
Ormond
Burial Mound
On
Mound Avenue near the intersection with Beach Street.
Thanks
to community efforts in the 1980s, the Ormond Mound has been preserved
as one of the finest and most intact burial mounds in eastern Florida.
Salvage excavations indicate that more than one hundred individual burials
remain, most dating from the late-St. Johns period, after A.D. 800.
Associated
with the Ormond Mound was a charnel house used to store bodies before
burial. The St. Johns people used such structures to prepare corpses (mostly
of prominent people) for the afterlife. The dead were laid out on wooden
racks and allowed to decompose, with attendants--usually high priests--carefully
removing flesh from the bones.
After
the bodies dried away, each charnel house priest ended up with sets of
cleaned, separated bones that were then bundled individually and interred
with special ceremony. This method explains the great number of skeletons
found in burial mounds.
Directions:
In
the city of Ormond Beach, take S.R..40 (Granada Boulevard) to Beach Street;
travel south five blocks to Mound Avenue. The city park charges no admission
fee.

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