Cherokee Women's Auxiliary Choir
 

Cherokee Women's Auxiliary Choir is a group of women who sing hymns and gospel songs in both Cherokee and English.

The following biography from The Cherokee Artist Directory, 2001, Cherokee, North Carolina by Barbara Duncan, Freeman Owle, Amy Davis and Tess Thraves, published by the Museum of the Cherokee Indian in collaboration with the North Carolina Arts Council and the Cultural Resources Division of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians is used with permission from the editors.


"The Cherokee Women's Auxiliary Choir is a group of approximately twenty women who sing hymns and gospel songs in both Cherokee and English.  The choir can include solos, duets, trios, or small ensembles in its programs.

The choir was formed in 1998 by the Baptist Ladies Auxiliary in order to sing for community members who were homebound or in hospitals and nursing homes and could not attend church services.  Open to anyone in the community that wanted to sing, the choir attracted members from a number of local churches.  Currently represented in the group are Straightfork Baptist Church, Big Cove Baptist Church, Yellowhill Baptist Church, Waterfalls Baptist Church, Cherokee Methodist Church, Bethabara Baptist Church an the Living Waters Lutheran Church.  All members of the choir are active in their own respective churches and participate in church activities that range from teaching Sunday School and singing in the choir to serving as auxiliary officers.

In addition to singing for services at the local churched and meeting in Cherokee, North Carolina, the choir has sung at the Cancer Relay for Life Project, the North American Indian Women's Association (NAIWA), the Lutheran Ladies Conference, the Folk Festival at Warren Wilson College in Swannanoa, a nursing home in Murphy, the Fifth Annual Ladies Retreat hosted by the Yellowhill Church, the Unicoi Turnpike Millennium Trail celebration at the Sequoyah Birthplace Museum in Vonore, Tennessee, and the Cherokee Voices Festival at the Museum of the Cherokee Indians.

The size of the choir for any given program will vary according to how many singers can arrange their work schedules and other commitments in response to an invitation to sing.  Some elderly choir members cannot travel far and their participation depends on the program location.  Most members, however, can travel beyond the local area.  The choir's organization includes contact persons who handle the schedule, a treasurer, and several members who activate a phone tree to relay information to each church.

Fees are negotiable and should include reimbursement for all travel, including mileage, meals, and any overnight accommodations.  The choir often sings with its own piano accompanist, but it can also sing without accompaniment.  Presenters should advise the choir's contact person in advance about the availability of a piano."

Rachel Mathis
PO Box 2342
Cherokee, NC 28719
(828)497-1388

Flora Bradley
PO Box 1388
Cherokee, NC 28719
(828)497-3806

Sources:
[Used with permission] The Cherokee artist directory 2001. Research and writing, Barbara Duncan ... [et al.] ; editing Barbara Duncan, Beverly Patterson. Cherokee, N.C. : Museum of the Cherokee Indian in collaboration with the North Carolina Arts Council and the Cultural Resources Division of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, [2001]