For
me, those plants found here in the Smokies region that have verified
practical human uses are, in the long run, of more interest than
those with often overblown reputations for sacred or medicinal uses.
For instance, the history of the common roadside plant Indian hemp
is, for me, fascinating, while the lore associated with ginseng
— which has reached near-mythic proportions — is somewhat
tedious. If you have an interest in plants and have lived in the
Smokies region for awhile, it’s probable that you already
know all that you need to know about ginseng, while Indian hemp
is an equally interesting plant that you perhaps know very little
about.
Indian hemp (Apocynum cannabinum) grows up to three feet tall
in roadside thickets, displaying smooth-edged, opposite leaves.
The greenish-white flowers bearing five petals appear from June
into August. It can also be readily identified by seedpods up to
eight inches in length that sometimes appear while the plant is
still in flower.
A member of the Dogbane Family, the plant produces the sort of
milky-white fluids characteristic of the various species of milkweed.
These fluids, which contain heart-affecting glycosides, have in
the past been used in the treatment of venereal warts. But for the
most part, Indian hemp has served as a source of fibrous stems used
in the production of cordage and other utilitarian products.
According to Rita Buchanan’s A Weaver’s Garden (1987),
“Indian hemp fibers were used by prehistoric Indians to make
cords, fishing nets, bags, mats, belts, sandals and garments ....
They resist weather and decay. A knotted net drawstring bag made
of Indian hemp fibers was found in Danger Cave, Utah; archaeologists
estimate it to be seven thousand years old. Early European colonists
in eastern North America were impressed with the properties of Indian
hemp and compared the fibers favorably to both flax and cotton.
“The Europeans usually did not undertake growing and using
Indian hemp themselves, because they were able to obtain it by trading
with local Indians. The botanist Peter Kalm wrote of colonists in
Delaware who bought Indian hemp ropes at a price of fourteen yards
for a piece of bread. Other settlers acquired Indian hemp storage
sacks, carrying bags, and mats through similar trade.”
Buchanan also noted that Indian hemp makes an attractive, if somewhat
invasive, ornamental easily propagated from seeds. And she concluded
with detailed directions for processing the fibers for weaving purposes.
My wife, Elizabeth Ellison, a professional watercolorist and papermaker,
prepares many of the papers she paints upon from native plant fibers.
The ancient Oriental process of gathering, stripping, beating, cooking,
etc., is from my point of view labor intensive, to say the least.
But the end result is handmade paper of rich textures and intricate
patterns that add depth, texture, and resonance to her work. Several
years ago, she gathered Indian hemp in the Patton Valley section
of Macon County and made a run of paper that was exquisite—perhaps
the most beautiful paper I have ever seen. Its cinnamon fibers were
translucent, radiating subtle hints of pink and other delicate colors.
In preparing this column, I took a look at Hamel and Chiltoskey’s
Cherokee Plants (1975) and found that the Cherokees also used Indian
hemp “for cords,” which wasn’t surprising. But
the authors also noted, in closing, that the Cherokees harvested
the plant’s fibers “to weave grave cloth material.”
Little wonder that a people so familiar with the plants of their
native mountains would choose Indian hemp when the situation called
for lasting durability and enduring beauty.
George Ellison wrote the biographical introductions for the
reissues of two Appalachian classics: Horace Kephart’s Our
Southern Highlanders and James Mooney’s History, Myths, and
Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees. In June 2005, a selection of his
Back Then columns was published by The History Press in Charleston
as Mountain Passages: Natural and Cultural History of Western North
Carolina and the Great Smoky Mountains. Readers can contact him
at P.O. Box 1262, Bryson City, N.C., 28713, or at george.ellison@cebridge.net.