Historic Albemarle Trail at Frisco Native American Museum Hatteras Island, NC OBX
Here's a video walkthrough of the Historic Albemarle Trail Site at Frisco Native American Museum & Natural History Center on Hatteras Island, NC. Check out the bird at the 9 minute mark!
Their web site can be found here:
Frisco Pow Wow 2011 - Historic Albemarle Tour
FUN for the Whole Family!
From the sounds of native drums and singing, to the smell of fry bread and the tangy taste of buffalo chili, to the images of intricate crafts and the delights of molding clay, shaping stone,stringing beads, carving wood, or weaving baskets, you will have the opportunity to explore and experience Native American culture up close and personal in Frisco on Hatteras Island.
Frisco American Native Museum Pow Wow 2011 part of the HAT Tour!
Powwows are traditional, inter-tribal celebrations with emphasis on the sharing of cultures and the opportunity to gather on ancestral grounds. Dancers wear traditional apparel and full regalia throughout the weekend, and vendors share beautiful crafts and authentic native foods. Visit Frisco each year for the awesome tradition!
Top 11. Best Tourist Attractions in Hatteras Island, North Carolina
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The most beautiful places and sight in Hatteras Island.
Top 11. Best Tourist Attractions in Hatteras Island, North Carolina: Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, Cape Hatteras National Seashore, Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge, Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum, Frisco Beach, Avon Fishing Pier, Canadian Hole, Hatteras Island Ocean Center, Pea Island Art Gallery, Salvo Beach, Frisco Native American Museum
OBX by RV: Happy Dogs [North American Road Trip #38]
We have settled into our campsite and the OBX mindset. Today we take a morning bike ride to the beach and Frisco Native American Museum. Upon our return the dogs convince us to take them for swim.
Special Thanks to Frisco Woods Campground
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NC WEEKEND | Museum of the Albemarle | UNC-TV
Museum of the AlbemarleElizabeth City, NC
From duck decoys to full-size Coast Guard choppers, this museum is a must-see if you're in northeastern North Carolina.
John Lawson's Indian Town on Hatteras Island, North Carolina
Telling the history of any particular place usually involves the study of written sources: letters, notes, pamphlets, books, and similar tangible references. But few concrete sources have survived that describe the natives of North Carolina and remote locations like Hatteras Island in the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries. Those who attempt to write the history of Hatteras often find them-selves practicing a bard's art more than a historian's, adding unsubstantiated filler between the few facts available to complete the tale. Adding to these difficulties, Hatteras's fledgling and haphazard history is not only affected by the dearth of primary documents, but also by geography—specifically, the island's great distance from the mainland. Potential informants from Hatteras spent their day fishing in local waters for menhaden or rendering porpoises on the beach and seldom visited the mainland. They were a self-reliant people. Neither did the outside world often visit Hatteras, a needless expense for a twenty-six-mile trip by water to an island deemed of little value. Hatteras was isolated, remote, and of no great size, roughly thirty-three square miles with a small population. Furthermore, a skewed understanding of the island's natives, their descendants, and their eventual fate hampered this history as well. For these reasons and more, the history of Hatteras has been difficult to tell. 1 That history, however, is intimately linked to a native town that had been misplaced for centuries. John Lawson—Yorkshire native, early Carolina explorer, native ethnographer, and noted historian—demonstrated his respect for the Hatteras Indians and became the first European to rediscover them and their town when he traveled through the area between 1701 and 1709. Ind. Towne, which Lawson found and recorded on his map, published just before his death in 1711, is historically significant. The town was important not only to explorers like Lawson, but also to the later residents who may have called those natives family.
Upcoming article on Blackbeard's genealogy:
“ ‘Born in Jamaica of Very Creditable Parents’ or ‘A Bristol Man Born’? Excavating the Real Edward Thache, ‘Blackbeard the Pirate’ “ in the July issue of North Carolina Historical Review...
Available at:
Author site:
Author gift shop:
Other publications of Baylus C. Brooks:
North Carolina 2013
This is a movie trailer for our trip to North Carolina in July 2013 to visit Mary's cousin Peggy and her husband, Bob Walters. We traveled the length of the state from the northwest corner in the Appalachian Mountains down through their home in Raleigh to the beach house on Emerald Isle.
