughout this stormy period. In 1971, the Muscogee people, for the first time since the partial dismantling of their National government, freely elected a Principal Chief without Presidential approval. In the decade of the 1970s the leadership of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation drafted and adopted a new constitution, revitalized the National Council and began the challenging process of Supreme Court decisions affirmed the Nation’s sovereign rights to maintain a national court system and levy taxes. The federal courts have also consistently re-affirmed the Muscogee Nation’s freedom from state jurisdiction. Present day Mound building located at the Tribal headquarters, houses the National Council Offices and Judicial Offices. In the 1990s, almost 100 years after the dark days of the allotment era, the Muscogee (Creek) people are actively engaged in the process of accepting and asserting the rights and responsibilities of a sovereign nation. As a culturally distinct people the Muscogee are also aware of the necessity for knowing and understanding their extraordinary historical and cultural inheritance.

By Tommy

October 9, 2006 12:18 PM | Link to this

Rick, an excellent article. I too am a Land Surveyor by trade and I’ve known at least two more Native American Surveyor’s. The Native Americans have been in survey party’s since the early 1700’s. Without them most of this land would not be mapped today. My hat is off to this family …

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