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By Sheron Smith

Mounds, Monuments and Mysteries

   MGA History Professor Dr. Matt Jennings            promotion from “monument” that could raise the
   studies the long, rich history of Macon’s          site’s visibility and pay off in tangible economic
   Ocmulgee National Monument, perhaps                benefits for the city and surrounding region.
   soon to become the first national historic         	 In January 2017, the U.S. House of
   park in Georgia.                                   Representatives passed a bill to expand Ocmulgee
                                                      and designate it as Georgia’s first national historic
Matt Jennings saw Ocmulgee National                   park. As of early spring, advocates of the status
             Monument for the first time in 2000      change were waiting on the Senate to act on the
             when, as a graduate student in           bill, which if passed would nearly quadruple the
 History at the University of Illinois, he attended   site’s current acreage to 2,800 and change its name
 an archeological conference at the ancient Native    to “Ocmulgee Mounds National Historical Park.”
 American site in east Macon.                         	 “Those changes would add a layer of
 	 “I had heard of it and probably read about         protection from commercial and residential
 it before, but seeing it was amazing,” he says. “I   development and, at the same time, pave the way
 thought it was extraordinary to have a place like    for a study regarding setting aside a huge swath
 that in the middle of a city.”                       of green space between Macon and Hawkinsville
 	 Seven years later, as a newly minted Ph.D,         for a variety of recreational uses,” Jennings says.
 Jennings began his search for a teaching job in      “I’m not an expert in economic development, but
 higher education. One of his interviews was at       those in the know project that within 15 years the
 what is now Middle Georgia State University          park and preserve could support as many as 2,800
 (MGA).                                               jobs and inject millions into the regional
 	 While he likes to think he could have built his    economy.”
 academic career no matter where he landed,           	 What makes Ocmulgee so historically
 Macon and MGA immediately felt like the right        significant? Here’s how Jennings described it in
 place to be, in part because of the access he would  his recently released Ocmulgee National
 have to what is often referred to locally as “the    Monument, one of the books in the “Images of
 Indian Mounds.”                                      America” series published by Arcadia:
 	 “The story of Ocmulgee National Monument
 hasn’t been fully told,” Jennings says, recalling      People have called the land near the Ocmulgee
 when he first saw a timeline poster of the site’s      River in present-day central Georgia home for
 history that did not extend beyond the 1820s. “I       a long time, perhaps as many as 17,000 years,
 wanted to be part of telling more of the story.”       and each successive group has left its mark on
 	 Now, as an MGA associate professor of                the landscape. Mississippian-era people erected
 History, Jennings is a prominent figure in the         the towering Great Temple Mound and other
 community of scholars studying Ocmulgee                large earthworks around 1,000 years ago. In
 National Monument as its story continues to            the late 17th century, Ocmulgee flourished as a
 unfold. His ongoing research includes exploring        center of trade between the Creek Indians and
 the relationship between Native American peoples       their English neighbors. In the 19th century,
 and the mounds at Ocmulgee, as well as the inter-      railroads did irreparable damage to the site in
 twined history of tourism and archaeology at the       the name of progress and profit, slicing through
 site. He is among the voices encouraging Congress      it twice. Preservation efforts bore fruit in the
 to elevate ONM to national historic park status, a     1930s, when Ocmulgee National Monument

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4 MIDDLE GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY
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