Welcome to Hatteras and Ocracoke Islands
Sunny Day Guide: Hatteras Ocracoke, North Carolina
Music Credit-POND5 (ukulele-and-whistling)
Steeped in centuries of history, Hatteras and Ocracoke Islands are home to several amazing museums. The Graveyard of the Atlantic and Frisco Native American museums, as well as the Ocracoke Preservation Society Museum, tell the islands’ tale. For a glimpse of life in Hatteras before human history, spend some time strolling the trails at Hammock Hills and the Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge, or shelling and bird watching at the Cape Hatteras National Seashore.
With so many ways to eat, shop and spend the day on Hatteras and Ocracoke Islands, explore SunnyDayGuide.com before your vacation. For over 30 years, visitors to the area have trusted Sunny Day Guide for restaurant and activity listings, detailed maps, and Money-Saving Coupons. We’re also available on your cell phone and mobile device, so you have all of the islands’ attractions and activities as well as guides to all the hottest dining and shopping at your fingertips – wherever you are! By browsing our event schedules, hotel and cottage listings and – of course – our online coupons, your visit to the islands begins!
The Museum of Albemarle
The following is just a couple of audio clips from our investigation at the museum of Albemarle. Listen closely at the beginning there is a ping than there is a voice right before the investigator states that she was touched.
Tropical Storm Maria - Buxton, NC September 27, 2017
Video by Don Bowerrs
Driving through Fort Meade, Florida on US 17
Fort Meade is the oldest city in Polk County, dating its origins to 1849 when it was an old military road from Tampa (Fort Brooke) to Fort Pierce during the Indian wars. The 1880s business district was located on old Wire Street (now Broadway), which was a casualty of 4 devastating fires. Today, there are over 150 which are designated as landmarks.[4] In the 1890s the Fort Meade Street Railway operated a horse-drawn service in the town.
The earliest known burial is John I. Hooker (1821–1862) located in the town's Evergreen Cemetery. Fort Meade's Christ Church (Episcopal) located at 526 North Oak was built in 1889. It is a frame vernacular with Gothic Revival elements and was designed by architect J. H. Weddell. A minister by the name of C.E Butler had committed suicide at the church in 1894. Located next to Christ Church is the famous Rev. Wm James Reid House. Located within the historic district, the house was used for the HBO motion picture The Judgement featuring Blythe Danner, Keith Carradine and Jack Warden (1990).
Future Confederate General Stonewall Jackson was stationed at the fort in 1851. The town was burned by Union forces in 1864[5] and all of the original structures were destroyed, except the 2nd fort which was dismantled in the 1890s. Fort Meade has over 300 homes on the National Register of Historic Places and a handful that date to the late 1800s.
Hatteras Island Inn - Buxton Hotels, North Carolina
Hatteras Island Inn2Buxton,North Carolina Within US Travel Directory The Hatteras Island Inn is just 1 mile from the beach and the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse.
Free WiFi is available in all guest rooms.
49 guests positively reviewed the property surroundingsA microwave and a small refrigerator are included in every room of this Hatteras Island Inn.
Ironing facilities are also available.
31 guests positively reviewed the room facilitiesAn outdoor pool is on site at the Hatteras Island Inn and parking for large vehicles and boats is also available on site.
A fish-cleaning station is available so guests can prepare their own meal.
This property is 11 miles from the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum.
The Frisco Native American Museum is 6 miles away.
46 guests positively reviewed the location
Hatteras Island Inn - Buxton Hotels, North Carolina
Location in : 46745 North Carolina Highway 12 ,NC 27920, Buxton, North Carolina
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Black Women Who Changed America, Frisco Museum Lecture Series
The Winter Lecture Series at the Frisco Historic Park and Museum presents Jill Tietjen with her talk on Black Women Who Changed America.
