Claremore Mound


Claremore Mound, an ancient earthen platform mound in present-day Rogers County, Oklahoma, is the site of the Battle of Strawberry Moon. In June 1817, a band of Cherokee Indians and their allies, under Chief Spring Frog, attacked Pasuga, an Osage Indian village at the foot of Claremore Mound, killing thirty-eight Osage, including their Chief Glahmo, and taking one hundred and four captives. In revenge, the Osage attacked the Cherokee for the next twenty years, led by Wah-tianka, Glahmo's son. The mound is located north of Sageeyah near the south bank of the Verdigris River.
The earthwork mound, likely constructed before 1000CE by the Caddoan Mississippian culture, has an elevation of above sea level. The area on top of the mound, where the Osage built a village called Pasona about 1802, is about. Parts of the Cherokee reservation, established in the late 1830s in Indian Territory, lay about to the west. The later, modern city of Claremore was developed by European Americans about away.
European-American settlers designated both the mound and the nearby town as Clermont in honor of Chief Glahmo, who French traders had nicknamed Chief Clermont. When the town petitioned for a post office in 1874, a clerical error listed Clermont as Claremore; the error was never rectified and today both the mound and the town are named Claremore.