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Thursday, December 22, 2011
Winter Softball Camp

Photos from the Chickasaw Softball Camp. The camp was for girls 10-18 years of age and took place at Ardmore High School. The event was held indoors due to poor weather conditions.


45 photos
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Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Winter Baseball Camp

Photos from the Chickasaw Winter Baseball Camp. The camp was for boys 8-18 years of age and took place at Ardmore High School. The event was held indoors due to poor weather conditions.


56 photos
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Thursday, December 15, 2011
Elders' Christmas

Photos from the Elder's Christmas Luncheon held at the Agriplex in Ada Ok


46 photos
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Winter House
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Winter House

Pre-European Influence

The winter house or stove house was in the shape of a 6 and housed the family during cold weather. The shape allowed for entry only by single file, and it was dark inside so it could easily be defended from intruders. The plastered walls were whitewashed within and without, either with decayed oyster shells, coarse chalk or white marly clay; one or another was abundant in the area even when the settlement was far distant from the sea shores.

Each Chickasaw of consequence owned a group of dwellings, including the summer house, corn house and fowl house. The women had a communal menstrual house they used for the "unclean times" and for a time after giving birth to a child.

The materials used in constructing the houses included logs, grass thatch, notched roof rafters, clay and withered grass daub, white oak splints, cane or hickory and honeylocust posts, cypress clap-boards and bark.

On the inside, mattress frames were constructed from long cane splinters. The bedding consisted of skins of wild beasts, such as buffalo, panthers, bears, elks and deer, which they dressed with the hair on, which made them soft as velvet.

Platform mounds were built in the towns as foundations for the chiefs house and other public structures in late prehistoric times throughout the southeast.

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