Lost Restaurants of the Outer Banks
Outer Banks
The Outer Banks (also known as OBX) is a 200-mile (320-km) long string of narrow barrier islands off the coast of North Carolina and a small portion of Virginia, beginning in the southeastern corner of Virginia Beach on the east coast of the United States. They cover most of the North Carolina coastline, separating the Currituck Sound, Albemarle Sound, and Pamlico Sound from the Atlantic Ocean.
The Outer Banks is a major tourist destination and is known for its temperate climate and wide expanse of open beachfront. The Cape Hatteras National Seashore has four campgrounds where visitors may camp.
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American Indian Center's 2011 Pow Wow
St. Cloud State University's American Indian Center (AIC) hosts a Pow Wow in Halenbeck Hall every year. Its 2011 Pow Wow is another success!
There are different men and women styles of dancing at Pow Wows. Before the dancing begins, a prayer is said with sage burning and people respectfully removing their hats. Everyone is supposed to stand during the honor and healing dances.
There are many different styles of dance. There are three different styles of men's dance and three different styles of women's dance.
Men's styles:
There is Traditional, Fancy, and Grass. Grass dancers wear a lot of fringe and do not wear any bustles on their backs. They stomp as if stomping on the grass in the prairie with movements' fluid like grass.
Should look like grass blowing in the wind, says American Indian Studies Professor of SCSU, Jeanne Lacourt.
Most Traditional dancers wear eagle feathers on their bustle. Fancy dancer's eagle feathers are colorful and they usually wear two bustles. The bustles are very beautiful and attention grabbing.
Women's styles:
There are three different styles of women's dance. There is Traditional, Fancy Shawl, and Jingle. After interviewing a young Jingle dancer, she said her dance is a healing one. Jingles are sewed onto the dress for healing.
Washington County, Alabama | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:00:24 1 History
00:03:33 2 Geography
00:05:12 2.1 Adjacent counties
00:05:39 3 Transportation
00:05:49 3.1 Major highways
00:06:09 3.2 Railroad
00:06:33 4 Demographics
00:06:43 4.1 2010
00:07:27 4.2 2000
00:10:44 4.3 Population decline
00:11:29 5 Education
00:12:02 6 Politics
00:14:10 7 Communities
00:14:19 7.1 Towns
00:14:34 7.2 Census-designated places
00:14:44 7.3 Unincorporated communities
00:15:08 7.4 Ghost town
00:15:18 8 Places of interest
00:15:49 9 Notable people
00:16:30 10 See also
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
Listen on Google Assistant through Extra Audio:
Other Wikipedia audio articles at:
Upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
Speaking Rate: 0.9132085139924696
Voice name: en-US-Wavenet-C
I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
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Washington County is a county in the U.S. state of Alabama. As of the 2010 census, the population was 17,581. The county seat is Chatom. The county was named in honor of George Washington, the first President of the United States. It is a dry county, with the exception of Chatom.
Native News Update August 18, 2010
The latest round-up of News From Indian Country on the Native News Update from the studios of IndianCountryTV.com on the Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe Reservation at Reserve, Wisconsin with host Kimberlie Acosta. Today's Stories include: The Red Diva Projects release new single; University of Rochester starts effort to attract Native students; Tony Reyna receives 7th annual Spirit of the Heard Award; Montana State University offers two online Native American Studies courses; Kim Acosta profiles Native boxer, Thaddine Swift Eagle Johnson; 5th annual Cherokee Art Market will feature 130 elite Native artists; Frisco Native American Museum will participate in sixth annual Museum Day; Jana Mashonee released her first book.
Agkistrodon Piscivorus Buxton Woods
Several cottonmouths found along the Buxton Woods nature trail on Hatteras Island. This is a .75 mile loop trail through the preserve directly across from the entrance to the Hatteras Lighthouse.
These snakes tend to stay very still and blend in with the surroundings extremely well. Unless one is actively looking for them, they tend to go unnoticed. Most of these were within a few feet of the trail. There is an aptly placed placard warning hikers about their presence. They are usually hidden in the vegetation where the water approaches the trail.
Shot with a gopro mounted on a hiking stick. Despite getting very close with the camera, not a single one actually struck