The answer is no known tribe. It is named Williamson for the discoverer of the mound. It is thought to be of the period of Hopewell. Please look in archaelogy searches for further questions. There were no "tribes" then, just hunters / gatherers. There are mounds all over Ohio and Indiana. Good hunting! yarnyogi@hotmail.com, L. Coffman
Requiem for a Tribe Brother - Williamson - was created in 1992.
THE SPOKANE TRIBE WERE MOUND BUILDERS.
mound builders
I might be able to answer in more depth later, but for now I know that Mound builders had a lineal government meaning that it was passed down through family members.
The Hopewell Indians or in a more general term, the mound builders.
The anasazi had a strong leader Pachakuti.
By 400 AD, the Hopewell culture and its mound building were all but over. The cause of this is still unknown.
the Hopewell tribe was a mysteries Indian tribe.
The Cahokia tribe, a pre-Columbian Native American civilization located near present-day St. Louis, Missouri, constructed large mound-shaped structures. Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site preserves the largest prehistoric Native American city north of Mexico.
Adena Indians built mounds using the women and girls of the tribe. They carried clay and earth in woven baskets to the site of the mound. The men only supervised. This from the book"Mounds in the Mist, by Harry Kroll and Mildred Payne
The address of the Williamson Public Library is: 101 Logan Street, Williamson, 25661 3630
Richard Williamson has written: 'Williamson's penmanship for the use of schools. ..'